"Mildly famous Captain" . Thanks for putting PT109 into the fuller story.
@historigraph10 ай бұрын
Yeah might be a seperate video going into that
@jankorosec710 ай бұрын
Nice cameo
@goldenfiberwheat23810 ай бұрын
@@historigraphit’s the Oppenheimer ending all over again
@wilson245510 ай бұрын
that's how JFK permanently injured his back, thus suffering chronic, often debilitating pain until his assassination..
@simongeard482410 ай бұрын
@@wilson2455 You seem to be arguing for assassination as a cure for back pain? ;)
@jackhew9310 ай бұрын
These animated ww2 battles are always a hit 🎯
@Mechanized8510 ай бұрын
nothing special, just another day learning the things, i feel nothing about it.
@skeletonwguitar438310 ай бұрын
@@Mechanized85you sound depressed, you okay?
@FluppiLP10 ай бұрын
as opposed to the American torpedos in the beginning of the war :D
@Mechanized8510 ай бұрын
@@skeletonwguitar4383 What the fucking hell are you saying about being depressed? I simply meant that I feel nothing. It doesn't mean I am depressed. I am kicking ass and actually fine.
@martz579410 ай бұрын
@@Mechanized85bro stfu he was just asking if you were ok! No need to be an ass about it
@wolfu59710 ай бұрын
I have Tameichi Hara's memoares, "Japanese Destroyer Captain" in my book shelf. The way he writes is exemplary when it comes to impartiality. In it, he doesn't hesitate to criticize, and praise, both the strategies and the tactics employed by both sides. The one thing I remembers the most is: Those with the benefit of hindsight, doesn't understand the burden of making split-second decisions. When the Shigure was lifted out the water in November 1943, they discovered that the American torpedo had left a two feet diameter hole in the rudder. When the engineers asked Hara how they'd managed to navigate the destroyer with the rudder in this condition, Hara replied: "The rudder has been sluggish in recent months, but we've been on dozens of missions since then and pulled through as you can see."
@Guangrui10 ай бұрын
Burke once remarked that the difference between a good commander and a bad one was 10 seconds
@Bandog2310 ай бұрын
Japanese naval memoirs are always fascinating
@Guangrui10 ай бұрын
@@Bandog23 and many were transparent lies
@arwing2010 ай бұрын
I never trust memoirs from officers. They will always twist things to make themselves look great or the enemies look stronger than they really were. German memoirs from WW2 and the book that inspired We Were Soldiers are good examples
@SeattlePioneer10 ай бұрын
@sharkscrapper8 ай бұрын
As a retired US Navy surface warfare officer I greatly appreciate the graphics and discussion. Keep up the great work.
@RampantFirefly10 ай бұрын
Captain Hara knowing full well they were sailing into an ambush despite his warnings “oh no! My ship can’t keep up. I better lag to the rear… just ‘cause”
@OOZ6628 ай бұрын
I'm too lazy to look it up, but I'm pretty sure I recall Shigure being the sole survivor of so many engagements that it became part of her reputation.
@kebasor7 ай бұрын
Actually, before Hara took command, the Shigure and its division were considered among the worst in the Navy, so much so that he initially balked when told he was being assigned to command it. He did a lot of work to straighten out the crew, but it wasn't a feint that Shigure's engines couldn't keep up with other DDs. It plagued her throughout her career, and that made Hara's command later in the war to throw them into super boost all the more horrifying to the crew. Truly a lucky ship with a captain that knew what he was doing (after learning from his mistakes). It didn't carry on past his time as her commander, unfortunately for Shigure.
@eitantovey257010 ай бұрын
Wow, a perfectly executed textbook attack down to the letter. A full surprise torpedo attack at the broadside, and crossing the T with the guns, while also waiting for the torpedoes to hit before opening fire. Absolutely stunning
@mathieu4432Ай бұрын
it wasnt text book. american battle tactics was to degrade the enemies fire power before closing in the finish them off at suicide range with torpidoes. This time around the americans tried the japanese tactic of openning up with a torpidoe attack then followed by guns.
