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@stevensulak23875 ай бұрын
KISS my A$$
@stevensulak23875 ай бұрын
SORRY RETRACK COMMENT IT WAS MENT FOR HARRIS
@stevensulak23875 ай бұрын
SORRY IT WAS MENT FOR HARRIS
@AndrewBertolo3 ай бұрын
7th 9@@stevensulak2387
@mlg_grandad6 ай бұрын
Japanese destroyers: everything is too easy, we should fight something harder Something Harder:
@atack12126 ай бұрын
"just because you are built to counter me, does not mean you can counter me"
@USS_Archerfish6 ай бұрын
Lamo
@jacobcave15876 ай бұрын
😂
@Rhi256 ай бұрын
Very clever.
@ongxuwei6 ай бұрын
Japanese Commanders after seeing CMDR Harder : SHIT GO BACK
@CapricornEGO6 ай бұрын
When a man says things like "I have to do this" without any concrete reason you know a death flag was raised sky high.
@Rhi256 ай бұрын
@@CapricornEGO It's kinda ominously equivalent to "The abyss calls to me." As if Lady Sea is calling Dealey to her cold dark embrace, like a Siren's singing with her dreaded enchanting song of peril. The Command should have taken this pattern seriously and prohibited them from going to another sortie sternly. Pushing your luck too much will end in trouble, and that of the crew were already exhausted to the point that even Dealey has become numb to the dangers of recklessness, that he overlooked his responsibility to his brothers-in-arms to return in one piece.
@CapricornEGO6 ай бұрын
@@Rhi25 "You aren't leading your men to victory, you are leading them home."
@neurofiedyamato87636 ай бұрын
Yea those type of lines are usually res flags mental health wise. Usually some sort of survivor's guilt or the like. But I don't know much about his service record prior nor his personal relationships
@DirkusTurkess6 ай бұрын
I believe that's called foreshadowing, to bad things.
@blusnuby2Ай бұрын
@@CapricornEGO , you are leading them on to an ETERNAL PATROL.
@joshglenn21156 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was the Radio and Sonar Operator on the Harder for it's first five patrols. He was supposed to go on the sixth but switched his leave with another sailor. My mom, aunt, two cousins, myself and my daughter wouldn't be here today if he hadn't. He spoke very highly of Dealy but also noted he was very aggressive with his tactics. His stories about the depth charge attacks were very eye opening. He served 20 years on subs but the Harder was the only one he spoke much about. I wish he would have lived long enough to hear the news about it being found.
@timsindt52453 ай бұрын
Dealer disassembled every torpedo he was given, knowing the mark 14 deficiencies, his torpedoes worked
@HeFromNorwayz6 ай бұрын
Overconfidence is a slow and insidious killer.
@dogcarman6 ай бұрын
The 5 mission limit was probably reasonable in light of what happened to the USS Harder.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis97146 ай бұрын
For soldiers its called the veterans bias. When youve survived 10 battles you biastly think youll survive the 11. even tho your ords are exactly the same as before.
@faatihh11306 ай бұрын
Those who survive a long time on the battlefield start to think they're invincible. I bet you do, too, Buddy.
@TheRandomGuy4146 ай бұрын
The ancestor grimly smiles
@christopherg23476 ай бұрын
@@dogcarman IIRC, it used to be a 4 mission limit. With the idea that skippers would either be too timid or too reckless to run a submraine by that point. I guess after Eugene Fluckey sank a train on his 5th Patrol, that rule was relaxed.
@Arutima6 ай бұрын
This video was surely made because of the recent discovery of USS Harder, in eternal patrol off the coast of Luzon.
@historigraph6 ай бұрын
Yes I started it a couple of days after the news - there's your example of how long our production cycle is!
@bpapao6 ай бұрын
@@historigraph kudos for your effort! thank you
@stillcantbesilencedevennow6 ай бұрын
RIP. They're on patrol for Cthulu now.
@daniellucas14946 ай бұрын
And rightly so - those brave men lie there to this day - it is for us to remember the sacrifice they made to give us the freedoms we have today. Rest well Harder for you shall remain forever on patrol!
It seems that the Wild Weasels are not the first instance of the Americans deciding that when the enemy comes up with a counter to a unit of a specific type, that unit should just try harder.
@ericvantassell68094 ай бұрын
The history of every weapon and counter throughout history. I you're looking for a justification for your pun, you'll have to try harder.
