My father was on the USS Nevada on December 7th 1941. He never talked much about it. He did say he manned an anti aircraft gun and then fought fires for the rest of the day. They then did rotations on the ship for the next few week in case Japan attached again they could at least shoot back. He watched them refloat the Nevada. He was so impressed with the divers that he applied for dive school. He reported to dive school on VE Day. He spent the next 20 years as a diver/master diver on salvage ships in the Navy. RIP Hank.
@purtis994 ай бұрын
My uncle was also onboard that day...
@chriswhitehouse91374 ай бұрын
My mom's Uncle was Nevada's XO before the attack, and commander afterwards. Admiral Harry Thompson. He rushed down to the harbor in his pajamas, driving his son's jalopy.
@4LowRocks4 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was a Chief Gunner's Mate on the Nevada that fateful morning. He survived and like your father, never talked about it very much, but I do remember him saying that they continued to shoot at anything in the sky that they perceived to move for the rest of the day. The rest of the family was living in Long Beach, CA, while he was on the battle ship, and after the attack it was months before they learned he had survived. He went on to get a wartime commission and served a total of 32 years. He was my hero as I was growing up.
@AlanMydland-fq2vs4 ай бұрын
nice
@abcde_fz4 ай бұрын
Bless those sailors. My father was on LST 51. Your father, my father, bless those guys...
@ryanward80392 ай бұрын
My Grandfather was a gunner's mate on board the USS Tennessee on December 7th, 1941. Sadly he passed away on my birthday in 2006. His ship was moored directly in front of the USS Arizona. I saw it in the aerial photograph at 0:22. I have his hat that he wore that day displayed on my desk here next to a picture of his ship. It's so seeing this picture, looking at the Aft Turret # 2 which is clearly visible and knowing that my grandfather was on that ship during the attack and when that picture was taken. Just amazing. I miss you, grandpa. Thank you for your service and your bravery.
@CharlesLicata2 ай бұрын
L pm
@willl7780Ай бұрын
wow...thats great RIP grampa
@christophergeorge1324 ай бұрын
In 1978-80, I waa Junior and Senior in high school. During that time, I was a student of JROTC, and had as my instructor (and later my friend), Lt. Commander Roy Johnson, Ret. He had served on the Nevada as a helmsmen on the ship and described that morning in detail as he and the crew galently got her boilers fired and got the ship underway. Roy said that he had been assigned at the lower bridge at the helm, when they took a hit from above by the Japanese. Roy said after the smoke and heat, he felt a warm sticky feeling all over his body. When he looked down he saw blood covering him and the surrounding bulkheads. He realized that he wasn't injured but then realized that the main bridge had been hit killing an admiral and bridge crew and it was their blood he had on him. They realized that they were sinking and didn't want to block the main channel, so they beached her. A year after graduation, Roy asked me to assist him with a reunion of the survivors of the Nevada. I agreed and made many new friends that served on the ship. I was unanimously voted as a honorary Mid Shipman and honorary member of the crew by all involved. This is an honor I will always be proud of. R.I.P. Lt. Commander Roy Johnson (Ret. U.S.N.)
@paulw43104 ай бұрын
Well done @christophergeorge132!👍
@LouSlade4 ай бұрын
You're a good man. Well on you.
@johnjay94044 ай бұрын
That's so f-ing cool. Like yourself, I'm the same age. My uncle, Bob Olson was on the Nevada. I don't know if he went to the reunion. He was a great guy and because of him, I joined the Navy in 79. Followed him as a gunners mate, but I was in Amphibious assault on an LPD. Anyway, I like hearing stuff about the Nevada.
@dustinhart70124 ай бұрын
That is absolutely an amazing story !
@thelittlesignpost4 ай бұрын
That is incredible, yet very credible. Thank you for sharing!
@twistin1404 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. My father served on the USS Nevada BB36 or as dad fondly referred to as " The Ol' Maru" He enlisted just after Pearl. He went to navy school and he boarded the Nevada on the west coast and remained on her for the duration of the war. My dad was proud to serve on the Nevada. I heard the stories hundreds of times but i never got tired of hearing them. I still have the letter dad received after his service for his time on the battleship and the book. It gives pretty much her history and pictures of all the men in the divisions they served. To the Greatest Generation ..... I thank you for your service.
@littlejoe16334 ай бұрын
Knowing how much effort it took to actually sink Nevada later after the war, makes the damage she took look trivial. Still glad to see her story told.
@peterbrazier71074 ай бұрын
The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and Able and Baker Atomic bomb tests couldn't sink her.
@TheIndianalain4 ай бұрын
Some atomic bomb : "I'm gonna send that old battleship to the bottom" Nevada : "Bring friends"
@dragongaming4794 ай бұрын
@@TheIndianalain or navada: i didnt here no bell
@michaelsturtevant77074 ай бұрын
She was the target ship of Operation Crossroads in 1946.@@peterbrazier7107
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
AND Nevada had the last laugh! During her post Pearl Harbor refit there was was a tremendous copper shortage here in the US, what with the massive conversion from peacetime to wartime manufacturing. When there was no copper available for electrical buss-bars for Nevada the Navy "bit the bullet" and used silver, a half-million dollar's worth, silver being an excellent conductor of electricity and there being no shortage of the same. Fast-forward to the post-war era and when Nevada was sunk as a target ship (After surviving TWO atom bomb tests!) they remembered too late those half-million dollar's worth of buss bars were still on board! Whoops. 🤣
@matthewavignonpetersen58934 ай бұрын
I’m increasingly convinced that some needs have no particular interest in maritime matters to adore this channel. Our friend Mike Brady is one of the best historical documentary filmmakers of our time.