@Guangrui10 ай бұрын
It's a small battle compared with air sea campaigns such as the Midway, but in cutting off the supply lines and sinking the destroyers that would have been part of the anti-submarine screen of fleet carriers and battleships, the engagement in the dark night of August 6 1943 was of strategic importance that should be recognized
@jakewillits467810 ай бұрын
1943. Back when americans didnt support socialism because of adolf hitler and they all knew there was only 2 genders and you couldnt switch
@fabianzimmermann549510 ай бұрын
To quote the very amusingly written history book Dark Waters, Starry Skies by Jeffrey R. Cox: "… the lead Japanese destroyer Hagikaze was the first hit, starting a large fire. The good news was the fire was quickly doused; the bad news was that it was doused by the plume of water from a second torpedo hit…" Originally the American plan had been created by Arleigh Burke, who also commanded the destroyer divisions from this battle. Moosbrugger replaced him just before the battle, which in earlier Pacific War battles usually led to disaster. But the destroyer captains convinced Moosbrugger to go with the plan they already knew and had trained for and since he had helped Burke in developing it, he agreed, which is why he used Burke's plan to great success.
@westrim10 ай бұрын
I'll bet there are Sumerian tablets complaining about a new chief coming to power and shuffling around what already worked just to put his stamp on things.
@MrAdamNTProtester5 ай бұрын
Was Burke cashiered or promoted & do you have any sources I can read about that? Sounds like once again they removed the guy from his post that was doing his job "admirally" read admirably!
@fabianzimmermann54955 ай бұрын
@@MrAdamNTProtester I'm not completely sure. The book I quote above, Dark Waters, Starry Skies by Jeffrey R. Cox just says that Burke was reassigned before the battle without going into detail about it. I'm very sure he wasn't cashiered, as Burke was present in two later naval engagements in the same year. (Both of them victories) He commanded one of the two destroyer formations in the battle of Empress Augusta Bay and later commanded the destroyer force in the battle of Cape St. George, which, if I recall correctly, is very similar to this battle here, since he used the same plan that he had developed for this battle, which had been used very succesfully by Moosbrugger. After that, he became Chief of Staff for Admiral Marc Mitscher, the guy who commanded the Fast Carrier Task Force of the Fifth Fleet, so he held a very important post and of course the Arleigh Burke class of modern destroyers is named after him, so he is very well regarded by the US Navy.
@biffbobfred3 ай бұрын
I know Burke from the Destroyer class. Thanks
@wolftamer546326 күн бұрын
That book is pretty good, but I don’t get why the author praised Rear Admiral Wright and calls him “noble” for completely and utterly failing at Tassafaronga. He’s got a weird judge of character.
@larrywilson69007 ай бұрын
My father was a radioman on the USS Craven, DD 382. H8e was very proud of this battle!
@robbielewis474010 ай бұрын
My dad served on the USS Moosbrugger. watching this, I was like, wait a minute, that's the ships' namesake, isn't it.
@AndrewGivens6 ай бұрын
Fun story - many years back (20 or so) my old pal was on joint RN / Dutch Navy exercises in the North Sea, when USS Moosbrugger announced loudly that she was "coming through" and simply barged her way straight through the exercise area, fouling up everything momentarily. Proof that, like her namesake, she was well capable of disrupting the enemy's carefully-planned manoeuvres & formations.
@fearthehoneybadger10 ай бұрын
This is what the USN was capable of when their torpedoes finally started working.
@johnsmith916110 ай бұрын
I saw a video on the reason for the torpedoes not working and was surprised that the main cause was the force of impact was destroying the front of the torpedoes rendering the firing mechanism inoperable. The fix was not a simple one as I had always believed it involved redesigning the whole front of the torpedo to withstand the initial impact when striking the side of the ship
@jimsharp504410 ай бұрын
My dad told a story of when something like 16 torpedoes were used to try an sink a Japanese transport. And they all bounced off the haul
@peterwilkinson397910 ай бұрын
I 0:28
@stanburk73929 ай бұрын
@@jimsharp5044 I guess the theory was if you hit it enough times eventually they punch their way through? Seriously though, what amazed me was the lack of testing when the torpedoes were put into production.