@croskerk4 ай бұрын
Damn guys, the harder you try the harder the joke will punch
@sciencetube45744 ай бұрын
Oh my god, I am an unintentional comedy genius. Pun not intended, but gladly accepted.
@croskerk4 ай бұрын
@@sciencetube4574 hahaa yes And we took our punches at the joke Well as they say Harder we punch the harder they fall
@purplefood16 күн бұрын
@@ericvantassell6809 There are lots of times when a counter to something is simply not able to be overcome by just trying more of the same thing.
@NVRAMboi6 ай бұрын
Amazing what fully functional torpedoes can do. Those first two or more years for the USN subs had to have been frustrating and awful.....and angry.
@RichardHomolka6 ай бұрын
And torpedo planes. Emmerich’s Midway shows how disappointing and dangerous they were for low and slow torpedo bombers.
@saturnv24196 ай бұрын
The perfect example of no matter how skilled you are, everyone eventually makes mistakes.
@MinnesotaGuy8223 ай бұрын
Yes, and exhausted/fatigued/sleep-deprived/burned-out/"combat-fatigued" people lose performance and make far more errors of judgment and actions. Regardless of how macho or invulnerable someone thinks they are or acts, human beings have biological limits that absolutely must be respected, or else. Hopefully the US Navy and the US military in general have learned this.
@blusnuby2Ай бұрын
And Lady Luck is infamous for her capriciousness.....
@b3jamin215 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. A relative of mine, last name of Keckler, was an electricians mate on the Harder. I saw the memorial to the crew at Pearl Harbor a couple of years ago. So glad the sub was found and final respects could be paid. What an amazing crew. Keep up the great work with your videos!
@ISAF_Ace6 ай бұрын
The admiral shouldn’t have let them go out again. The boat had already taken a lot of punishment, and the captain had already done all his patrols. It was the needless endangerment of a crew, and they paid the price for it.
@theMoerster6 ай бұрын
And his XO had said the Capt was showing strain and was downplaying enemy anti-sub capabilities. A dangerous combo.
@patrickrutherford19346 ай бұрын
And, there was a war going on….
@keithsimpson21506 ай бұрын
You're deluded if you think command really cared about their lives it was all just about the total resources expended versus destroyed
@ISAF_Ace6 ай бұрын
@@keithsimpson2150 I can’t talk on the behalf of the US, but British generals certainly did. The country was devastated by the First World War, and had to savour every fighting soldier it could, because getting replacements was very difficult. It was often detrimental to Imperial command, as many British generals (most famously Auchinleck) failed to launch counterattacks or offensives which led to the defeats further down the line (read North African campaign). The UK armed forces were also adherent to the doctrine of ‘steel not flesh’, meaning to conserve all available manpower and instead use their enormous industrial capacity to win. I can’t speak on behalf of the US in WW2 though. For all I know you could be right, this is an American sub we’re talking about here.
@kon84596 ай бұрын
The admiral misplaced his trust on the Captain's skill over protocol.
@anthonybelmonte90216 ай бұрын
Christie should have overruled Dealey. Christie knew that with these stunning successes it was only a matter of time until luck ran out. Overconfidence is a silent killer, with ignornance taking front seat. As mentioned, Dealey was becoming too careless with Japanese Anti-submarine tactics. It only requires 1 mistake before its too late. Its unfortunate cause had Dealey taken the advice, he and his crew would have likely survived the war. RIP to Harder and her crew.
@Mcbignuts5 ай бұрын
Hindsight , dealey was at the top of his game, Christie just sounded like a hater
@rachitkumar10126 ай бұрын
Last time I was this early USN torpedoes were still not working
@MrScientifictutor6 ай бұрын
Really 1942 vs 1944 are like completely different wars to a submariner
@jessicaregina19566 ай бұрын
Usn torpedoes work?
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
@@jessicaregina1956 in 1944, the Mk 14 torpedo's contact exploders were improved significantly, thanks to the work spearheaded by Admiral Charles Lockwood et al in 1943 (He received the Legion of Merit for this work). And by this time, the Mk 18, that American "Chinese copy" of the German G4e electric torp, is introduced in service.
@turkey72696 ай бұрын
Wake up babe, new Historigraph video
@T.McGarry6 ай бұрын
Walked through the WWII sub SS Torsk, on display in Baltimore, an updated Gato-class submarine. How anyone crammed themselves into that thing, and fought a war, is unimaginable.
