"History of the U.S. Navy: 1775 - Today" - October 13th Navy Birthday Special

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  • Опубликовано: 7 авг 2024
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Комментарии • 163

  • @y4enik_26
    @y4enik_26 2 года назад +26

    Happy birthday, U. S. Navy

  • @Wolde72
    @Wolde72 Год назад +8

    Wow 13 October 1992 was my first day of basic training at Great Lakes.

  • @the1magageneral323
    @the1magageneral323 Год назад +10

    Salute to the USA NAVY Veterans! As John Paul Jones said "I have not yet begun to FIGHT!"

  • @bonehead2768
    @bonehead2768 Год назад +23

    I'm PROUD to say I served in the US Navy.

    • @retiringrenegade9874
      @retiringrenegade9874 Год назад +2

      I am proud to have served for 8 years from 1976 in the Submarine Service, being too late to enlist in the Rangers to see combat in Vietnam!
      Honored to have been a member of the"41 for Freedom" while serving on the USS Henry L. Stimson SSBN 655!

    • @alitlweird
      @alitlweird 9 месяцев назад +1

      Amen! Me too!!
      I now I want to be a part of the writing of the opening chapters of The United States Space Force! ✝️🇺🇸🚀

  • @nickhimes2736
    @nickhimes2736 Год назад +5

    My high school that I graduated from is named after Commodore Oliver Perry, Commodore Perry High School. I also live on Perry Hwy in PA which is named in Commodore Perry's honor.

  • @bobbycv64
    @bobbycv64 Год назад +2

    THANK YOU SO MUCH. THIS WAS GREAT. I will watch again and make some corrections or additions. You did SUCH a wonderful program. I passed on this information to all my USN Family.

  • @abryant78
    @abryant78 2 года назад +7

    One of my ancestors was Alexander McDougall 🇺🇸

  • @danielnortham7003
    @danielnortham7003 Год назад +4

    I grew up there, and I say the NAS puts on a pretty good air show every year, great areas for bike riding and some really good OHV areas near coalinga not to far away.

  • @hwhw4414
    @hwhw4414 Год назад +2

    On three ships that sank . First time your mind is blown. Second time you float above your body and the third time they make you lieutenant colonel Bill Kilgore from Apocalypse Now

  • @earleburtonjr9292
    @earleburtonjr9292 Год назад +2

    A rose by any other name is still rose...

  • @neilcasper2129
    @neilcasper2129 Год назад +6

    Go Navy!

  • @saul2007t
    @saul2007t Год назад +1

    As we venture out into deep space (beyond our solar system), we will still need the Navy & Marines.

  • @Nongdamba500
    @Nongdamba500 Год назад +1

    Great educational vedeo.

  • @PrinceChaloner
    @PrinceChaloner 2 года назад +19

    My 4th great grandfather William Chaloner was the very first Continental Naval Surgeon for the State of Massachusetts and fought in the Battle of Machias. Also my 5th great grandfather Benjamin Foster also fought in the Battle of Machias Bay..

    • @aldossantosrjbr
      @aldossantosrjbr Год назад +1

      Não

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 Год назад

      Wow sport your really lucky to be alive!

    • @michaeltalmadge3257
      @michaeltalmadge3257 Год назад +1

      Good for you!
      is that why you refer to yourself as “ Prince”? 🤔

    • @PrinceChaloner
      @PrinceChaloner Год назад

      @@michaeltalmadge3257 All Chaloner's are descendants of Rhodri the Great of Wales.

    • @christip20
      @christip20 Год назад

      @@aldossantosrjbr How would you know?

  • @skivvy3565
    @skivvy3565 10 месяцев назад +1

    Fantastic. Thank you

  • @ci_a
    @ci_a 2 года назад +6

    go navy beat enemy , , , , , , , ,

  • @cliffordljacksonjr8020
    @cliffordljacksonjr8020 Год назад +21

    American casualties were about 2,400 not 24,000. Most occurred on the USS Arizona, otherwise great documentary.

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 Год назад

      So the indigenous islanders don't count. So typical!!!

    • @curtisblanks
      @curtisblanks Год назад

      7 year naval vet ....uss Sumter last 1181 fighting game cock's ....served under commander Reese an executive commander white 1986-1990 ......haze gray and under way boy's

    • @retiringrenegade9874
      @retiringrenegade9874 Год назад +4

      @@robertsettle2590 Get over yourself! The narrator stated "24,000 sailors lost their lives" in that battle, which is BS!

    • @Carrera-gp9od
      @Carrera-gp9od Год назад

      @@robertsettle2590
      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Lafayettelyle
      @Lafayettelyle Год назад

      That's journalism for you. Like our old illustrious Senator Hollings used to say, " a million here and a billion there and pretty soon it adds up to real money.

  • @bjbeardse
    @bjbeardse Год назад +1

    Lovell was on Apollo 8 not 9. 8 was the first circumlunar flight, 9 was the first flight of the LEM in Earth orbit.

  • @cpcattin
    @cpcattin Год назад +5

    At -58:00 correction. Ports of Call. Not Port of Calls.