@jimsharp50449 ай бұрын
@@stanburk7392 War time production. Get the stuff out there and hopefully it worked correctly.
@joselitostotomas811410 ай бұрын
It's was the steady incremental improvements: 1. Replacement of defective torpedoes. 2. Effective use of radar by placing the most effective radar ship in the lead. 3. Creation and implementation of the Combat information Center to help division commanders and above "see" the tactical situation. It all started with a destroyer XO in the radar room and yelling to the bridge what he's seeing.
@legoeasycompany10 ай бұрын
Also cutting the DDs free from the cruiser line helps. It's crazy that it was a few days short of a year since Savo Island and the USN kept relying on cruisers in the narrow waters until they literally had none before even giving the destroyers the ability to range free.
@andrewzheng403810 ай бұрын
@@legoeasycompanyThe USN weren’t unique in employing cruisers the guard straits - after all many USN cruisers were lost at Guadalcanal to IJN cruisers funneling into those same waters. Experience also showed that destroyers had a rather short life expectancy if detected and fired upon by larger ships. USN failures at Guadalcanal were due to poor understanding of radar, bad communication, often simply incompetent leadership (like the USN cruisers refusing to take evasive action at Tassafaronga even when torpedos were already beginning to strike) and *finally* lack of creativity in employing destroyers (which in some ways circles back to the former *koff* Wright not understanding his own DD’s torpedo range *koff*). It’s not like giving destroyers free engagement was mutually exclusive with effective cruiser utilization, as Empress Augusta Bay and early Japanese victories showed The decision to switch to only destroyers was likely motivated by the fact that the Japanese were only employing destroyers and a few positively ancient light cruisers, because if Japanese heavy cruisers had gotten the drop on US DDs as they had done before the results would not have been so pretty
@d.olivergutierrez869010 ай бұрын
They literally had the industrial capacity to give themselves the luxury of royally screw things up at the beginning, and then come back even stronger now using the same lethal Japanese tactics against them, “oh no my cruisers are gone... anyway, want me to introduce you to my little fellas here the Cleveland’s and Baltimore’s”
@somerandomguy481210 ай бұрын
I think it really just speaks to how unrealistic the US had expected night battles to be. Whereas the Japanese Navy placed a premium on realistic night combat training since the 1920s and willingly accepted the loss of several destroyers during training accidents, the pre-war USN focused more on safety over realism in their training. The confusion and brutal nature of night combat was ignored in those exercise, making the lessons skewed. One of those being that destroyers were too vulnerable to heavier warships, and thus needed the escort of light cruisers and heavy cruisers. This wasn’t at all realistic to the Solomon Islands Campaign, and hindered Allied naval success. To be fair, the tactic of combing destroyers and cruisers in the Solomons had worked during Cape Esperance, but it’s still really surprising that it was only in July 1943 that the US Navy finally learned of the capabilities of the Japanese torpedoes (from Kula Gulf and Kolombangara, and from a recovered Japanese torpedo on Guadalcanal).
@legoeasycompany10 ай бұрын
@@somerandomguy4812 unfortunately Cape Esperance was more luck and a few other factors than the viable tactic if we take in the experiences of other battles like Tassafaronga and those two other battles mentioned are taken into account. It's also crazy that the assumption of IJN submarines hitting the ships with torpedoes rather than the long lances being better ranged thought still would have the USN risk cruisers in the narrow confines of "The Slot".
@GamerSnow310 ай бұрын
Such a shame that you don't have that iconic intro music anymore, for me it was such a unique feel when watching the start of your videos. Watched everyone and would like to comment that your documentary are outstanding. Great narration voice also!
@Mechanized8510 ай бұрын
Sometimes, it's good to have no music. it's better to find something that is truly suitable to your type, rather than settling for modern rubbish, popularized chaos, or mindless meme songs either any music that cannot match with theme. If there's nothing suitable, I wouldn't fucking bother playing any music at all.