@kerberos6236 ай бұрын
In Swedish Torsk is the fish called cod.
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
The US Navy probably named it as such because there's a sub named Cod (which you can visit in Cleveland, Ohio).
@Jacks_Bad_Ideas6 ай бұрын
I went to the USS Silversides in Muskegon, I hit my head several times and was not trying to fight, it must have been awful
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
@@Jacks_Bad_Ideas well, it takes a certain kind of men who volunteer (then and now) for subs. One major requirement is that they are not claustrophobic, another is they must possess physical and psychological fortitude to withstand 50 to 60 day patrols in these subs.
@tundranomad6 ай бұрын
Probably 40 years ago I went on the Torsk with my family on a trip to Baltimore. I very much agree with you!
@sullid4136 ай бұрын
Great tribute to the Harder and its crew.
@soupsoup78316 ай бұрын
It is important to remember that there were other men on that ship beside Dealey who lost their lives. Here are their names: William Gordon Zander Buford John Young, Sr. Leonard Maurice White John T. Swagerty Nelson Spice Lloyd Hammond Sommerschield Walker Neal Snyder Austin Smith Vernard Leslie Sloggett Melvin Schwartz Donald John Simon Francis Xavier Scheibelhut Philip Thomas Sampson Robert Barnwell Roosevelt Mervin M. Rogers Max Myrval Rogers Robert Peter Przybilla Ralph Edson Pratt Richard Semple Pick Elroy Rufus Peck Freeman Paquet, Jr. Larry Anzo Opisso Thomas Daggett Ogilvie, II John William Snipes, Jr. Myles Harlan Murray Roy Benjamin Moss Arthur Bernard Morgan Robert Moore Otto Junior Moore Charles Allen Moffett, Jr. Robert Ray Mills Chester Miller Benjamin Ralph Medley Gordan Keith McWilliams Frank Bartlett McGrevy Ralph Erskine Manning Frank Paul Majuri, Jr. Harvey Austin Lynn, Jr. John Peyton Lonas Samuel Moore Logan Angelo LoCascio Sylvester Benjamin Lilley George Bernard Levin Henry Wilfred Lawson Joseph Melvin Lane George William Lakey James Hubbell Kellogg Roland Wilbur Keckler Roy Edward Jones Daniel Richard James Vard William Hutcherson Earl Verner Hood Hiram Delbert Hatfield Walter Orville Haloupek Daniel John Gully Joseph Lewis Glueckert Robert Lee Gifford Charles Raymond Altherr Robert Orville Baber Walter Francis Beutelspacher Robert Aloyious Blum Wayne Allen Brostrom Sumter Bourg Thomas Wooldridge Buckner Calvin Arthur Bull Vivian Jewell Cash Roland Raymond Chenard Wilbur Lee Clark John Chester Conley Harold Frederick Crask James Edward Cromwell George Eugene Fisher, Jr. Carl Edwin Finney James McKinley Edgar William Vernon Diamond Edwin Warren De Voe Vincent Louis Dallessandro Donald Bernard Dahlheimer
@RespectMyAuthoritaah5 ай бұрын
Thank you. It's not just the Captain operating that boat. It requires a lot of skilled men who are mission driven, just like the Captain.
@timmiller91463 ай бұрын
Buford Young was my cousin (1x rem) and I found this video researching him. Thank you for posting this.
@richardletaw40686 ай бұрын
Thanks for this narrative, of which I was previously unaware. I am PARTICULARLY grateful to know that the wreck had been discovered just this year (2024). Thank you.
@ASB1176 ай бұрын
Dealey really should have been promoted ashore. You could see Harders loss coming as soon as they left Freemantle
@joelfurrer1339Ай бұрын
I’m sure the Harder was partial inspiration for the great sub movie “Run Silent, Run Deep” that follows a destroyer-hunting skipper fond of bow shots.
@Wyomingchief6 ай бұрын
I've always been absolutely fascinated with the war in the Pacific, mainly because my grandfather served their along with one of his brothers. His other brother served in the European theater. And I've read many books about the submarine fleet, and Admiral Christie was criticized for the fact that he let him go on that last patrol. I believe after that it was actually put into the regulations that no Captain was allowed to make more than four War Patrols. Because by that point in the war they were getting enough experience captains there was no need to risk guys so many times.
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
After that rule, the only exception was Eugene Fluckey's "graduation" fifth patrol, which is more like a test run for new technology and tactics.
