The Unsettling Disappearance of USS Snook

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Big Old Boats

Big Old Boats

Күн бұрын

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Chapters:
00:00 USS Snook
1:44 Chapter 1: Island Hopping
7:00 Chapter 2: Life Undersea
10:56 Chapter 3: The First Patrol
15:12 Chapter 4: Triumph and Tragedy
18:35 Chapter 5: The Hell Ship
24:05 Chapter 6: Eternal Patrol
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Пікірлер: 381
@opeth1429
@opeth1429 19 күн бұрын
I am an alumnus of the US Naval Academy, and I have been watching this channel for some time (it's fantastic, keep up the great work). I While I was at USNA 30+ years ago, I had the privilege of meeting submariners from this era, and they were impressive individuals with many harrowing stories. I'm glad that you picked one of them to tell, and I am eager to hear more.
@John-zy4zz
@John-zy4zz 18 күн бұрын
Respect, Sir. I'm just a second gen Jarhead, but that was a tough school, was it not? I got to walk through the U 505 as a child. They may have been our enemy, but submariners are all a brave lot
@CaesarInVa
@CaesarInVa 18 күн бұрын
My father was an Annapolis graduate (class of 40). An underclassman and friend of his, Capt. Earl Barret (41, I believe) married my mother's cousin. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Dad went on to fly with the Lexington's airgroup, while Earl went on to submarines. After the war, both were based out of San Diego: Dad over at NAS North Island (where I would serve in the late 70s and early 80s), Earl and his sub at the sub base at Point Loma. They were both interested in the other's occupational field, so they agreed that Earl would take Dad out on a sub for a day or two on its next exercise and Dad would take Earl up in an SB2C Helldiver on a simulated dive-bombing mission. When they returned from their respective outings, both agreed that there wasn't enough money in the world to get them do to the other's job.
@davidthomas1467
@davidthomas1467 18 күн бұрын
Wow an Academy grad that is a Opeth fan?
@AbbyNormL
@AbbyNormL 18 күн бұрын
I’m a US Navy bootcamp graduate 47 years ago and became a nuclear power plant operator on US fast attack submarines. The people that went out on these WWII diesel submarines were far braver than myself. I’m not sure I would have volunteered to ride them.
@SunBear69420
@SunBear69420 18 күн бұрын
Based
@benketengu
@benketengu 16 күн бұрын
My uncle was on the USS Snook. I wish I could’ve known him but I was born in 1960. My wife’s uncle was also a submariner in the imperial Japanese Navy Who failed to return. So our son has 2 submariner Great Uncles on both sides of the Pacific war whose ships failed to return. War is a tragedy
@Dat4valveGuy
@Dat4valveGuy 13 күн бұрын
Wow what a coincidence don’t let your son join the navy lol
@Rexini_Kobalt
@Rexini_Kobalt 9 күн бұрын
​@@Dat4valveGuy or at least not his brother 😂😂😂
@beepseatsfindingfoodtreasu8756
@beepseatsfindingfoodtreasu8756 19 күн бұрын
We have her sister ship. The USS Cod docked on Lake Erie at Cleveland. Even with the amenities, you would be surprised by how cramped life aboard was. It's well worth the time to take a tour of one of these remaining subs. It gives you an appreciation for the young men from across our country who found themselves serving on one. As usual, a great video. Thanks for your dedication and work.
@paahl1572
@paahl1572 18 күн бұрын
I toured the USS Cobia is Manitowoc and I had a really hard time getting around in it. I’m 6’4 and did not fit very well.
@pcka12
@pcka12 18 күн бұрын
If you think that US submarines were cramped take a look at British & German Subs!
@Electriceye1984bySam
@Electriceye1984bySam 18 күн бұрын
Yes, I love the USS COD KZbin channel ! it’s another great maritime channel just like B O B👍🏻
@luckyguy600
@luckyguy600 18 күн бұрын
got to go and visit that boat.
@Electriceye1984bySam
@Electriceye1984bySam 18 күн бұрын
@ that has been on my mind I would really like to take a trip up the coast and visit the USS COD and meet some of the cool crew that I see all the videos.
@tomernest2004
@tomernest2004 18 күн бұрын
My dad, shortly after completing sub school, was assigned to the Dorado. 3 days before it sailed he got bumped by someone with more seniority. The boat left Groton, heading for the Panama canal, but never made it. To this day, despite lots of theories, they don't know why she went down.