@oxcart41724 ай бұрын
I was just thinking that!
@aleix13374 ай бұрын
Indeed, I am an avgeek but ran out of videos for now and stumbled across this channel instead. It's quite captivating without being too sensationalist, with quality research and respectfully done - that's good ideas, creative design, planning and execution right there.
@elizabethbeierle74644 ай бұрын
I agree entirely! I’m from Colorado, have touched a whopping 3 boats of any kind, and have never been in an ocean. Our friend Mike Brady has largely been my introduction to the maritime world. The biographies of historical ships told in smooth cadences with an abundance of visual aids would be enough to enthrall anyone!
@JosephJohnson-h2f3 ай бұрын
@@elizabethbeierle7464is ,😮
@mbvoelker84484 ай бұрын
My husband and I are watching this series together. We're incredibly impressed with the Captain who was blown off his ship, swam back to her, and rescued her.
@sifridbassoon4 ай бұрын
Amazing video. I want to thank you by proxy for my father, who was in the Pacific during WWII. He died a few years at the age of 94. Toward the end, he spent most of his time watching old western movies. Truthfully I'm not sure how much of the movies he understood. But I am certain he would have loved your two videos. I can see him sitting in his lounger, smiling and nodding his head. Thank you so much.
@AdVapidKudos4 ай бұрын
I want to note that USS Nevada didn't just beach itself to survive but it was a deliberate action to prevent itself from clogging the harbor entrance. Had they sunk in the wrong place the harbor entrance would be blocked for weeks so the captain raced to maneuver to the coast so the Japanese couldn't sink them in the wrong place.
@20chocsaday2 ай бұрын
Indeed. It surprises me that the attack did not include mines laid at the entrance and a few more left inside to hamper free movement for a few hours.
@leoborn40134 ай бұрын
Great series, you’re by far one of the best KZbin creators and historians. Explaining detailed but not to complex for anyone to understand. The day is always saved, if our friend, Mike Brady, uploads a new video.
@AbdMajidMajindi-i4t3 ай бұрын
Ok..by Idea
@harridan.4 ай бұрын
My Mom's uncle Harry Turbeville was a Seabee, an extremely talented welder and fabricator. He was deployed to Pearl Harbor at the beginning of the impossibly massive salvage work undertaken there. We can only imagine what it must have been like for those guys to cut into a mangled bulkhead to find corpses rotting in the tropical heat, over and over again, or to hear about the knocking of the trapped sailors who couldn't be saved. Uncle Harry had more hatred in his heart than anyone i have ever met; he was another kind of casualty of the war. Thank you for providing a place for me to tell someone, anyone, about Uncle Harry, who died over 40 years ago, a twisted, wounded and angry man who only really had room in his heart for his horse. At least he had that.
@Ali_D_Katt4 ай бұрын
Yeah one does not need to die at war to be a casualty. As an elder millennial you can't swing a dead cat in my generation and not hit a veteran of the Iraq/Afghanistan war. I'm lucky, all of my friends and family came home bodily but some of them didn't come home mentally. I fought my own battles at that time and picked up a nasty drug habit to try to cope with those battles and in my journey through addiction and recovery the number of veterans I met was harrowing. I did lose friends to addiction they were just trying to ease or forget what happened over there. I still consider those people casualties of war just in a different sense. It really reflects you and your mom's character that even though your great uncle was one of those hard to love casualties you still have love in your heart to want to pass down and tell his story and keep his memory alive. I'm sure the things he witnessed and experienced were horrendous.
@harridan.4 ай бұрын
@@Ali_D_Katt Thank you for your beautifully written reply. i was born 14 years after WW2, well within the sphere of its echoes, from nuclear bomb drills at school to hearing my parents and others stories about life during the war. i remember the Vietnam War and the coinage of the term P.T.S.D, formerly known as shell shock, first used in reference to Vietnam Vets. There was, until he passed about 7 years ago, a Korean War Vet whom i would see out walking 3 Great Pyrenees dogs. He had a .50 caliber Browning machine gun in his living room and he carried a Walther PPK in his pocket....One day we were talking about WW2 history and i was espousing my epic rant about Douglas MacArthur's colossal tactical errors and his general failures as a human being as far back as when he ordered cavalry troops to run down the Bonus Expeditionary Force, WW1 veterans who had marched on Washington demanding their back pay, which they never received. MacArthur abandoned his men to torture and death in WW2 and then there were his blunders in Korea which caused much suffering among his men....as i ranted old Bruce's jaw dropped and his eyes glittered. his expression said it all: Somebody gets it! Somebody understands!! I am not a veteran, merely someone who reads, however i firmly and passionately believe that we must never forget the lost and broken casualties of war, and their horrible burdens of disenfranchisement, addictions which only fleetingly mask their pain at great cost, and the horrors of war which they can still see but which most people cannot. i have been sober for 32 years, and i would like to say don't give up, there is help out there, sometimes in the unlikeliest places, as long as we are open to it.