@MakeMeThinkAgain6 ай бұрын
There's a little bit more to the change in tactics regarding destroyer attacks. American intelligence had discovered that -- unlike the Americans and British -- the IJN did not have a large program to build more destroyers or tankers. Japan never really got over the idea that it would be a short war. The USN then realized that sinking these 2 ship types would be particularly damaging to the Japanese war effort as there were no replacement ships in the pipeline. The results were devastating.
@neurofiedyamato87636 ай бұрын
It's not that Japan didn't think it would be a long war. They simply understood they stood no chance in a long war. And so there is no reason to sacrifice resources and plans that will hopefully bring victory early for a defeat that happens farther in the future. And as far as destroyers go, Japan knew they needed them. Pretty much all battleships and even some cruisers were halted except for some at very late stage construction. This was in favor of more destroyers and carriers which even as early as 1941, Japan acknowledged they needed more of. Akizuki and Matsu classes for example are war time production and we're fairly numerous in addition to the continued production of pre-war Kagero designs under the Yugumo-class designation. Japan however wasn't willing to sacrifice qualitative features in favor of quantity until the Matsu and Kaibokans late war. The US thoroughly embraced the destroyer escorts early on but also enjoyed a much larger industrial base. Even without DDEs and CVEs, US still out produced Japanese DDs and Kaibokans combined with just DDs alone. The entire Fletcher class was the size of the Japanese DD fleet.
@nomadmarauder-dw9re5 ай бұрын
For Japan, the war on mainland China took precedence offensively. Everything in the Pacific was defensive. Hold and defend. But that robs one of initiative. Defensive tactics are easy to predict and require greater resources to sustain.
@rackstraw6 ай бұрын
Sam Dealey: "Come at me, bro."
@Jabarri746 ай бұрын
There was a quest in wow where a monkey shouts "come at me Brokkers". It means the same and I like the monkey version more. But yeah that was my 1st though too
@thejudge-kv2jk6 ай бұрын
Unbelievably risky. Not sure the crew would have appreciated the Captains quest for destroyers.
@Beecher_Dikov6 ай бұрын
I'd bet they were 100% with him...
@mosesracal67586 ай бұрын
@@Beecher_Dikov You could not be a submarine skipper without full trust to your captain, submarine duty is insanity in itself already
@DomWeasel6 ай бұрын
@@Beecher_Dikov People say that, but I think if you were to ask them, or the men of Varus' legions or Custer's 7th Cavalry; they'd have some colourful words to describe their commander's overconfidence.
@PvtPartzz5 ай бұрын
@@DomWeaselif the fragging wouldn’t have also crippled their submarine I doubt it wouldn’t have been seriously considered
@bobw2226 ай бұрын
The first destroyer kill sounds like the basis of the movie "Run Silent, Run Deep."
@Jon.A.Scholt5 ай бұрын
I loved watching that movie with my dad growing up! Whenever my mom and sister would go on a girl scout trip that would take them somewhere overnight, dad and I would watch Run Silent, Run Deep! I was probably the only kid who grew up in the early 90s that had Run Silent, Run Deep in his top 5 favorite movies!
@TS-ef2gv5 ай бұрын
Obviously RSRD borrowed heavily (but not entirely) from the Harder's exploits for the movie's plot. Not only the repeated "torpedoes down a charging destroyer's throat" aspect, but also the friction between the CO and XO, who suspected the CO was cracking up and unnecessarily risking the lives of his crew. The movie's plot took a different turn than the Harder's real life story, however.
@TeardropSidemarker6 ай бұрын
USS England: _”Okay, let’s roll these dice.”_
@CruelandCold6 ай бұрын
Phenomenal video as always, thank you!
@m.streicher82866 ай бұрын
"hittem' harder" so cool
@zammie016 ай бұрын
Wonderful commentary, thank you.
@christopherg23476 ай бұрын
As I understand it commanders were repalced every 4th partol, because the idea was that they would either get _too timid_ or _too reckless_ to command. This was definitely the latter. 2:40 Turning away was a deadly mistake. Taking the salvo head-on gives the best survival chance. Pointing right into the salvo minimizes the surface area torpedoes can hit. And the bow isn't exactly the most critical part. Even if the torpedo get's close, I doubt the fuse would detonate if it started scraping along the hull. But staying on course was probably insanely hard from a psychological point of view. 4:15 The chance to hit was still bad. Ships - especially destroyers - don't have a wide profile from the front. 4:50 They got it right. A careful manevuer that avoided ramming their bow into Nr. 2. Without driving their aft into 3-6. 9:47 That is why you stay on course. The best chance that the entire salvo will just miss. Admittedly, in that animation he barely gave the enemy _time_ to dodge. And if the enemy does not maneuver, you have no real chance of hitting.