@CJM-rg5rt
@CJM-rg5rt 13 күн бұрын
Wow, yeah just read about it. The only sub in US active duty that was lost in the Atlantic during WW2. That's gotta be embarrassing for U-boats, I just read they lost 785 haha. We really kicked their butt and that one of ours was probably struck by a mine or something stupid like that, the only other was a bad training accident off Key West. I know their war was longer and whatever else and it's not a laughing matter but that's bad.
@nancygoerlich8526
@nancygoerlich8526 19 күн бұрын
Just an outstanding job in telling this heartbreaking story and giving another glimpse into the horrors of war, and that war in particular. Those brave men! I can't even begin to fathom how they did it. They died heroes, every one of them.
@jopowers5006
@jopowers5006 18 күн бұрын
The narrator’s vocal quality genuinely conveys compassion and sorrow. So many dreams for the future lost.
@TheSilmarillian
@TheSilmarillian 18 күн бұрын
They are on eternal patrol.
@clarityhouston3499
@clarityhouston3499 16 күн бұрын
It conveys…something else to me. Lol
@Sleep-is-overrated
@Sleep-is-overrated 18 күн бұрын
I used to be a deckhand for two years on the USS Pampanito Submarine Museum. I had no idea Snook as well as Pampanito had an unfortunate history with hell ships. On Pamp’s third war patrol in the South China Sea, she along with Growler and Sealion attacked a Japanese convoy, two of the ships sunk that night were unfortunately hell ships and one of them, the Kachidoki Maru, was sunk by Pampanito herself. Unaware of her human cargo, Pampanito went off to hunt down more of the convoy, only returning to the original area 3 days later. Initially when they came across rafts of flotsam and lifeboats, the crew thought they were Japanese survivors and were cautious about approaching them, it was only after they realized they were British and Australian POWs did they start rescuing them as fast as they could. Pampanito herself rescued 73 men, her whole crew slept out on the main deck so that the former pows could sleep on the beds, bedding was even put on the empty torpedo skids just so that everyone they rescued had a place to rest. There’s 16mm footage of the rescue here on KZbin, and I highly recommend the book “Return From The River Kwai”, it chronicles all of the POWs journey from prison camp, to hell ship, to rescue and repatriation
@chatnoir7923
@chatnoir7923 17 күн бұрын
I have been on the Pampanito in SF. I did know about its unfortunate history in that specific case. Unimaginably sad.
@mahbriggs
@mahbriggs 17 күн бұрын
​@@chatnoir7923 As have I! Although I did not know of the sinking of the prisoner of war ships at the time! Just another reminder of the horrors of war!
@noneyabeeswax3200
@noneyabeeswax3200 17 күн бұрын
❤❤
@alexwilliamson1486
@alexwilliamson1486 16 күн бұрын
Why 2 bombs dropped…
@berserkerwolf84
@berserkerwolf84 18 күн бұрын
The dedication you put in to the old pictures and footage is really amazing. This channel is so much better than any history channel on TV. Thanks so much for your hard work and dedication
@eviemoody
@eviemoody 18 күн бұрын
When I joined the US Navy the recruiter asked, “how would you like to serve on a boat that’s designed to sink?” I simply said, “nope.” Then I went on to serve on aircraft carriers. A decision I’ve never regretted.
@Rollacoastertycoon
@Rollacoastertycoon 16 күн бұрын
gay -usaf
@Venom_Snek
@Venom_Snek 15 күн бұрын
Yeah but those aren't designed to sink, so when they do sink it's significantly worse. If you think about it, boats are really just worse submarines.
@pault726
@pault726 13 күн бұрын
Ignorant recruiter. They're designed to dive, not sink.
@titaniusanglesmith9690
@titaniusanglesmith9690 3 күн бұрын
i mean obviously? an honorable discharge promises you gainful employment due to both federal & state laws ensuring yall get hiring priority and then if that wasnt a thing? theres always bootlickers that will hire you to share the honor of what is considered service these days. you can feel offended by this or think im full of shit but you cant deny its difficult to claim something is a "service" to ones country when the benefits for those that enlist massively outweighs anything negative, and just to be clear, I am not associating veterans of either our planets only total wars with what the US military has been doing since vietnam.
@Feline_Frenzy53
@Feline_Frenzy53 19 күн бұрын
Well told story. May those men rest in peace. Thank you.
@colinleat8309
@colinleat8309 18 күн бұрын
Another fantastic, but heartbreaking episode. There is NO WAY I could handle being on a Sub. I'm somewhat claustrophobic and would lose it after one day. I really admire their courage.
@sdcoinshooter
@sdcoinshooter 18 күн бұрын
I toured the U-505 in the Chicago museum. I felt claustrophobic in that vessel, on land and peace time. Imagine what those men endured under attack 300’ deep. Courage? More then I’ll ever have.