@robertjessen15544 ай бұрын
Godspeed Uncle Henry. 🙏🙏❤️🇺🇸
@AlanMydland-fq2vs4 ай бұрын
he saw and did to much😢
@harridan.4 ай бұрын
@@ToniPfau An unfortunate truth. Over the years i have met a few young people from Japan and Germany who are dedicated pacifists, well read and articulate in their desire to make the world a better place. For many years here in New Mexico i was fortunate enough to be a patient of Dr. Ken Yamamoto, a kind, decent man, animal rescuer, and a native son who passed before his time. i always wondered if his family were interred in a camp here in New Mexico however i never wanted to bring it up, however in retrospect i am certain that they were.
@pathallock78682 ай бұрын
Retired sailor here... my uncle Robert(Tio Pat), was on the Nevada at Pearl Harbor. He never spoke of it. I only found out years later when he was invited to attend a memorial ceramony for WW2 vets at Pearl Harbor. Then in his 80's, he stood proudly. God Bless you sir!! Thank you. Pat L. Hallock, HT1(Ret.).
@lpd1snipeАй бұрын
My uncle, Roy Eugene, is still on the USS Arizona standing an Eternal watch with his Shipmates. Never got to meet him but he's the reason why joined the Navy.
@cheriselaron61934 ай бұрын
I actually got emotional watching this! Great tribute to Pearl Harbor!
@EndingSimple4 ай бұрын
yes. effected me too. Made me feel good about what this country can do when it puts its mind into doing it.
@matthewbratton38252 ай бұрын
One of the five Japanese midget subs was never found. Anything ever found over the years. They raised one in the early 1960s at Pearl Harbor. It is really amazing what salvage work and getting the sunken ships back in action.
@RailPreserver2K4 ай бұрын
All 4 parts combined would be a great documwntary
@moparman2nd4 ай бұрын
Drachinifel has done this as well
@TheEDFLegacy4 ай бұрын
@@moparman2nd He did! It's a great series. :)
@willpugh88654 ай бұрын
@@moparman2ndyeah but he’s not our friend like Mike Brady from oceanliner designs
@JeffBilkins4 ай бұрын
I don't doubt it'll appear as a supercut when completed; long videos are all the rage now.
@christopherbodnar99344 ай бұрын
He really does make great videos
@ronjones10774 ай бұрын
This is by far the best report on these ships I have seen in many years. Thank you. My Father served on the Vestal at wars end after serving on a destroyer escort as signal man during Okinawa.
@brownwrench4 ай бұрын
I used to work with Al Weddle. RIP. He was a diver and helped rescue fellow sailors after the attack. USS Tangier. His battle station was the stern gun.
@auntkaz8154 ай бұрын
So glad to have part 2! Can’t wait for part 3. This series is so well done!
@ChesterCochranАй бұрын
My grandparents sent my mother to Hawaii in 1947 as a college graduation present. She told me about taking a boat tour of the harbor and seeing how much damage still remained after 6 years. I went there with my parents in 1971 and we did the same boat tour, and visited the Arizona memorial. It was a moving experience.
@robertbrown50524 ай бұрын
Incredible!! I was blown away with the first video of this series- and now this. Your only half way through yet I feel these should be mandatory viewing for every American high school history student! Mike, your ability to present a compelling and riveting story is truly a remarkable gift!
@iananderson83634 ай бұрын
Mike, your content is better than The History Channel. Excellent work!
@wolfinhiding78574 ай бұрын
Fully agree. Last time I watched The History Channel, it was pretty much no longer about history. That was maybe 12-15 years ago.
@cuddlepaws44234 ай бұрын
The History Channel.... It's a mystery why it's still going. It should be history itself. It should be renamed Alien Tinfoil Hat Channel. We would like to ask two questions of the man with the exploded hair.... ''How much have you made from all this? Also, do you actually believe any of this crap you are pushing???'
@T_R_H_HB2 ай бұрын
I agree. Both History Channel and Discovery Channel are a joke now.
@frankfischer12814 ай бұрын
The destruction at Pearl Harbor looked overwhelming. But with lots of ingenuity and even more hard work, the sailors and other workers did an outstanding job. Good job with this video.
@sammichbreadАй бұрын
i hope to see part 3 soon!! anything that gets posted is a treat, but this series in specific has proven to be extra interesting so far :D
@hughmcaloon65064 ай бұрын
Nice work, sir. Clear, concise, logical story-telling with excellent graphic back drops. Keep up the good work!
@hillaryg4yle4 ай бұрын
This is a fascinating look at a side of Pearl Harbor most people never even think about. Bravo, and thank you!