@scottpecora3715 ай бұрын
Reviewing the exploits of the USN Harder and the sinking of 9 destroyers, its ultimate demise was quite predictable, and any blame lies at the feet of Admiral Christy. There was a good reason that captains were rotated to desk duty after 5 missions. All those reasons were being exhibited by Commander Dealy. They don't mention how man depth charging attacks the Harder had undergone, but they mention two that were so severe that crew didn't think the vessel would remain intact. Sinking 9 destroyers in that short of time undoubtedly would lead to a false sense of security, invincibility, and with each successful attack an increase in high-risk behaviors. ADM Christy should have never allowed Commander Deal to command another rotation at sea. The signs of battle fatigue and the stress of daily command had obviously taken their toll on Cdm Dealy. Had Commander Dealy been rotated to shore time, he could have been assigned to the advanced submarine school for commanders where his knowledge and exploits could have been passed onto a new generation of sub commanders. Any of the crewmembers on their 5th rotation should have also been rotated shore side and used at the submarine schools. Instead, all lives were lost along with all there knowledge!
@johnzgamez8106 ай бұрын
Small issue I noticed: With LT Commander Lynch's Insignia, you gave him one that's a Commander's (Silver Oakleaf) when it should be a LT Comm's (Bronze Oakleaf). Other than that VERY minor issue, wonderful video, very well done.
@shadowwarriorshockwave32816 ай бұрын
The War under the pacific is a wonderful book that give access to a lot of the surface level information on many interesting patrols by US submariners I highly recommend this to anyone who wants more stories
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
@@shadowwarriorshockwave3281 another excellent work is Clay Blair's definitive history of the submarine war in the Pacific, "Silent Victory".
@randyfant258815 күн бұрын
When I do and sub simulators, I always go for the escorts first. If you take them out, then you can have your way with the transports. On the other side, Reinhard Hardegen recounted in his book, when he was taking his U-boat towards the US East coast, he received a message from command giving him permission to go after a crimpled freighter near Nova Scotia which had called for a tug. When he got their he ran into a dense fog. as he approached the location, he saw 2 sets of running lights and assumed one was the tug and the other the freighter, but as he got closer and could see better through the fog, he spotted another pair of lights, he realized were the tug and freighter. the 2 he was approaching were a pair of British Destroyers standing by and sitting dead in the water. his knee-jerk reaction was to order full astern and get out as quick as he could. After extricating himself he realized, to his chagrin, that he had 2 British Destroyers dead-to-rights with prefect shots and didn't fire. That's the difference between aggression and caution. A ships captain needs to have both.
@Kurtownia6 ай бұрын
Should've been called The Destroyer Destroyer
@rlife78536 ай бұрын
The destroyer²
@ChrisbyFlanker6 ай бұрын
I did something similar to this in the Silent Hunter games, never knew that this actually was considered by real captains
@bobsylvester885 ай бұрын
If you read between the lines of the decision to give Deally an against protocol sixth mission commanding Harder, you see a power struggle with the Captain and the First Officer, who should rightfully take command. The First Officer basically throws him under the bus, but Deally manages to get the get the ship and tactical command of two others.
@alexandruhagi5 ай бұрын
I love your content! Thanks from Romania!
@LancasterResponding6 ай бұрын
I don’t know how I would feel being part of Dealey’s crew. Like I’d be proud of all the badass shit but at the same time I’d be like this guy is completely insane.
@PaladinCasdin6 ай бұрын
Probably about the same as the crew of USS Johnston would have felt as they defended Taffy 3 honestly. Or anyone who flew with Dick Best at Midway. It was always the insane ones who turned the tide at the end of the day.
@neurofiedyamato87636 ай бұрын
@@PaladinCasdinWell, plenty of insane ones just died. It's the few that survive and since they took the risk, they reap the rewards. You can't win if you don't play. But when the majority of those that play loses, you got to ask if it really was worth it.
@maxhill70656 ай бұрын
First destroyer: These idiots aren't diving Second, third, and fourth destroyers: Oh fuck, they're not diving
@docproc765011 күн бұрын
I surprised the captain could fit through the hatch with balls as big as that! Taking on destroyers in a submarine is crazy!