@Whickedlee
@Whickedlee 16 күн бұрын
You would be surprised. There are amazing things you'd be capable of if the culture made it unacceptable to simply declare yourself incapable. If the culture reminded you of your responsibilities instead of your rights. You could.
@OCinneide
@OCinneide 10 күн бұрын
I went through a uboat in a german museum, I'm 6'5 and couldn't stand straight up, there was a coast guard boat beside it that they were showing off the engine on so it was pouring out smoke (they had just turned on the engine before I went below deck on the uboat and the whole uboat had filled with the smell of gasoline and smoke. There was also basically a line through it, so you couldn't turn around and had to wait for people to move forward. You had to climb a ladder down into it and a ladder out of it. It was pretty surreal and I thought I was claustrophobic but actually being in that situation surprisingly I was relaxed. I'm sure if you were onboard you would be alright but it's one of those situations where you just have to accept your fate.
@showze21
@showze21 18 күн бұрын
i was in the submarine force in the 1970s, this video is good. my grandmothers cousin was CO of the uss runner, lost during the sub war around japan, on 22 June 1943 runner was attacked and apparently damaged by Imperial Japanese Navy forces. its good that the video doesnt sugarcoat the awful living conditions inside
@marksebastianjordan1985
@marksebastianjordan1985 10 күн бұрын
Thank you for the dignity and poise of your narration. You know exactly when to stop and let a point resonate with the listener, something that is almost a lost art today, where every pause is usually edited out. This channel is an oasis of humane storytelling of important stories. Your thoughtful work is deeply appreciated.
@onebigadvocado6376
@onebigadvocado6376 14 күн бұрын
I don't normally comment twice on a vid, but I'll make an exception here. In the context we find ourselves in today, that comment about men dying for the disagreements and ambitions of other men made me choke up. Thanks Brad. Thanks also for the reference to US isolationism prior to WW2. It's an important context. Thanks for keeping it in the public consciousness.
@BigOldBoats
@BigOldBoats 14 күн бұрын
Thank you, glad you appreciated it.
@dalecaldwell
@dalecaldwell 18 күн бұрын
Your videos about wartime losses are amazingly thoughtful. Thank you for your service.
@benpotter4905
@benpotter4905 18 күн бұрын
Another sister sub the USS Silversides 236 is docked in Muskegon, MI as well. It is a museum ship and you can take tours also there. It is surprising how cramped it is on there
@chromesphere
@chromesphere 18 күн бұрын
I thought the Silversides was a Balao class boat?
@luckyguy600
@luckyguy600 18 күн бұрын
been there. tip-top shape she is.
@kirkgorte128
@kirkgorte128 12 күн бұрын
​@@chromesphere Nope a Gato, commissioned Dec. 15, 1941.
@jetsons101
@jetsons101 18 күн бұрын
I am so impressed by the "Respect" you give to those that died, you give this respect freely even though you have never meant any of those in this video or any of your videos for that matter. Great job.
@OCinneide
@OCinneide 10 күн бұрын
I was expecting an AI video when I clicked but really surprised!
@artshaw6962
@artshaw6962 14 күн бұрын
I rode submarines when I was in the Navy in the 1970's. Mostly Nukes, but I rode the USS Thornback, a vintage WWII diesel boat, from Groton to Key West after it had been turned over to the Turkish Navy. Yes, it was cramped, but overall, a very capable and powerful vessel. When you volunteered for submarines in my day, you had to be interviewed by a Navy psychiatrist to determine if you were suitable for this type of duty. When asked why I volunteered for Submarine duty, I said very matter-of-factly "There are two types of ships in the Navy, Submarines and Targets. I really don't want to go to sea in a target." So I rode submarines for my entire Naval career.
@sus8e462
@sus8e462 18 күн бұрын
A very respectful & touching story to honor the memory of those brave men that remain lost.
@faithcastillo9597
@faithcastillo9597 16 күн бұрын
I love your story telling. You make the people in the stories come to life. I feel sadness when they don't come home, and joy for those that do. Thank-you for the research and script writing and editing and all that goes into creating these wonderful stories.
@Redhand1949
@Redhand1949 18 күн бұрын
A sad, sobering story, told with drama and wonderful "production values." I am extremely impressed.
@straightup7up
@straightup7up 16 күн бұрын
Love those vintage slide transitions, leaves viewers with sense of mystery and feeling of the unknown. Great work
@toolsteel8482
@toolsteel8482 19 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing the story of the Snook and the service of her crew.
@arkansasboy45
@arkansasboy45 18 күн бұрын
Great video. My dad served on a Gato boat, the USS Rock.