@ginnrollins2114 ай бұрын
As a Nevadan, the ship always fills me up with pride. The salvage teams did an incredible job saving her. There is another fact that wasn't mentioned here. After Arizona's guns were salvaged, some made it on to Nevada, so in essence both the Arizona and the Nevada got their revenge. I'm still saddened that the ship wasn't saved as a museum ship, but I'm glad that the wreck was rediscovered.
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
Right, the problem with Nevada and the battle ship New York as well was both were "hot" with radiation after the Bikini A-Bomb tests. New York had been promised to the state of New York as a memorial and museum ship but the radiation made that impossible. The same would have been true of Nevada. They were even too "hot" for scrapping.
@chriswhitehouse91374 ай бұрын
@@wayneantoniazzi2706 But in essence they were very different ships from those that were attacked at Pearl Harbor. They underwent very extensive modernization.
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
@@chriswhitehouse9137 Modifications after Pearl Harbor? Certainly. Upgrades in communication equipment, radar installation, most likely new fire control systems for the main batteries as well. But the fact they were "different" ships wouldn't have prevented them from being donated as museum or memorial ships. Nevada and New York may have been WW1 era ships but their combat careers were pure WW2.
@chriswhitehouse91374 ай бұрын
@@wayneantoniazzi2706 Sure. She did great things at Normandy and Iwo Jima. She should have been a museum piece for that along. But she looked very little like the ship at Pearl Harbor.
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
@@chriswhitehouse9137 So what?
@hibob8414 ай бұрын
Excellent video! Just one tiny correction, if I may: hydrogen sulfide (H2S) is not odorless per se. It's actually quite pungent, with a smell similar to rotten eggs. In sufficient concentrations, however, it quickly deadens the sense of smell (temporary anosmia) via its ability to attack nerves, and thereby becomes undetectable. It's highly toxic, corrosive, and highly flammable to boot. Bad stuff, and a major hazard to oil and gas workers (which is how I originally received some education on it). They use electronic detectors, of course-but we were still instructed to GTFO and raise the alarm if we ever got a whiff of rotten eggs...and reminded that it was _not_ a good thing if the smell subsided!
@OceanlinerDesigns4 ай бұрын
Very interesting fact, thanks! That’s horrible stuff.
@JayneCobb884 ай бұрын
I was going to comment the same. Worked 3 years in a sulfur recovery unit. One guy opened a rail car without supplied air and was immediately overcome by the H2S gas. Lucky for him, he fell off the rail car instead of into the molten sulfur.
@robertdug4954 ай бұрын
As a millwright we dealt with H2S in the refineries and sewer plants, etc. you smell rotten eggs you leave the area immediately. Nasty stuff
@jpcallan972254 ай бұрын
@@JayneCobb88 I suspect your colleague was overcome by sulfur dioxide instead of hydrogen sulfide.
@GaryAnderson-hl8ik4 ай бұрын
I did a lot of work back in the '90s in refineries as a factory Steam Turbine Service Representative and the safety training always emphasized that if you smell rotten eggs, do not sniff the air twice to make sure that's what you smelled. An almost impossible human response to stop. And run CROSS WIND if no breathing apparatus was available. We were also told, "You'll only smell it once, so don't blow it off. (ignore it)"
@Rky-pr7zh4 ай бұрын
Thanks! Really appreciate you doing this series on Pearl Harbor. Awesome job as usual…🍻
@monsieurcommissaire16284 ай бұрын
The greatest monuments to the souls and ships lost at Pearl Harbor were those ships restored and the hard- working people who repaired them. Not all monuments are static.
@QuietTiger19684 ай бұрын
Another amazing episode. I look forward to the next two! The story of the events that followed the treacherous Japanese attack, and the miraculous salvage of most of the ships is awe inspiring. The bravery and selflessness of the many men and officers that served in world war two is truly remarkable. Their courage under fire, determination in the face of overwhelming odds, and unwavering dedication to their comrades and country exemplify the highest ideals of heroism. Their sacrifices laid the foundation for the freedoms we enjoy today, and their legacy continues to inspire generations. Each story of valor and resilience from the events of Pearl Harbour are a testament to the indomitable human spirit.
@crazestyle834 ай бұрын
There are 100s of Pearl Harbor attack videos, but none of what came after. Great video!
@crazestyle834 ай бұрын
Modem ships wouldn't be salvageable.
@dca734 ай бұрын
WOW , Mike! Incredible story of the salvage effort to rebuild the Pacific fleet. Can't wait til part 3!!
@556guy42 ай бұрын
Can't wait for parts 3 and 4. This is great documentary.
@JaelaOrdo4 ай бұрын
Awesome, I was impatiently waiting for part 2. Keep making great videos 👍🏾
@gidgetboggs16564 ай бұрын
Same!
@tessat3384 ай бұрын
Thank you for pronouncing "Maryland" correctly! I've been to Pearl Harbor and visited the USS Arizona Memorial. Your narration really gives me a much better sense of the rescue, recovery, and repair than I could get reading off the National Park Service plaques. Brilliant series! I can't wait to see the rest!
@julieputney43174 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mike...this series is engrossing. So amazed to see how these ships were rehabilitated!