  • @FallenAnvilForge
    @FallenAnvilForge Год назад +7

    As a Navy Vet. I thank you for the excellent work put into this documentary. Well done.

  • @saul2007t
    @saul2007t Год назад

    VF-74, AMH, F4 Phantom in the house, and proud of it, Go Navy.

  • @ShortyTW867
    @ShortyTW867 Год назад

    Excellent.

  • @darthblazer340
    @darthblazer340 Год назад +1

    Not as bad as what history Channel changed into with its infinite loop of ice road truckers😢

  • @_.J._.
    @_.J._. Год назад +1

    I fell asleep and in the morning I discover that this played all along

  • @valentinionita4798
    @valentinionita4798 Год назад +1

    This is not history. This is a patriotic documentary.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj3917 Год назад +3

    11:39 You might want to check your date for the founding of the United States Marine Corps. *Hint:*
    It was 10 November 1775.

    • @estherclawson6876
      @estherclawson6876 5 месяцев назад

      It was indeed. But then they disbanded the Marine corps because Congress wouldn't pay for it until some years later. It was made more permanent after that.

    • @lancew.6568
      @lancew.6568 4 месяца назад

      All the video stated was that in 1798 The Department of The Navy (which, at the time, the Marines were a part of) was PERMANENTLY established. Remember that after the war was won and independence was gained in 1783, that Congress, in its infinite wisdom, abolished ALL ASPECTS of the standing military. ALL aspects. Their thinking was IF we EVER needed a military again that we would just start from scratch like we did with The Revolutionary War. That keeping a standing military in peace time was a waste of money.

    • @jmanj3917
      @jmanj3917 4 месяца назад

      @@lancew.6568 i just went back and listened again...three times.
      Final Analysis: The sentence in question was worded poorly.
      Applying the proper use of the rules of grammar, in this instance, inherently leaves the audience with little clarity regarding exactly which effects occurred, and to whom these events occurred, and (incorrectly), that the Marine Corps was founded in 1798.
      That's all.
      It's just a textbook example of Constructive Criticism...lol

  • @johnholeman2966
    @johnholeman2966 Год назад +1

    Was there and American Navy of the Islands like there was a Contininetal Navy (as in continental 48?)

  • @jasonharding96
    @jasonharding96 Год назад +1

    The most fightingest naval man to date

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Год назад

    Born in Boston I've visited old ironsides many times, just one look at her build tells you where she got her name, cannonballs would bounce of her.

  • @00GrnGT
    @00GrnGT Год назад +1

    Didn't the first female in charge of a sub get kicked off?

  • @nobilesnovushomo58
    @nobilesnovushomo58 Год назад

    I was wondering if you would ever consider compiling and maybe even adding the thousands of Privateers of Colonial/revolutionary America.
    The Mass. Society SAR had a great article stating how numerous they were "Privateers of the Revolution" by Charles R. Lampson.
    Insert Obligatory "John Paul Jones is a Pirate" shanty.

  • @thegreyhound1073
    @thegreyhound1073 Год назад +1

    The most ironic thing. The French monarchy went so far in their contributions to the aid the American revolution that they could no longer support themselves leading to the French revolution. A very important lesson to learn "take care of your side of the street 1st"

  • @attlee2010
    @attlee2010 Год назад +1

    Good documentary but shame it didn’t take an unflinching look at our record during the wars - good and bad.

  • @packrat76
    @packrat76 Год назад +1

    107:18 totally looks like Roger Cross.

  • @w.allencaddell6421
    @w.allencaddell6421 2 года назад +7

    Being in any military service, especially the Navy, had to be extremely difficult. Knowing what Sail to use at what time, having to climb up and down, most of the time Barefoot, hopefully you don't get splinters. The food had to be terrible compared to the officers. And remember these are driven by wind power. So you had to understand wind current and weather conditions.

    • @joem3999
      @joem3999 Год назад +2

      Speaking as a former fisherman. (Bering Sea- Gulf of Alaska) Not much has changed. Crew members still work a specific position. All he needs to know is what things are called and how to follow orders. The ability to ignore the constant fear and seasickness is useful too. The ability to force yourself to eat when you feel like death. Overcome terrible smells. Learning how to take a dump in 50 ft seas... Learning how to sleep in 50 ft seas...
      Easier to climb a Jacob's ladder without shoes. I actually stuffed my boots in my survival suit during drills, and the one time I had to use one. They are only useful if you live long enough to make landfall. Wood wears down when they swabbed the deck with pumice stones. The splinter from cannon shot would worry me more lol.
      You could adjust if you had no choice. Navigation was for the rich boys (Midshipmen and Officers) and still is.

    • @herbertlewis8442
      @herbertlewis8442 Год назад

      The movie 'Master & Commander: Far side of the World' is an excellent movie that illustrates this

    • @herbertlewis8442
      @herbertlewis8442 Год назад +1

      @@joem3999 Agreed about going barefoot. It would allow the feet to adhere to the ropes or other surfaces much better

    • @annpeerkat2020
      @annpeerkat2020 Год назад

      @@joem3999 so a good job to recommend to the chilluns you reckon?