@waldopepper1
@waldopepper1 16 күн бұрын
“designed to strike without warning before vanishing into the shadows” is a great way to describe sub-mariner warfare. For all of the souls who reside in Davy Jones locker, a salute.
@iangoddi
@iangoddi 18 күн бұрын
This is a great Channel. I joined the Navy in 1987 and got out in 1993. I joined during Reagan and left the Navy when Clinton was president... The cold war had ended and the US was cutting back on the military... My grandfather was on the aircraft carrier Wasp during WWII. He would have been a pilot but in 1945 he was diagnosed as color blind. He did go on to serve during Korea. I was a helicopter aircrewman.
@alrise1776
@alrise1776 18 күн бұрын
My grandfather was on the USS Wasp during WWII too!
@mahbriggs
@mahbriggs 17 күн бұрын
One of my uncles served in the Army Airforce in Europe! He initially applied as a pilot trainee, as he had a private pilots licence, but they discovered he was color blind! So they made him a waist gunner and then a radio operator instead.
@stargazer5784
@stargazer5784 18 күн бұрын
Thx. Great video. It's worth mentioning that the 1922 Washington naval treaty was just as much about curtailing the debilitating economic debt that was incurred when countries became involved in naval arms races, as it was about reducing the risk of war. It took vast amounts of wealth to build and maintain large fleets of battleships, battlecruisers, heavy cruisers, etc., not to mention the hundreds of other smaller vessels that would be required to support them when assembled into battle groups. As a point of reference, USS Texas cost over 2 million dollars to build over 100 years ago, which was a huge amount of money in those days. Trying to keep up in a worldwide arms race could destroy the economies of many nations. Those ships that the Germans scuttled in Scapa Flow represented a huge loss dollar wise in war reparations to the victors after WW1.... United States submarine development prior to WW2 was focused on building what were termed as fleet submarines. As the name implies, their primary role was to be scouting and reconnaissance for the fleet, and not necessarily becoming directly involved in lone engagements with surface war ships. Basically, they were rather expensive to build, and were also considered to be quite vulnerable to attack by ASW vessels. As a result of this line of reasoning, the captains were trained to conduct operations very conservatively and with as much stealth as possible, acting as eyes and ears for the fleet. As it was, the whole strategy was a dismal failure. With a maximum surface speed of around 20 knots, the subs built were never able to attain the speeds necessary to even keep up with surface vessels moving at engagement speed, let alone range out ahead of them to do any scouting. Further, any such attempts would greatly reduce their range and put a huge strain on the propulsion system. Make no mistake, the United States built some excellent subs, but they were never useful for the role that the navy originally intended. Once the war broke out, everything changed, and even though they were burdened with the horrible Mark 14 torpedo, they did an outstanding job. We all owe a debt of sincerest gratitude to the men of the Silent Service.
@luckyguy600
@luckyguy600 18 күн бұрын
for sure. All the country's plaques list like 50 or so missing. It wasn't for the chickens of this life like me. Tough dedicated men from all the countries involved.
@philgiglio7922
@philgiglio7922 17 күн бұрын
​​​@@luckyguy600...the lost 52 project has found 4 or.5 of the subs "on eternal patrol '
@The_algor1thm
@The_algor1thm 16 күн бұрын
Good job illustrating the strife these men had to endure. I'm fascinated by World War 2, easily the most interesting 6 year period in human history. I enjoy Drachinifel's videos, but he focuses on the technical aspects of the vessels. This video tells a deep and moving story about the human costs of service during war time.
@cellolaurel
@cellolaurel 18 күн бұрын
Thank you. By far one of my most favorite channels.
@fiona8230
@fiona8230 19 күн бұрын
Everything about submarines are my personal genre of nightmare fuel.
@lochlanmuir2291
@lochlanmuir2291 19 күн бұрын
Are you claustrophobic?
@ald1144
@ald1144 19 күн бұрын
Submarine technology is fascinating. I love touring museum subs. I have deep respect for anybody who crews one. As for doing it myself, stick a torpedo into that idea, no way.
@JohnWayne22-b6w
@JohnWayne22-b6w 19 күн бұрын
you should look up the soviet sub K19
@tamlandipper29
@tamlandipper29 18 күн бұрын
Submarines are where engineering becomes theology and faith.
@matthewmiller6068
@matthewmiller6068 18 күн бұрын
I have a co-worker who used to be in the Navy on a submarine, he was explaining it that anyone who is on a submarine has to be a minimum amount of crazy, just sane enough to be able to carry out their orders but insane enough to be willing to work in something that sinks intentionally.