@kievbutcher10 ай бұрын
@@Mechanized85watch his older videos with music in the intro, it's not "modern rubbish".
@GamerSnow310 ай бұрын
Im talking about his intro music at the start of each video, really set the tune for the video..@@Mechanized85
@tomaung10 ай бұрын
I agree with this sentiment as the intro music can really set the mood. Similar to having a show/channel with a distinct sound affiliated with it (ex: Mark Felton's intro randomly pops into my mind from time to time). Histriograph's intro even got me to downloading the Ryno's Theme just to hear that particular segment of the song.
@joeschenk840010 ай бұрын
Great to see this battle animated. Capt Hara's book does tell this battle very well.
@samschellhase883110 ай бұрын
It’s so interesting to me that naval ships can take so much damage sometimes, but can also go down in minutes from a single lucky hit. You could be hit with shells and torpedoes for minutes straight and still limp away, or one lucky magazine hit means you’re going down with almost all souls on board. 300 out of over 1500 people surviving, is horrific, really. Has to have been really demoralizing too
@CydeWeys10 ай бұрын
These destroyers are tiny, with total displacement under two thousand tons. That means they had very little armor, and any sort of impact (torpedo or shell) could do substantial if not catastrophic damage to them. The battleships were made to take a punch, and indeed the Yamato did, taking many dozens of such hits any one of which could have sunk one of these destroyers.
@samschellhase883110 ай бұрын
@@CydeWeys still, was the Johnston that took hit after hit in the battle of the coral sea and only after a day of battle did it finally sink?
@WeddingVegetables10 ай бұрын
@@samschellhase8831 Yup, it's all about where the hits landed. Of course caliber was important but location even more so.
@kisaragi_san13786 ай бұрын
@@samschellhase8831 battle off samar, but yes. there's also a few destroyers who had their bows completely sheered off yet managed to stay afloat (HMS Eskimo, IJN Suzutsuki, and technically the USS O'Brien are good examples)
@MrAdamNTProtester5 ай бұрын
Considering the mission was resupply & creation of a buttress to the main DEF Line
@Krywiggles10 ай бұрын
This was an amazing video! Some years ago, I attended the United States Naval War College, and they really focus on the Naval Battles of Guadalcanal in November 1942. If you did a video on those series of battles, I guarantee you that those professors would definitely use your video in an academic manner. Keep up the good work, man!
@dude97x10 ай бұрын
I have read Tameichi Hara's memoirs, it is fascinating to see the "birds eye" perspective of the events he described. I strongly recommend his memoirs, a very rare case of recorded history since so many of the destroyer captains died during the war and many who survived stayed silent.
@SquidInJapan10 ай бұрын
Frederick Moosbrugger was my great grandfather! Thanks for the interesting video! First time I’ve seen the battle talked about in a conspicuous manner. Some funny irony about the whole situation is that I actually live in Japan. Proud that via the efforts of men like my great grandfather, that this country went from being what was essentially a military dictatorship to one of the most desirable places to live in the world.
@sjb34609 ай бұрын
Did you hear about Johnny Somali?? He is an asshole KZbinr that harassed the Japanese civilians. He is an embarrassment for our entire country. I am disappointed he only recieved a small fine and deportation. He should have been jailed for 10 years.
@AbeBSea9 ай бұрын
So you're stationed at Yokosuka or some such?
@SquidInJapan9 ай бұрын
@@AbeBSea I am not in the military, personally, though much of my family is. Oddly enough I just work as an actor here, so in terms of my work, no connection.
@linguinatorschwartz93098 ай бұрын
@SquidInJapan -- So you're the round-eye who "gets it" in all of their WWII movies ?
@SquidInJapan8 ай бұрын
@@linguinatorschwartz9309 haha, from time to time. Thankfully I mostly do voice acting these days, and that is a lot of fun.
@chrisjensen91810 ай бұрын
Ive been a critic of many videos put out by others, i was a 16inch GMG and have seen some incredibly derpy videos. This however is VERY well done. This young man should be proud.