@johnneutralobserver59442 ай бұрын
One of the most remarkable stories I have ever seen. What a magnificent and wonderful effort of near super human endeavour. Fantastic presentation
@DonaldLGiles4 ай бұрын
This episode would offer a compelling mix of historical drama, technical ingenuity, and emotional storytelling, appealing to viewers interested in military history, engineering, and World War II narratives.
@kivulifenrir4 ай бұрын
The timing of this couldn't be any better, as I just returned from Oahu. Had my second trip to Pearl Harbor and all these places firsthand, and it's still just as it was. They've immortalized just about everything from that day. Damage to buildings still have the impact marks and shell holes, and the USS Arizona is still leaking her fuel oil. For how chaotic that day may have been, it's an incredibly somber place today, though only two battleships remain in battleship row.
@MrDaewen3 ай бұрын
Without a doubt some of the finest documentary work. Are you paying attention History Channel? Probably not. Eagerly awaiting the next parts. Thank you for your respect and dedication to fine content.
@tracyhue234 ай бұрын
I appreciate this series. It’s odd but I am a big civil war and WWII buff. Your commentary and compassion for both the men and ships is amazing.
@Odin0294 ай бұрын
People might not know Captain Cassin Young was killed at Guadalcanal not quite a year after Pearl Harbor. A year or so after that the Navy named a destroyer after him, and the USS Cassin Young is still around today as a museum ship in Boston.
@celestedestiny4 ай бұрын
My grandpa was a civilian contracted bell helmet diver and underwater welder with the navy and one of a dozen men sent from bremerton navy yard ( puget sound , Washington) to pearl help cut open ships and rescue people and then salvage and refloat ships. He got there days after the attack and stayed for a year working 12 hr days diving on the ships cutting metal and recovering many hundreds of bodies. He only left because he was drafted to the army and sent to the Philippines with Mc Arther and then became a POW and survived the Battan Death march and 2 yrs in a Japanese POW camp.
@marbleman524 ай бұрын
@celestedestiny...Wow....what an incredible journey your grandpa had..!!
@voiceofraisin37783 ай бұрын
Pearl Harbour, December 7th 1941 Fall of Corregidor May 1942 Surrender of Phillipines April 1942 Bataan death march 9th April 1942 One year diving plus basic training plus specialist training? maths no work! If he made it to the New Guinea campaign in 43 that would make more sense? Or he was prior national guard, got activated and his unit went to the Phillipens so he skipped the basic training stages?
@jeffreywolf72854 ай бұрын
Incredible story. Thank you for shining a light on this. I am eagerly awaiting Part 3.
@lingmingching12 ай бұрын
Great job!!! I spent a few years at Pearl. Man, it's like no other place. The history just comes through. I think you did a fantastic job telling this part of the story!
@BrockRuby4 ай бұрын
MIKE!!! This is a fantastic vid on the salvage operations of Pearl!! Most are fast n skimpy. NOT YOURS!! Great vid!! Great detail!! Great photos and of course, narrative!! Keep it up buddy!! Again very professional!
@Typhis1923 күн бұрын
Not gonna lie, very rarely have I ever seen anyone tackle the salvaging of these ships in a documentary, it's usually just glossed over by giving the time it took, while the focus is on the fighting and retaliations. Thank you, this is absolutely fascinating!
@nanabutner4 ай бұрын
Such courage, dedication and determination is incomprehensible today! Our society has lost so much of what made these women and men-both the living and dead- so great! Every day we lose more and more and soon they will all be gone, taking with them the greatness that gave them what was needed to win the war against such overwhelming EVIL! THANK YOU AGAIN, MICHAE, for sharing your vast research and knowledge with us. You do these men and women so proud with your hard work and dedication! You and your team truly are a treasure to all their memories and great accomplishments!
@Deanothefordtech4 ай бұрын
my grandfather was stationed on bb40 uss new mexico, he served throughout the entire pacific theater. The new mexico was hit by 2 kamakzis and he said he was amazed by just how hard of a beating the ship would take.
@dziban3034 ай бұрын
excellent video, however 21:15 Nevada did not have reciprocating steam engines, she had geared turbines. It was her sister Oklahoma that had triple expansion engines, to see which was best. The turbines won and subsequent battleship classes used them.
@davenamanda4 ай бұрын
Wow! The quality of this video is comparable to those professionally produced at television network studios or major production houses. As a matter of fact, this production/video exceeds the overall quality of many produced by those facilities. Mike, I very much look forward to more upcoming videos from you. Rest assured in knowing that many of us are in awe with your productions. Well researched, well produced and very interesting. You have a talent for what you do and I greatly appreciate the time and effort you put forth. Thank you!
@wadeenyart96764 ай бұрын
long time watcher first time commentor. TY for these videos i dont think there is any way this could have been done more professional, considerate, reverant, and truthful. TY once again
@terrygibbs11474 ай бұрын
A fitting tribute to the truly incredible work done by the salvage teams at Pearl Harbor.