@wheresmyoldname
@wheresmyoldname 19 күн бұрын
Here we go ! Love the channel my guy, staying away from all of those a.i cookie cutter channels that run rampant...😒 Oh also, Love the voice, please don't ever sellout! Stay You 🫵💪🥳
@Tal-q3r
@Tal-q3r 19 күн бұрын
like, titanic uploads ad nauseum? 🤣
@Sevenigma777
@Sevenigma777 18 күн бұрын
This guy's voice at the same time can be the most soothing sound you have ever heard or the most eerie and spooky voice you ever heard! Very easy to fall into a trance like state just listening
@ripwednesdayadams
@ripwednesdayadams 13 күн бұрын
The photos make me cry. They look so much like my own grandparents. I think about how easily it could have gone another way, with mg grandfathers dying in WWII and the Korean War. Great job as always.
@lukesimonbrothers
@lukesimonbrothers 10 күн бұрын
So glad I stumbled across this channel. Amazing production, research, and storytelling. Easiest subscribe i've had in a while
@stevenr5534
@stevenr5534 19 күн бұрын
I imagine that during World War II that many ships on all sides disappeared without a trace. So it's fascinating to hear a story about one of them. My, admittedly uninformed, guess is that the submarine was sunk by the Japanese navy. A second, less likely, possibility was that the Snook was sunk by one of its own torpedoes, which circled back. This was a known problem, as you stated early on in the video. Thank you for another great video on maritime history.
@Jeff-ty1ek
@Jeff-ty1ek 18 күн бұрын
Happiness is a whole gale at 30 feet. That's why many left the 'surface skimmers' and headed for the boats.
@NunnyaBidniss
@NunnyaBidniss 17 күн бұрын
Great video. I particularly enjoyed hearing the nomadic merchant song “Dispair” from Elden Ring. Perfect choice
@bluesioux9538
@bluesioux9538 19 күн бұрын
USS Snook?!? The name piqued my curiosity so here we go.....I know I'll learn alot from you!
@maarten.dejong
@maarten.dejong 18 күн бұрын
Dutch word for pike (snoek). A common freshwater/salty water fish.
@dzzope
@dzzope 18 күн бұрын
@@maarten.dejong Thats where the word comes from but I believe there is a fish in the Caribean called a Snook.
@samulivainionpaa9338
@samulivainionpaa9338 18 күн бұрын
@@dzzope You would be correct, Snooks can be found from the Florida's coast all the way down to Brazilian coast including the Caribbean
@rickgrimes4133
@rickgrimes4133 18 күн бұрын
Loved this!! You did an amazing job telling the story Thank you
@davidcustard9311
@davidcustard9311 18 күн бұрын
Great story. Wonderful storytelling. Highlight of my Saturday. Thank you
@Electriceye1984bySam
@Electriceye1984bySam 19 күн бұрын
Yay! B O B another Saturday morning vid!🎉 thanks! I’m back on Sunday morning to watch again. This is a crazy world we live in and I’m glad there’s channels like this to learn some interesting facts. ❤ thanks👍🏻
@jakubstrumillo
@jakubstrumillo 19 күн бұрын
Next time please cover famous ORP Orzeł escape from Tallin and its later disappearance.
@died4us590
@died4us590 19 күн бұрын
I like stories about war time vessels, because some of the fights were pretty intense. Have you thought about doing a video on the PT109 Kennedy story, because not many people know the amazing story of it's sinking. I try to comment to help the algorithm, and watch your sponsor material to help your channel. You do a great job on these video's, and you research thing's properly, while paying respect when vessels sink and people die. G-d bless.
@mbvoelker8448
@mbvoelker8448 11 күн бұрын
You are splendid storyteller, bringing these men and ships to life.
@origamikamiful
@origamikamiful 17 күн бұрын
I would love to see more WWII content from you. Back then my family served in the Pacific theatre because they were Italian-American, but they never ever talked about it.
@PeterMigliorini-x4o
@PeterMigliorini-x4o 19 күн бұрын
An excellent presentation of an extremely "sad" naval episode during war duty. Great work & thank you for sharing!
@primatt
@primatt 18 күн бұрын
really well made, thoroughly enjoyed!
@brucemoriarty9964
@brucemoriarty9964 19 күн бұрын
Another really great history story of our old boats and ships and i always watch your videos. Thank you for your work.