@bf61marc3510 ай бұрын
Arashi just couldnt catch a break. First Midway, now this.
@surfdocer1033 ай бұрын
😂 a black swan to be sure.
@legallyblind39310 ай бұрын
Thank you for always having captions ❤️😊
@darekkijewski7139 ай бұрын
You are doing a great job focusing on lesser known engagements, thus preserving a fuller picture of the WW2 maritime history; I find your maps extremely helpful in trying to figure out what is happening in the course of a battle. Please, keep up the good job. Greetings from Poland, my friends!
@devildogcrewchief333510 ай бұрын
I hope that you do more of these videos explaining the smaller but yet important engagements of the Pacific War that get overshadowed by the much bigger naval battles.
@jamespaul461810 ай бұрын
5:27 PT 109. I never knew that incident happened or the circumstances leading up to the event. THANKS for this information.
@glitchtastic75910 ай бұрын
Captain Hara’s book is my absolute favorite of war in the pacific. Love to see this action animated.
@hrunchtayt158710 ай бұрын
5:27 “Mildly famous captain” 🤪
@rembrandt972ify9 ай бұрын
He wasn't that famous in 1943.
@LionlordEbonfire8 ай бұрын
And there was a mildly famous book about that ship that was almost required reading in my youth. ( PT-109: John F. Kennedy in WW II )
@edhuber35575 ай бұрын
@@rembrandt972ify Should have been...by court martial.
@JohnSmith-tm5sh5 ай бұрын
@@LionlordEbonfirethat genuinely may be the second most famous memoir of a captain in this engagement
@Heywoodthepeckerwood5 ай бұрын
Mikey famous? Not so much. Highly overrated? 100%.
@Strathclydegamer10 ай бұрын
Another fantastic video. I hugely appreciate that you post your stuff with proper subtitles ready to go!
@kilcar9 ай бұрын
Excellent, concise. The Maps and such are wonderful and essential. Well done.
@keyslonsimon457110 ай бұрын
I love that he names the heroes who fought, they were not just nameless robots, they were people who had lives and I think that point is lost on other animated war channels
@jeffreyharris344010 ай бұрын
Thank you. I just listened to Tameichi Hara's memoir, and had trouble visualizing in my mind the battles he described. This animation was very helpful. Well done.
@JHruby10 ай бұрын
Another terrific video. I really enjoy these videos, the animations showing the geographic view of the battles adds so much. Excellent work again.
@davidwemyss730310 ай бұрын
Saw this as my first of this channel's videos. I enthusiastically immediately subscribed. My father, a non-com, his loyal troopers of the 1st Cav Division recieved extensive jungle warfare at Camp Strathpine from whom he called the finest jungle warriors ever; the ANZACs, before flanking the Marines, already in the horrific Island Campaign. WWII-PTO was Dad's first of his 3 wars, two of with his admired ANZACs. Vietnam may have been the Cav's evolution to airmobile, but many older non-coms, like my father, were trained jungle fighters well before thanks to the ANZACs. Proud of Dad, his beloved Cav troopers & the ANZACs. I have extensive diaries, maps, souvenirs from Dad's operations but the overall perspective of the battle movements too broad told from my American influencers POV, I found a personal POV that forms a detailed story, I think, because of who the presenter is & from. I'm an ANG Aviation veteran of Grenada & Panama, btw. I get the vibes the young man presenter is possibly from "Down Under"? Great job young man. "Whoever sheds his blood with me on this day shall be forever my brother..." THANK YOU.
@mcnorcan10 ай бұрын
Your content is among the absolute best historical material. And your narration is fantastic. Thank you.
@samhunt938010 ай бұрын
Enjoyed immensely. The graphics are simple but first class and support the narrative very well. Thank you.
@tomfultz87937 ай бұрын
Thanks for great video. My father was on the uss craven dd382.i have heard this story dozens of times.it was a special day for us to remember . I have a copy of the ships log which i read often
@aaronbussey385610 ай бұрын
Amazing video of a little known battle - love it! Thank you!