@Warmaker016 ай бұрын
Submarine duty was one of the most dangerous duties you can do for anyone in WWII. There's many examples of great accomplishments by them from for example the Kriegsmarine and US Navy. But they also had in common high losses. Also, the biggest killer of Japanese Destroyers in WWII were not from surface action, land or carrier based air power. Submarines inflicted the most losses, which was a surprise to me.
@Boba-Fett-GS1150Ez6 ай бұрын
Nice video! Well timed and informative!
@westernstar49644 ай бұрын
Watching this on 24th August for the first time
@MousePADDING6 ай бұрын
Always a good day when Historigraph video drops.
@inchworm9311Ай бұрын
This channel is so good
@donarthiazi24434 ай бұрын
_"Dealey overconfidence"_ was a curse for US sailors... JFK decided he could ride through _Dealey Plaza_ in Dallas in a convertible despite being warned of its dangers. It didn't work out well for the former sailor.
@takashitamagawa58816 ай бұрын
The Japanese navy was chronically short of destroyers, literally from day 1 of the war with the US with the attack on Pearl Harbor. The carrier attack force had but nine destroyers escorting the six most valuable ships in the fleet - the six fleet carriers - that launched the air attack. Never enough destroyers to put into their fleet formations, let alone perform escort duty for merchant shipping. The specific targeting of Japanese destroyers by HARDER had an outsize effect on the Japanese Navy's ability to fight its battles with the US Navy as well as maintain its lines of transport within its empire.
@lucianene774118 күн бұрын
A cautionary tale against pushing your luck.
@GreyWolfLeaderTW6 ай бұрын
Having learned about the submarine war against the Japanese in WWII and how incompetently the Japanese handled that crucial aspect of the war (never developing either the techniques or technologies the US and British developed to handle the German Wolf Pack), one can pretty accurately say the outcome of the Pacific Theater was predestined by the fact that the US had a large and powerful submarine fleet that could interdict and sink the near entirety of the Japanese merchant fleet, starving it of the resources the Japanese Islands themselves lacked and would be needed to fuel, arm, and run the Japanese Navy and Army.
@mosesracal67586 ай бұрын
The IJN simply didnt have enough ships to cover everything. Theres a reason why the IJN preferred the Kantai Kessen - the Decisive Battle doctrine because they know they cant hold everything. Also despite the obsessiveness of the IJN over planning, they just somehow didnt anticipate the sheer amount of coverage you need to fully transport everything that they dont have enough cargo ships. So now the IJN found itself needing more destroyers and more cargo ships - but it simply cant keep up. It wouldnt have been bad if they had secured a peace deal not too long afterwards but they didnt. The IJN simply didnt think they would be fighting up to the point where new technologies and strategies would be crucial.
@MFenix2065 ай бұрын
if US torpedoes had actually worked more than 10% of the time for the first two years of the war, it would have probably lasted half the time.
@CountCristo6 ай бұрын
Great story told in a moving way as usual
@BrickDaniels-qu7bz6 ай бұрын
That 6:00 animation is crisp.
@hyacinthbucket3281Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video. The crew of USS Harder deserve recognition for their courage. I also have two requests: would you be willing to do a video like this about the sinking of the Japanese battleship Kongo on November 21, 1944 by USS Sealion II? You might also be interested in Operation Praying Mantis on April 18, 1988. I hope that you will at least consider it. Thanks.
@jerrylou928517 күн бұрын
That made every Destroyer sleep with just a single eye.
@刘东-p3p6 ай бұрын
Thanks so much!!!
@Harry-ff4vx2 ай бұрын
Always seem to forget the us boats had rear facing torpedo tubes the ability to attack from both ends of the sub definitely came in handy
@bigsarge20856 ай бұрын
Incredible!
@Hugh_janus126 ай бұрын
I like your videos because there very very detailed thank you for putting in all of that work
@bengoolie51976 ай бұрын
The old semi-documentary television series THE SILENT SERVICE features the Harder in one of its episodes. It was a good tv series.