@Steven-r1x
@Steven-r1x 19 күн бұрын
I really like this new round of videos you've made for the channel! I've subscribed long ago, so keep up your Outstanding work on this platform!!! ❤❤
@jaynorris3722
@jaynorris3722 16 күн бұрын
I've saved this video to watch today, (20 Jan 2025). I decided to have a Big Old Boat a thon. What's going on in this country has me more than a lot scared and worried. Just couldn't deal with it. Thank Mr.Bradley Little from my whole heart and soul. Thank you.
@rebeccakinney6357
@rebeccakinney6357 4 күн бұрын
Today is Feb 1st and I desperately needed to take a break from the news and horror happening here. It’s actually giving me hope to know someone else also sees the writing on the wall, I feel like I’m going insane screaming for anyone to hear and no one can.
@ivanconnolly7332
@ivanconnolly7332 19 күн бұрын
The Brits limited a sailors service in subs to 10 years, it was not out of concern for their mental health but because of the higher pay rate.
@thejudgmentalcat
@thejudgmentalcat 19 күн бұрын
Wow that was pretty dark, especially the hell ship incident 😢
@bensonFromRegularshow
@bensonFromRegularshow 19 күн бұрын
Spooky stories and Boats, two of my favourite things mushed together. Great video as always
@billb1725
@billb1725 16 күн бұрын
Your work is very entertaining and very well done. Brought life to such a haunting topic, that being a US sub lost on eternal patrol. Thank you.
@miapdx503
@miapdx503 18 күн бұрын
That was excellent. What an amazing ship she was, such a history. I'd never heard of her. Thank you for the work you put in. Truly excellent 🌹⚓ Salute! 🌹⚓
@jez6208
@jez6208 19 күн бұрын
Big Old Boats!!!! That's my Saturday night sorted thank you very much! 😂😊
@ELBOHOS
@ELBOHOS 18 күн бұрын
Great video! Your delivery is second to none.😊
@markhammett5072
@markhammett5072 18 күн бұрын
So cool this Sub has Fairbanks-Morse engines since they are in my Town.
@danstinson7507
@danstinson7507 18 күн бұрын
Most subs of the era were fitted with the vertically opposed Fairbanks-Morse diesel. It's unique design was taller and thinner than most large diesels of the era, making it a good fit for submarine engine rooms. But that design also made them a challenge to work on, especially the bottom cylinders. Navy submarine diesel engineers were an amazing breed!
@luckyguy600
@luckyguy600 18 күн бұрын
Our first TV set was made by Fairbanks-Morse, believe it or not back in 1958. and they had an engine plant in Cambridge Ontario till they tore it down I believe? Cambridge/Galt Ontario.
@markhammett5072
@markhammett5072 18 күн бұрын
@luckyguy600 we have engine plant here in Beloit Wisconsin.
@stevenbowman7766
@stevenbowman7766 6 күн бұрын
From the UK , my Uncle was aboard the Karidohki Maru when she was sunk by the submarine USS Pampinito , 1944 , prisoners from Singapore to the Japanese home islands , slave labour ? There were two ships with 1600 men aboard all allies. Not many survived my Uncle among them , he was 24 year old at that time !!!
@ViolettaVeilchenblau
@ViolettaVeilchenblau 8 күн бұрын
I never knew I was interested in ships but here we are😅 keep the great work on going!
@markstone5597
@markstone5597 10 күн бұрын
RIP young sailors, many battles at sea have a record of some sort, but many, for one reason or another, have been forgotten and lost to history, these people would want to be remembered even though their lives were short. I remember stories about my mother's brother, back seater on an SBD, shot down over Guadalcanal. Wars are so wasteful, so the rest can live, people are their own worst enemies.
@ValerieprimcessAmanda
@ValerieprimcessAmanda 16 күн бұрын
I always enjoy this channel. Informative and relaxing. Thank you.
@grahamkearnon6682
@grahamkearnon6682 19 күн бұрын
Astonishing to think that an admirals ego meant that the fix for the obviously defective torpedoes was delaled SO long. That admiral king who dispised the british navy brass (understandable) so much that he delayed the british enspired 'convoy' system for merchant shipping is beyond sick, condemning, many sailors to a death.
@leighrate
@leighrate 19 күн бұрын
You are aware that the refusal of congress to provide proper funding was the direct cause of the torpedo issues? I believe that they allocated something like $100,000 total for development and testing. Even by the monetary standards of the time that was pitifully inadequate. The reality was the British Navy Brass was (certainly at the beginning of WW2 must better at their jobs than the American Equivalent. With a centuries old traditional of victory. Which showed. That rubbed King, understandably up the wrong way. That wasn't the fault of the American Navy or it's Officer's. It was directly the fault of the whole way Americas political system operated. Under the British System Admirals were Naval Officers first and Politicians a distance second. Promotion in the Royal Navy was (mostly) by seniority and merit. With strict rules as to when an Officer had to retire if they weren't promoted Under the American system, An Admiral has to be confirmed by Congress. They are therefore a political appointee. So you have a ridiculous situation of the Admiral having to be a politician first, and a Naval Officer second. King was, by any reasonable standard, an awkward, outspoken, probably too blunt for his own good, bugger. If he hadn't been supremely good at his job, he would probably have been retired as a Captain. It's interesting to note that once we introduced him to an equally awkward and good bugger by the name of Mountbatten relationships between him and the Royal Navy improved immensely.