@johnharrington18003 ай бұрын
Never knew of this battle in the Pacific. Really well done. Great graphics and research. Love the nod to PT109.
@jeffbenton618310 ай бұрын
Thanks for including the old music at 7:40 I missed hearing it every episode.
@badkittynomilktonight333410 ай бұрын
Tameichi Hara wrote a memoir called "Japanese Destroyer Captain" which is the second best book I have read on the naval conflict between the US and Japan. The best book being "Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors". If you have not read this book its it an absolute MUST READ. Hara was involved is several key battles and brings a unique and fascinating viewpoint to the war.
@christopherhanton661110 ай бұрын
very nice i must get this book for my kindle then ty.
@skyden2419510 ай бұрын
Wow, as they say, "slow and steady wins the race," or in this case, slow and steady survived the attack. Thanks for that extra note on Kennedy's PT-Boat. The incident is, of course, so often discussed but usually just from the point of the boat being rammed and then the aftermath. Pretty much never putting into context of the bigger picture within the overall conflict of the Pacific Theater of the war, i.e., why were the two involved warships in the area in the first place. (edit: word use spelling correction, i.e., where -> were)
@SeattlePioneer10 ай бұрын
> I agree. Placing Kennedy's disaster in the context of this larger battle was very useful.
@toawing10 ай бұрын
an excellent judgment of tactics and use of radar combined with the efforts to fix the mark 14 giving a dramatic success.
@scottfitts51215 ай бұрын
Very cool! Documenting these lesser known battles is great context.
@timothyporter163210 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed Sir Lawrence Olivier narrating The World At War back in the seventies.
@sullid4133 ай бұрын
Glad I stumbled upon this video from some of your others - love the update!
@Thirdbase910 ай бұрын
Everyone seems to focus on the Cruisers and bigger ships. It's nice to see some small ship coverage.
@--Dani10 ай бұрын
Great content as always 👍🏻
@Cormac1314 ай бұрын
Image being a sailor on the last ship in line half asleep stood out on deck as a lookout then suddenly without any warning the 3 ships in front of you simultaneously explode almost terrifying
@cbusdavecbusdave140810 ай бұрын
Well done - Thanks for explaining the tactics & strategy.
@manveerparmar657010 ай бұрын
Hopefully we get more videos in the future about the pacific sea battles of ww2
@tonymata24 ай бұрын
its great to see a video with a real human voice and not an AI voice. Good work!
@SR-bh5jd4 ай бұрын
Watching this never gets old.
@damnhandy10 ай бұрын
My father served on DD-559, the USS Longshaw, a Fletcher-class destroyer which was sunk off Okinawa on May 18th, 1945 with 86 dead, and 95 wounded. She had 9 Battle Stars.
@steveg697810 ай бұрын
Kamikazi ?
@damnhandy10 ай бұрын
@steveg6978 She ran aground during a 4-day continuous fire support mission supporting Marines ashore, and was hit by a Japanese shore battery before she could be towed off the reef. She was hit in the forward powder magazine which blew off the front of the ship from the bow back to the bridge and the smokestack. If you Google DD-559, you can see photos of the mangled ship. Coincidently, the Longshaw can be seen in the movie Flat Top, about a fictional aircraft carrier. She was delivering mail to an aircraft carrier somewhere in the Pacific, and they used footage from that in the movie. For about 4 seconds, my 18-year-old father can be seen hauling a bunch of mail bags up to the deck of the carrier. My brother and I recognized his particular gait and his red hair as he hauled on the line.
@samschellhase883110 ай бұрын
5:56 Hara really asked ‘can you put that in writing’ and his boss gave it
@mguy880210 ай бұрын
Cool animation, one thing that would be nice is a compose in corner. Would make discerning the directions of the ships easier.
@tcsmagicbox10 ай бұрын
Great to finally see the face behind the voice. Great content as always!