@headrushindi4 ай бұрын
My Fathers Uncle, " My Great Uncle Henry Kalinowski was on , and still is on ,the US Arizona . His name is on the monument that was placed over the ship. The Story is legendary in my family , but well documented. Henry was not supposed to be on the Arizona that Sunday Morning . He had shore leave , but instead took the day duty of one of his Buddies who was getting married that Sunday. Henry died in place of his friend. Sadly I doubt his friends wedding took place that day due to the events that unfolded. I have copies of many letters that Great Uncle Henry wrote on US Arizona stationary , and sent back to his family and girlfriend in Ashtabula Ohio. Of course there were no more correspondence after that fateful day. A very poignant story , that I am surprised was never elaborated upon in any documentary or Hollywood film. There is a small section of HWY 8 between Cleveland Ohio and Ashtabula which has been named the Henry Kalinowski highway. and a monument has been erected to him in Downtown Ashtabula City.
@scottzehrung48294 ай бұрын
What a great series! Thanks to Mike and team, another fantastic production. A WWII collaboration with Mark Felton would be a dream team.
@Roosters_Restos4 ай бұрын
My dad joined the navy in feb 1942 and march headed to pearl to join others in the salvage efforts. My dad was a machinest first class. He told stories of sailors on deck of the uss Holandia doing calisthenics as bubbles would emerge from the deepths and talked about the stench and some men puking on deck or others that got gravely ill days later from it. With most of his time spent in the belly of the ship making parts he only saw and smelled it once but even at 72 he said that smell haunted him and was set off by some smells like the day we were cutting up a dead tree in the woods. He died later that year but it took him over 50yrs before he told the tales of the days at pearl. Later the uss holandia would be a transport carrier and repair ship. She still did her part in the war even though she was a small carrier. I have talked to many sailors about pearl that survived just curious about it. A common comment was. Boy you dont know what horror and loss is. 1000s of good men left to the sea to rot like the meat mike talked about. So think of that smell for a bit.😢
@nickmccauley75144 ай бұрын
My friend Mike Brady, absolute beautiful series man. So glad I found these. I’m an avid war documentary watcher and have ran out of WW2 videos to watch and this has made my day!! Can’t wait for part 3 & 4!
@texas2cv2 ай бұрын
this series has been awesome. thank you for your efforts.
@Natale_Luca_9814 күн бұрын
Where are Parts 3 & 4 ??
@68airАй бұрын
Wow--fantastic academic treatment of a very important tie in history for the US and US Navy.
@ralphkarkur4 ай бұрын
This video popped up as a suggested topic. Very well put together. Very informative. And it was even more interesting than it normally would have been because of the fact that I was at Pearl Harbor just 3 weeks ago on vacation. Now I HAVE to go back and watch part 1 and will be looking for 3 and 4. Well done.
@BHuang924 ай бұрын
Half of the ships at Pearl Harbor will later get their revenge at Surigao Strait.
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
They were called "The Pearl Harbor Ghosts" and they got their revenge all right.
@mikemcguire11604 ай бұрын
Pretty much all of them were decommissioned by 1950 and scrapped by 1960 or sunk as targets. As "standard" US Navy battleships their flank speeds topped out at 21 knots, too slow to keep up with 30+ knot carriers.
@rogerstlaurent87044 ай бұрын
@@wayneantoniazzi2706 The japanese got smoked at Surigao Strait
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
@@rogerstlaurent8704 That they did. Those were old battleships but they could still shoot.
@jonnyblayze51494 ай бұрын
5 out of 8. Little more than half
@DavidCaban-m7w4 ай бұрын
⚒I love this video. It takes me back to my times living on a war ship. I served on the USS Little Rock CLG-4 from 1973-1976 as a Hull-Tech Repairman and those were the best times I had. I was one of the lucky ones who survived the Vietnam war because I was stationed in Europe. My elder brothers did not make it back from Vietnam. God Bless All Veterans. Thanks
@johnzangari34323 ай бұрын
I just stumbled across this video 2 days after returning from Hawai’i. My reason for going there was not sun ‘n surf, but to see Pearl Harbor, a place I’ve always wanted to see since my father was there on December 7, 1941. Ironically on the 5th my father wrote to a friend stationed in Georgia. They talked about promotions and assignments and how beautiful and boring things were in Hawai’i, be careful of what you wish for. It is postmarked on the 6th. His friend kept the letter until 1996 when he sent it to my mother. My father only told one war story this is it. So, a little before 8am my father was washing up to go to Mass on the Arizona. That would have been with a bar of soap, a face cloth and a bucket of water. When the first bomb hit, he said, that must be a boiler, boilers blow all the time. When the second one hit, he said, something is really wrong 2 boilers don’t blow. Just then General Quarters was sounded; he took the bucket, dumped it over his head, wrapped the towel around his waist and ran to his battle station wearing just a towel for the whole battle. Maybe you have seen my father in the Ben Affleck/ Matt Damon Pearl Harbor movie. Near the beginning of the attack before they know what’s really going on you can catch a glimpse of a sailor on deck wearing just a towel. My father was on the USS Tennessee (BB43) the battleship that’s not talked about all that much probably because it did not sustain a lot of damage and was still seaworthy at the end of the day. But the Tennessee blocked by the quays, Oklahoma, West Virginia and Arizona so it could not go anywhere; eventually it went to Bremerton, Washington. In Jonathan Utley’s book about the Tennessee he said the Captain of the Tennessee ordered a speed of 5 to 10 knots to push back the burning oil from the Arizona.