@johnhallett5846
@johnhallett5846 18 күн бұрын
actually false. We simply did not have the escorts to form convoys. Troop transports and trans atlantic convoys had the priority. This LIE has been told by the enemies of King to try and discredit him. When Roosevelt called him about his King was blunt. "You want the supplies to reach England and the troops to get where they need to go? This is the price." Look up Bucket Brigade. There were several things tried to ameliorate things. There simply was not the military assets to do much more than was done.
@randomlyentertaining8287
@randomlyentertaining8287 9 күн бұрын
​@@johnhallett5846 Even just forming convoys with just one or two escorts would've been better than just letting ships go it alone. King fucked up by not using convoys. He's still one of our best admirals in history.
@willo7734
@willo7734 17 күн бұрын
Seriously excellent video. I think it’s one of your best.
@blusnuby2
@blusnuby2 15 күн бұрын
Well done & compelling story about this intrepid war-boat, that was ultimately fated to become it`s brave crew`s iron coffin. Big Salute !
@christaylor4477
@christaylor4477 16 күн бұрын
You are an amazing storyteller! Thank you.
@benvandermerwe4934
@benvandermerwe4934 18 күн бұрын
Great historical journalism and professional presentation. Thanks.
@stvrob6320
@stvrob6320 16 күн бұрын
Great video. Thanks for all your hard work. @31:38 Sonar blip, not radar blip.
@HogMan2022
@HogMan2022 17 күн бұрын
This has become one of my all-time favorite KZbin channels. 🙋
@treavorwhitlock5606
@treavorwhitlock5606 18 күн бұрын
Ships transporting POWs were supposed to be clearly marked. The Japanese intentionally did not mark their POW ships to both cause situations like the snook, and cause allied ships and airpower to think twice. They were some real bastards at the time
@Hellsong89
@Hellsong89 18 күн бұрын
Like in many similar comments, this is failure to understand their culture and honor system. Those that surrendered had lost their honor and in culture that values honor the most, such individuals were seen worse than filth so anything goes pretty much, specially since they didnt even commit seppuku to retrieve their lost honor after capture. Completely different mindset that clashed with western values. Also it didnt help the emperor was seen as the literal God at the time and from there we get to gods chosen people, but that particular phrase is nothing new even today. In the end war is hell and it happens what ever we like it or not, just try to keep civilians out of it, but sometimes the line is rather blurry so shit happens. Its not like there is any country that havent done literal warcrimes during nations existence, so singling out just a few that lost the war just goes to show how long the propaganda has lived and is likely to live, though people have started to question the absolute garbage that has been presented as official history.
@rockadoodoo
@rockadoodoo 17 күн бұрын
I think they lost their compass
@stvrob6320
@stvrob6320 16 күн бұрын
@@Hellsong89 Its not a failure to understand their culture and honor system. Rather its a critique of it.
@BirdieRumia
@BirdieRumia 15 күн бұрын
Do you have any sources for it being deliberate? Knowing the IJA they'd be more likely to have tried to cheat any system of informing about POWs than to try to 'trick' the allies into sinking them.
@MikeyMobes
@MikeyMobes 19 күн бұрын
i live like 5 miles away from the portsmouth naval ship yard!! Cool stuff
@mikeherren5604
@mikeherren5604 18 күн бұрын
Always love your history lessons. You checkout the uss trout sub. Lost in secret mission that may have change the war. Wife’s grandfather was in it.
@holopilot2241
@holopilot2241 19 күн бұрын
Excellent work!
@matthill1727
@matthill1727 18 күн бұрын
Great presentation, style and content. Keep it coming. I love visiting US submarines but as a Marine I'd prefer they still be attached to the dock.
@fairmanbockhorst1181
@fairmanbockhorst1181 17 күн бұрын
Good story, well told and well illustrated. Made my years on 603 look sumptuous by comparison.
@Gangstameister42
@Gangstameister42 16 күн бұрын
The submarines shape and the way they just pierce the water always fascinates me. Ever since I had an rc one
@wendys390
@wendys390 18 күн бұрын
I cried to see all those young men in the last picture. An anti-war tale of war, well told. Thanks.