@jamesscalzo30334 ай бұрын
Loved the video @historigraph! Can't wait for the next video man! So, Harder was another Iconic Gato-class Submarine to have been lost during the War. I wonder if Anyone has done a Custom Stat Card for her in "Axis & Allies: War at Sea"? Her Sister, The Barb, is a Somewhat Basic Gato being the Only Boat in the Class that's in the Official Sets. Barb has the Submerged Shot like all Submarines in the Game as well as Audacious Attack which allows her to make Two Attacks against Separate Targets in the Submarine Attack Phase of the Turn. This, combined with her Torpedo Attack Values of 3/3/2/- at Ranges 0/1/2/3 respectively and her Armor, Vital Armor and Hull Points of 3, 6 and 2 respectively and a Speed of 1 equals to 12 Points in the Game. Harder, Given her Service, would likely have the Destroyer Killer (+1 Attack Die when Attacking Destroyers) as well as the Wolfpack (+1 Attack Die when Attacking with Another Submarine with the Same Ability) Special Abilities in Addition to Barb's Submerged Shot and Audacious Attack. I'm guessing that with this Set-up, Harder would Probably be about 14 or 16 Points in the Game. The Respective Dates for the Sub's are 1942 for Barb and Maybe a 1944 Date for the Harder. Before I forget, Submerged Shot allows your Submarines to make Torpedo Attacks against Enemy Submarines. I know that there aren't that many People who are into the Tabletop Wargaming scene, But for those who are She'll be a Great Addition to your Fleet for any Games you may find yourself in even if it's a bit of a Tribute to the Submarine and her Crew. Let me know what you think about this and I'll catch you in your next video man!
@ProWhitaker6 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video
@moonface9786 ай бұрын
The older I get the more sensitive I become to the casualties of war , the statement of “ with no survivors “ instantly brings images of young children with no father coming home , that being said the Japanese did terrible things during the war , so I suppose you reap what you sow
@timesthree57576 ай бұрын
The older I get the less I care. The further away you live from me or if you're not family I'm not going to even send up a prayer. "This just in, 10,000 people in northern England died from an asteroid impact." Me, "Glad it didn't hit where I or my family lives."
@henrycooper3431Ай бұрын
The crew of IJN Ikazuchi was actually one of the more humane group in the IJN, they risked being torpedoed by submarine to save the crew of HMS Exeter and HMS Encounter, which was around 400 men before transferring them to a hospital ship.
@teejay77626 күн бұрын
@@timesthree5757sad
@Raven-rl7gj15 күн бұрын
Nice video.
@joechang86966 ай бұрын
was Harder the first to adopt the tactic of charging the destroyer? The Mk 14 high speed is 46 kt. A destroyer is rated for 35kt+ but may be 30 kt with barnacles on hull + some plug boiler tubes. So, a closing speed of 75kt. 3min rule is 100yd per kt, so 7500 yd per 3min, or 2500 yd in min and 800 yd in 20sec. Would be nice to know what the spread angles were. Early in the war, Japan did not set their depth charges correctly. This was told to a reported, who published it. The Japanese got the paper, and passed it on
@kristoffermangila6 ай бұрын
@@joechang8696 the culprit to that depth charge fiasco is IIRC, a boastful Republican congressman (if it is, go figure).
@Theearthtraveler2 ай бұрын
Quite an accomplishment.
@Bob-The-cat16 ай бұрын
The goat upload another vid
@larryl435 ай бұрын
Thank you
@cathalmurphy45846 ай бұрын
Great video
@dannyhonn9734 ай бұрын
Reminds me of Clark Gable in "Run Silent, Run Deep".
@ClimateScepticSceptic-ub2rg6 ай бұрын
Sad. The rear admiral should have insisted on the crew taking time off. Battle fatigue destroys judgement.
@RailsOfTheSouthProductions5 ай бұрын
Looking at the pic…. It looks like the aft of the submarine is completely missing…. I recall in Eugene Fluckys book “Thunder Below” that he suspected that maybe the sub was lost after a circular run torpedo rather than the result of a failed “down the throat shot” that Harder had by then become known for. Wonder if that is what in fact sunk her, sending her men onto internal patrol.
@amptechron6 ай бұрын
This captain had balls!
@lachbullen80146 ай бұрын
Can you do a video explaining what were the anti submarine tactics of the imperial Japanese Navy..
@CountCristo6 ай бұрын
This would be extremely interesting - tricker to source in English I imagine than some topics - but really interesting
@keith67066 ай бұрын
The basic summary: "You know all the stuff the Americans, British, and Canadians have come up with to fight submarines effectively? Don't do that." Although, to be fair, they didn't have the ships to do it.