@henriquepinto96524 ай бұрын
Fantastic documentary, I had no idea that the Americans had managed to save some ships. Congratulations to the whole team. Greetings from Portugal 🇵🇹
@7891ph4 ай бұрын
Nevada wasn't just a participant on D-Day, she was the US flagship. After the war, she wound up being the target for the first nuclear test at Bikini atoll. She survived both bombs tested then, only to later be scuttled off of Hawaii due to her being so radioactive that she couldn't be decontaminated. Her wreck was rediscovered just a few years ago.
@johnlorrieboskovic28364 ай бұрын
Just a note recognizing that the ship being refloated with the inflatables is the minelayer USS Oglala at the 1010 dock. So many incredible stories of the salvage. I highly recommend Descent Into Darkness: Pearl Harbor 1941: A Navy Diver's Memoir by Commander Edwin C Raymer and also Pearl Harbor: Why, How, Fleet Salvage and Final Appraisal by Vice Admiral Homer Wallin, which was published by the Naval Institute. This video series really illuminates both works.
@ElizabethMayo-sf4wg4 ай бұрын
I love this man's videos. I love history and he does an excellent job with his subjects.
@davedavids96194 ай бұрын
Absolutely great video, you did a great job in telling this extremely interesting story, that is so often completely forgotten. Normally documentaries will only tell us the fighting stories. This was a fight on a different level, but worthy to be told. Looking forward to the next episodes. 👍
@marshaprice82264 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for this very informative documentary on the salvaging of so many of the ships that were damaged at Pearl Harbor! This is the first time that I have learned about the salvage operations after the attack. It’s also the first time I learned about all of the ships that were at Pearl Harbor, including the USS Maryland, the ship named for my home state. I had no idea that she was there. It was so interesting to learn that she was repaired and returned to duty (after being reported as sunk by the Japanese) and was very active during World War II. Thanks so much for bringing us this story!
@Shadooe4 ай бұрын
The book "Descent Into Darkness: Pearl Harbor, 1941: a Navy Diver's Memoir" by Edward C. Raymer goes into incredible detail as to what the divers did. Hellish is the word. But one funny story (funny cuz it's not me) was one diver was inside a wreck in the oily, black water, and found he had a huge sugar-cane spider in his helmet, crawling over his face.
@matthewpettengill300815 күн бұрын
Excellent book the way that they excavated the mud under the hull alone would give any normal human nightmares
@Motti224 ай бұрын
I didn't know they salvaged the ships that were sunk in pearl harbor. what a great video with good information, thanks mike!
@fooman21084 ай бұрын
In damage control school they use Nevada as an example of how to save a ship. Nevada was the ONLY battleship to get underway, which caused the Japanese attackers to concentrate on her (to try and sink her in the channel) after being hit by two b torpedoes and five bombs (numbers vary by source). The Pearl Harbor yard tower ordered he to be run aground, at Hospital Point. When she was grounded her DC crews were fighting fires and counter-flooding, moving TONS of water after. She was down by the bow some NINTEEN FEET (NEARLY DOUBLE HER NORMAL DRAFT FORWARD). 6 6 HOURS LATER, AT THE CHANGE OF TIDE, THE FIRES WERE UNDER CONTROL, AND TUGS HAD TO BE CALLED BECAUSE SHE FLOATED OFF!
@historybuff19934 ай бұрын
Some of USS Arizona’s 14” guns were placed on the Nevada. So in a way the spirit of the Arizona kept fighting on long after she was sunk.
@Dakiraun4 ай бұрын
What an incredible effort - and so many firsts that were a "learn as you go" sort of thing. I cannot imagine the emotional trauma some of those men went through in clearing out the ships. Such a good series thus far - looking forward to part 3.
@Daniel-ic5zj4 ай бұрын
Part 3 is coming .. So is Christmas. Just kidding. Thanks Mike. Love the content.
@PhilipAlvers4 ай бұрын
Best Maritime Historian on U tube , by a country mile! Well done sir!
@Headloser3 ай бұрын
It ironic with the Japanese Air forces was so focus on the USA battleships, they forgotten one VERY important detail. Next door were the ENTIRE USA Pacific fleet fuel storage units. Had Japan attack these storage units. USA wouldn't have any fuel for at least 6 months. That alone could have really change the war as we know it.
@sportsdistribution21 күн бұрын
Fortunately Japan’s strategy missed that key point!
@kevinbarry714 ай бұрын
Joke was mostly on the Japanese. Most of the capital ships there were quite old. Arizona and Oklahoma were built before the first world war and were obsolete. The Japanese didn't seem to know about all the ships being constructed at the very time of the Pearl Harbor strike
@rogerstlaurent87044 ай бұрын
100% correct about the Arizona and Oklahoma and a few others The Japanese were looking for the Carrier Fleet as soon the Japanese found out the aircraft Carriers were not at Pearl Harbor one of the Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto said I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping a giant man was he correct
@cavalierliberty68384 ай бұрын
The killer part is they couldn't get to North Carolina or Washington, which became a BIG problem for them very quickly.