@rockadoodoo
@rockadoodoo 17 күн бұрын
They were so full of life and promise
@hadrianwall9157
@hadrianwall9157 3 күн бұрын
..love that colorized footage of the war!
@williamdunklin
@williamdunklin 19 күн бұрын
Well told, as always. 👍
@ivoryjohnson4662
@ivoryjohnson4662 16 күн бұрын
That was a fantastic story thank you for compiling this article
@heikkiremes5661
@heikkiremes5661 17 күн бұрын
It's usually pretty quick when the hull implodes. Barely enough time to get scared.
@hanovergreen4091
@hanovergreen4091 6 күн бұрын
Ugh. Well done Lad! Grim but Thank You for telling their story. Best Regards and Best Wishes!
@dkoz8321
@dkoz8321 16 күн бұрын
I was never Seaman 2nd Class. But I do have 2nd class seamen
@trj1442
@trj1442 18 күн бұрын
Another excellent episode. Thankyou.
@aarondeck1884
@aarondeck1884 19 күн бұрын
Oh my god, Soo well done!
@HiddenHistoryYT
@HiddenHistoryYT 16 күн бұрын
Great video & RIP to all those sailors 🇺🇸
@babyswheels54
@babyswheels54 19 күн бұрын
Another excellent job!
@rallfsvirkstenis1670
@rallfsvirkstenis1670 19 күн бұрын
great beginning of a weekend
@NancyWilliams-w7u
@NancyWilliams-w7u 17 күн бұрын
Really enjoy listening to these stories.
@Paulftate
@Paulftate 19 күн бұрын
semper fortis ... semper fi 👋
@Lisa1111
@Lisa1111 17 күн бұрын
Good gravy, I had no idea a submarine could large! So to speak naturally. I'm sure to these brave men had a rough go in a bathtub under the sea ❤ Thank you boys 🇺🇲🙏🏽
@armphidiic2609
@armphidiic2609 19 күн бұрын
Damn, this is a grim story. A very interesting one, for sure, but even if the sub hadn't gone down, this would be a hard tale.
@andrescer
@andrescer 17 күн бұрын
this was incredible. well done.
@leemacpeek2698
@leemacpeek2698 3 күн бұрын
excellent story telling
@stevenkarnisky411
@stevenkarnisky411 18 күн бұрын
Accurate and well told! You have done justice to the sacrifice of these men!
@Robear538
@Robear538 19 күн бұрын
Santa Claus is a swindle?!
@joefin5900
@joefin5900 18 күн бұрын
The Portsmouth Naval Shipyard is in Kittery, Maine. Portsmouth, NH is across the Piscataqua river.
@GanzotheSecond
@GanzotheSecond 18 күн бұрын
thank you for mentioning the atrocities committed by imperial Japan, it's far too often left out when imperial Japan is covered. Their actions in China are comparable to their ally h!tlers atrocities in Europe, and they've never apologized for it (the US kinda let them get away with it btw) great video!
@johnoneill5661
@johnoneill5661 18 күн бұрын
Does make me wonder if the atrocities committed by Japan had been against white people of a certain religious belief would america have been so easy on the culprits?
@mrmagpiepromotions
@mrmagpiepromotions 16 күн бұрын
I remember there was one story where an SS officer was attached to the Japanese and was horrified at the sheer barbarity of the atrocities that were being committed against civilians. That said I feel like the reason the US don't really pull them up on it is because they dropped atomic bombs on them which is a horrific thing to do as well.
@BirdieRumia
@BirdieRumia 15 күн бұрын
​@@mrmagpiepromotionsWasn't an SS officer, it was John Rabe, who was not actually particularly Nazi much less an SS member. He was reporting on the Rape of Nanking. Saying he was SS is pretty insulting considering he saved thousands of lives. I think people do it to make the story more shocking.
@BirdieRumia
@BirdieRumia 15 күн бұрын
Also, look up 'List of Japanese war crimes apologies.' They apologized plenty, they just don't teach it well in their schools and have loud nationalists just like we do.
@richardkeilig4062
@richardkeilig4062 16 күн бұрын
We owe these US submarines and the crews great gratitude.
@CAROLDDISCOVER-2025
@CAROLDDISCOVER-2025 18 күн бұрын
The hardest thing for the ones left behind is to never know or so they say. I believe the hardest thing is knowing that your loved ones not coming back. It only makes it worse not knowing how. Pause the movie. If we knew how our loved ones died exactly, could you ever sleep again?
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