@greathornedowl36443 ай бұрын
Thank you for the detailed and well-animated documentary. Context: this is the beginning of August 1943, a year after the Battle of Midway, and a year and a half after Pearl Harbor. American production was entering 2nd gear, producing, producing faster
@rajesrecipe249210 ай бұрын
Come On Historigraph!!!! Videos on British Pacific Fleet from the new year right ??? ❤ Waiting for it 🇬🇧
@asamann173810 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing all these small battles I’ve never heard of most of these and I looooove ship and plane battles from ww2.
@jayfrank191310 ай бұрын
Great video, as usual! Just one note on the pronunciation of USS Helena: It is pronounced, "HELL-en-uh," named after the capital of the state of Montana, Helena, one of the smallest state capitals in the US.
@samarkand158510 ай бұрын
Do we really have to yell out the first syllable?
@jurgschupbach305910 ай бұрын
Next to the Minute Man Silo
@goldenfiberwheat23810 ай бұрын
Making a ship after the capital of a land locked state? I’ll never understand that
@noahbody987510 ай бұрын
If you had ever been to Helena you would understand why the first part is all capitals.@@samarkand1585
@jayfrank191310 ай бұрын
@@samarkand1585 Emphasis on the first syllable, no yelling necessary. 🫢
@paulthetester102310 ай бұрын
So good .... a Pacific War doc with a voiceover that pronounces Rabaul properly. I find it too distracting if not done right, so this doco is a joy to watch. The content and animations - spot on too. Thank you.
@bobcougar7710 ай бұрын
The value of seeing your enemy before he can see you is paramount. Even with better torpedoes, better night sights and experienced crews they lost this fight before they even knew it had started.
@chetanjejurkar744910 ай бұрын
The old music was pleasent and great to hear
@MrMojolinux10 ай бұрын
Very Good!! Now I think I more clearly understand the naval actions up The Solomons, just after Guadalcanal was won.
@iamrichrocker2 ай бұрын
i see Woody looking over your shoulder..perhaps he wants his hat back..btw..thank you for an engagement that is not widely discussed..great graphics and editing..
@frankbodenschatz17310 ай бұрын
Nice job reporting the battle.
@Greg_Andrews10 ай бұрын
I was glued to the screen! Great video man!
@user-lw7om1sg1m10 ай бұрын
Excellent work and very much appreciated on a little known pacific battle which I find interesting please can you make more on little known battles may I suggest the battles fought in China and Burma as well as Tunisia and Italy
@canuck_gamer33599 ай бұрын
This is not meant at a criticism of you folks, just so you know. I've never understood why it's said that an enemy transmission is "intercepted", rather than "overheard". "Intercepted" makes it seem as though it was blocked in some way, rather than just listened to. Just a curious example of how our language evolved using a certain word in a given phrase, rather than other, perhaps more appropriate words.
@jamesscalzo30332 ай бұрын
Loved the video @Historigraph! Can't wait for the next video man! It would be Interesting to see a video on the Battle of Kula Gulf and the Battle of Kolombangara, especially when the First 3 Cleveland-class Light Cruisers (USS Cleveland (CL-55), USS Columbia (CL-56) and USS Montpelier (CL-57)) were at the Latter Fight. Trying to Play these Fights in "Axis & Allies: War at Sea" even with Custom Units is quite fun, Especially when you have to Make sure the Area is to scale. Each Space on the Board is 5,000 Yards or 15,000 feet which is a little over 2¾ miles (2.84 to be exact/precise) with each Turn being about Ten minutes. Each Ship and Aircraft is worth a Certain Amount of Points and for Various Scenarios there can be Effects like Darkness or Squalls that can and sometimes will Hamper Operations. Each Unit also have a Set of Special Abilities that can Help or, In the case of Mogami's "Bad Luck", Hinder your Forces. Let me know what you think about this and I'll catch you in your next video man! P.S. Hungarian Revolution of October 1956 was kinda interesting.
@jamesd347210 ай бұрын
Really enjoy learning more about these smaller scale battles and engagements, would love to see you cover some more of the ones in the Mediterranean between the British and Italians - there are some British attacks on Italian convoys that I think would make some really great videos!