@awommack19944 ай бұрын
Most of Japan’s battleships were in the same predicament. Older ships built before or during ww1 and modernized in the 30s. Their most modern ships were carriers and cruisers with only a handful of fast battleships added in the late 30s.
@dallasbishop79294 ай бұрын
They broke the main rule you don't mess the boats . In all of history that's not ended well for anyone, starting way back with the barbary pirates.
@jonnyblayze51494 ай бұрын
@@rogerstlaurent8704No, he didn't. It's been proven he said nothing of the sort. Stop spreading fake @ss false information
@JamesKelleyJr4 ай бұрын
You sir do better work than any historical channel I've seen on television of any year.
@TheHylianBatman4 ай бұрын
I'm shocked to discover there's footage of the Pearl Harbor attack! I had no idea! Another great video, thanks, Mike!
@robertjessen15544 ай бұрын
Incredible video detailing the monumental task of salvage. There is a wonderful book titled "Decent into Darkness" written by one of the divers. He recounts an event. While moving through compartments he could feel the arms of drowned crewmen floating about him against the overhead. It must have been an other worldly experience.
@Rooster82110 күн бұрын
Amazing accurate and thorough job done here. Thank you so much for documenting this massive effort!
@jackieheidorn587529 күн бұрын
Thank you for this information. My uncle survived the attack on Pearl. He Never talked about it and we never knew what happened to the Oklahoma after the attack ended. When we visited the site, we left a lei in gratitude that he was not #300. RIP Uncle Dale.
@cpnquack4 ай бұрын
Ok so the image of the USS Nevada being raised from the water in the state that it was in, being able to float and eventually sail under her own power was just incredible. Huge respects to the repairmen of yesteryear for pulling these miracles off.
@yoyodynepropulsionsystems4 ай бұрын
The Arizona lies at the bottom of Pearl Harbor and was listed as a national memorial in 1966.
@cpnquack4 ай бұрын
@@yoyodynepropulsionsystems ok so i swore i typed in Nevada for the ship being raised but uh, i guess youtube had other plans for some reason. anyways, thanks for correcting me.
@MrGoesBoom4 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this, it was a horrific event but damn near everyone focuses on the battleships and nothing else. Good to hear about the 'little' guys and other ships
@danestormfeltz78154 ай бұрын
I really like this series Mike! Please keep the videos on it coming!
@artswri4 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@tidlywinks4 ай бұрын
Ive been learning about Pearl Harbour for many years. And just when i thought i had seen and heard it all you come along and provide not only a great little history lesson; but you also provide some amazing footage ive never seen before. 10/10 would recommend.
@seymoarsalvage4 ай бұрын
I JUST watched part 1 yesterday and wondered if there were ever going to be a part 2 😂
@jakubrusnak34324 ай бұрын
Same here
@Daniel-ic5zj4 ай бұрын
About time. : P
@PeterWolniewicz4 ай бұрын
Where did you find part 1? I can’t find it
@uptoolate27934 ай бұрын
I can't find it either....
@tonyzed68314 ай бұрын
@@PeterWolniewicz Same question. Where is it?
@krymera666x72 ай бұрын
As a sailor, there’s nothing worse than the thought of being trapped below decks while she sinks.
@kahunathesune-sune94282 ай бұрын
the outstanding depth and research put into this series has truly been awe-inspiring. thank you for such an excellent, unique retelling. it'd be awesome to see some coverage of the submarine effort at this time! holding the line in the pacific while Pearl recovered as best she could.
@timothywalker45634 ай бұрын
This story boggles the mind even long after the war. Amazing 😊
@SofMoth4 ай бұрын
pearl harbor is a special interest of mine i’m so happy part 2 is finally here, thank you mike brady from oceanliner designs
@67comet4 ай бұрын
Totally interesting episode (series). Thanks for cranking these out, they're always a treat.
@trentjordan13414 ай бұрын
I was literally wondering 30 minutes ago when part 2 was coming.
@woodandwheelz4 ай бұрын
I was aboard the USS Preble DDG-46 (the 5th Preble) but the 4th Preble, DD-345 (later designated DM-20 in 1937 and again to AG-99 in 1945), was in Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 1941. She was in dry docks port of the Cassin and Downs. Her crew helped fight fires and also man guns on other ships as the Preble had no ammo due to being in dry dock. I'm trying to find photos of her there but so far have been unsuccessful. Thank you for this video and honoring the men that day, both living and dead. God bless.
@randerson41244 ай бұрын
4:34 I saw a documentary years ago where this exact photo was shown to one of the planers of the attack after the war, the US officer interrogating him, pointed out the tank farm in the upper left and asked the Japanese officer if he knew what it was. The officer said no, the US officer told him it was the entire Pacific fleet fuel reserve, and the Japanese didn't drop a single bomb on it. Guess the Japanese planners had tunnel vision on the fleet.
@wayneantoniazzi27064 ай бұрын
Great show Mike! Thanks so much for all your hard work in putting it together!
@brucemitchell56374 ай бұрын
Great video, Mike! You always create such a polished, professional video presentation, but I think that you and your team really out did yourselves with this series! WELL DONE!!