@KingJacktheThird6 ай бұрын
Have you done one on the engagement between the USN Taffy 3 and the Japanese Center Force during the Battle of Leyte?
@SuperCrazf6 ай бұрын
Amazing what WW2 American subs can do when they have actually working torpedoes
@williamjpellas03142 ай бұрын
American destroyers, too. Numerous Japanese warships escaped severe damage or destruction because US destroyers fired torpedoes at them that didn't work. One of the worst instances of this was during the First Naval Battle of Guadalcanal.
@MrDlt1235 ай бұрын
Of course it helped that American subs finally had good torpedos that werent duds.
@tcsmagicbox6 ай бұрын
Amazing story!
@redshirt51266 ай бұрын
Japanese Destroyers: exist USS Harder: "I'm not locked in here with you. You're locked in here with me!"
@kurt549011 күн бұрын
I question a few things here. The number of torpedoes launched in each example varies. So I assume the tactic was being developed. When the wolf pack was formed were there any tactics laid out prior to deployment? Hailer(spelling?) Could have flanked the oncoming destroyer and launched torpedoes, covering Dealy. Hailer abandoned his post and ran. I can't help but see it that way.
@ijnfleetadmiral6 ай бұрын
Wakatsuki was NOT an older Mutsuki class ship...she was a modern Akizuki class vessel. Also, Ikazuchi did her best, but it wasn't enough. (Obligatory DesDiv 6 KanColle reference.)
@maxiegrobner90186 ай бұрын
Hubris, then no one goes home.
@bsmartr8066 ай бұрын
Dealey: Rock Japanese: Paper Dealey: I win
@ICII0I6 ай бұрын
lovely, new video
@casualobserver3145Ай бұрын
I wonder why the Hake SS256 didn’t attack while the IJN vessel was engaged with Harder. They were obviously operating together as a “wolfpack” and the IJN vessel could only concentrate its attack on only one of the subs at a time.
@Sandhoeflyerhome2 ай бұрын
GATO... Remember the effect of vowels. The O changes the sound of the A. Thus GATO LIKE gate with an oh on the end.
@tatumergo39312 ай бұрын
Not like GATE, but more GAH - TOH.... it means cat in Spanish and other several romance languages like Italian and Portuguese.
@Sandhoeflyerhome2 ай бұрын
@@tatumergo3931 But we are not speaking Portuguese or Spanish, this is an English channel communicating in English, basic English should be understood before pressing that publish button.
@tatumergo39312 ай бұрын
@Sandhoeflyerhome . Proper names are pronounce in their language of origin, regardless of what the pronunciation might be in another language. It's called having culture and a higher education, so as not to come across as an ignoramus. Just because someone's upbringing was unable to provide them with a sophisticated learning is no reason to continue to educate oneself and become better! Otherwise what would be the purpose of living...... just to occupy space and consume?
@Sandhoeflyerhome2 ай бұрын
@@tatumergo3931 I speak 3 languages and have a degree in meteorology
@tatumergo39312 ай бұрын
@Sandhoeflyerhome . And you're still complaining....?
@OutsideTheTargetDemographic6 ай бұрын
Welcome back. 🎉
@theboss6846846 ай бұрын
I wonder how the rest of the crew felt about doing these extremely risky scenarios that the captain was putting them in.
@jonpato6 ай бұрын
Someone missed a golden opportunity to call Captain Dealy "the destroyer destroyer".
@ThunderSquadronGamingYT6 ай бұрын
Damn that picture3D looks like they really had bad time I think the crew heard the depth change touch the submarine and knew they were doomed I hope we see the inside
@michaelusswisconsin60026 ай бұрын
Rest in peace Harder
@the1magageneral3236 ай бұрын
The Silent Service tv show did a great episode on the USS Harder.
@daylate6 ай бұрын
It fought harder than others.
@frank260801156 ай бұрын
how do you even compute a firing solution for a head-on aspect shot?
@anti-Russia-sigma6 ай бұрын
King’s ban on fish usage was silly,as you should trust your subordinates on such usage.
@sjorgen12366 ай бұрын
have ever considered joining nebula? I think you'll fit in really well with these high quality videos!
@s.porter86466 ай бұрын
HARDER/DARTER/PARCHE/TROUT, never in, always out
@wendesmith624014 күн бұрын
The Clark Gable/Burt Lancaster film Run Silent Run Deep storyline bears a striking similarity to this. It is the bow shots that make me think so. Anybody know?