@brookeshenfield71562 ай бұрын
He didn’t know about the damaged rudder for months, certainly not at 10:23. Still a great production. Aloha!
@dahno197510 ай бұрын
Why dont you guys make some posters with details of some of the major battles like behind you. I would buy a few of those. Love the work keep it up.
@historigraph10 ай бұрын
Yeah Ive been really trying to find a good distributor for them but the costs they charge are prohibitive. I think I might end up just doing it myself - but big upfront costs to order stock in
@stephentaplin876710 ай бұрын
Suggesting a video on the defective torpedos, from an engineering perspective. It’s an interesting story.
@timothyporter163210 ай бұрын
Really excellent animation and narration. Really love a british accent explaining world war II.
@daddiospatio6 ай бұрын
Just discovered you to-day, subbed right away. Thank you!
@greghanson569610 ай бұрын
Great stuff as always!
@garyhughes244610 ай бұрын
That was a very interesting and informative video thank you keep up the good work.
@plantfeeder66775 ай бұрын
A great book to read is PT-105 by Dick Keresey. He was stationed at Rendova with Kennedy and was on patrol that fateful night. A great personal look at life in the Mosquito Boat Fleet.
@jamesmcstein675810 ай бұрын
'A mildy famous captain' Oh you are a funny man 😂
@surfdocer1033 ай бұрын
Later killed by his own country
@markw201610 ай бұрын
PT-109, captain only MILDLY famous.
@GarrickKing-w2s10 ай бұрын
Babe wake up new Historigraph video is out in time for Christmas 🎄
@johnofnz10 ай бұрын
This part of the war in the Pacific is fascinating
@AndrewGivens6 ай бұрын
USN commanders afloat finally placing their trust in the radar plots and using them to develop a solid real-time awareness of the battle space, instead of simply doubting it and waiting for visual cues before deciding what to do. Huge step change.
@greygalah3 ай бұрын
would love to see something on the attack of the IJN home base at Truk
@jackland338710 ай бұрын
Great video. Informative and entertaining. Keep up the great work
@davidcashin189410 ай бұрын
Nicely done, especially appreciated by a Plankowner of USS Vella Gulf CG-72. ;-)
@billhanna214810 ай бұрын
Thank you for your wonderful work.
@historigraph10 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for the support, means the world!
@Allinlehead9710 ай бұрын
I am but a simple man. I see Historigraph i click
@EdibleClown10 ай бұрын
Arashi? The same Arashi whose actions at Midway essentially doomed the Japanese carriers?
@Nuke8934510 ай бұрын
Yep.
@nighthunter4610 ай бұрын
Benn wanting to see this for a while and well what a nice suprise this was
@charlesfaure118910 ай бұрын
Amazing what can be accomplished once you get incompetent commanders out of the way.
@williamkirk115610 ай бұрын
Astounding. Thank you for sharing this.
@Kwaj10 ай бұрын
4:28 "With no time to waste, Shigure was attached to Destroyer Division 4." *Hagikaze:* Welcome to the division! I heard you were quite a destroyer of good fortune. Hope some of it rubs off on the rest of us. *Shigure:* _(pauses)_ We'll see...
@d.olivergutierrez869010 ай бұрын
Im literally unable to not picture this conversation as anime girls with high pitch voices, this is what media has done to me And i love it
@Kwaj10 ай бұрын
@@d.olivergutierrez8690 Agreed. Anime girls are a complete good in the world. No one will steer me any different.
@stephenkeen603910 ай бұрын
Well presented, I always wondered what went on during that time.
@EndingSimple6 ай бұрын
Beats reading this in a book. I was never able to figure out those swiggly lines all over the place.
@oneshotme10 ай бұрын
I very much enjoyed your video and I gave it a Thumbs Up
@briancochran835610 ай бұрын
Clear detail. Very entertaining.
@Henandi10 ай бұрын
You make great videos, just wish they were longer
@kiwifruit2710 ай бұрын
Excellent video as always, thanks
@steveschlackman45039 ай бұрын
Captain Hara is covered in a number of videos. Hara survives the war.