    • @mattkaustickomments
      @mattkaustickomments 11 месяцев назад

      @@joem3999Joe, care to describe the time you had to wear the suit in an emergency? I hope all your crew mates survived uninjured.

  • @LTrotsky21stCentury
    @LTrotsky21stCentury Год назад +2

    Even today, more than 108 years after the fact, this video does *not* mention that it is an undisputed fact that Lusitania was carrying weapons and shells as cargo of war. These were on its ship manifest. So today here we are, perpetuating a myth that the German attack on the Lusitania wasn't justified under the rules of war, and the notice given by Imperial Germany that ships carrying cargo of war would be destroyed.

    • @annpeerkat2020
      @annpeerkat2020 Год назад

      dunno about your name... but the facts are good

  • @Splodge542
    @Splodge542 2 года назад +3

    And I bet the food and service life is better than the Army. That's how I found it as a teenager way back then anyhow.

  • @dangerdoberman
    @dangerdoberman Год назад +2

    Back in 1775! MY MARINE CORPS CAME ALIVE!!!!!

  • @lancew.6568
    @lancew.6568 4 месяца назад

    Where did the name, United States, originate? The Declaration of Independence!
    Perhaps the most important and certainly the most dramatic sentence in the Declaration comes near the end:
    "That these UNITED Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent STATES."
    The absolute, boldest statement one could ever make to the king of what was then THE MOST POWERFUL COUNTRY IN THE WORLD! (IF that doesn't send a shiver down your spine, nothing ever will!)

  • @AlfredPeeler-yj6sw
    @AlfredPeeler-yj6sw 2 месяца назад

    RVAH-13, AKA Heavy 13, Go Navy!

  • @dooleysmichiganhomestead8339
    @dooleysmichiganhomestead8339 2 года назад +2

    Thumbs up from the Dooleys of Michigan

  • @AverageNiceGuy
    @AverageNiceGuy Год назад

    Nice work 😎
    Somehow the audio is slightly distorted?

  • @tigertiger1699
    @tigertiger1699 Год назад

    The YN & RN.. hell of legacies

  • @SomeRandomDude2020
    @SomeRandomDude2020 2 года назад +2

    Ports of call.

  • @windborne8795
    @windborne8795 Год назад +2

    The US built 6 frigates: 4-44 gun and 2-36 gun vessels. Yet you say moments later that the Constellation was armed with 38- 24lb guns. Where's the explanation of why Constellation had 38 guns instead of 36?

    • @willboudreau1187
      @willboudreau1187 Год назад +1

      Because the researcher as well as the narrator on this so-called documentary are stark raving ignorant retards, that's why. See my comments above.

    • @spikespa5208
      @spikespa5208 Год назад +1

      Gun ratings were constantly changing according to alterations in the ship's design and/or the captain's wishes. The Constitution sometimes had as many as 54 guns on board.

  • @dontfollowme4057
    @dontfollowme4057 Год назад

    The opening of Japan to trade by force Commodore Matthew Perry was not something to be labeled as glorious triumph in history. It was force, and should be labeled as such.

  • @danielch6662
    @danielch6662 Год назад +2

    17:00 Britain attempting to blockade France was an insult to American sovereignity because it amounted to interference with America's freedom to trade with whoever it wants. 200 years later, the USA has the most powerful standing army, navy, and airforce, capable of fighting the rest of the world combined AND it is doing everything it can to stop smaller countries from trading with Iran and North Korea. America grew up to become the abusive parent it complained about. The founding fathers would be aghast.

    • @annpeerkat2020
      @annpeerkat2020 Год назад +1

      I laughed at this post!... the hero oliver perry's actions against japan's sovereignity....what would you call that? USA rah rah rah!
      although I see a different theme in the second half of your post.
      A bit like jews in ww2, followed by modern day israel's holocaust against palestinians.

    • @peterlloyd8313
      @peterlloyd8313 Год назад

      You have some imagination. The Chinese Navy is the largest navy in the world now..And the rest of the world would wipe America out. Or just leave the North Vietnamese tp do it AGAIN.

  • @kingSukram
    @kingSukram 10 месяцев назад

    The navy is the best branch of the military everything starts on the water before it even hits land … US NAVY VETERAN (E-4) 2007-2012 USS BATAAN LHD-5

    • @Nop3.1
      @Nop3.1 Месяц назад

      And if they get passed, the Marines meet them on the beach with big guns and bad attitudes. Semper fi brother 👊🏼

  • @wheressteve
    @wheressteve Год назад

    We had a canoe, it was green.

  • @leobonnechere2811
    @leobonnechere2811 8 месяцев назад

    I love the us Navy

  • @Chrisamos412
    @Chrisamos412 2 года назад +3

    👍🏼

  • @josephcoleman57
    @josephcoleman57 Год назад

    Is that the official version of the Gulf of Tomkin incident? An "over zealous" seaman acting alone... Ok

  • @ms.tokyoo
    @ms.tokyoo Год назад

    Hooyah shipmates, CTT2

  • @mikepierce1724
    @mikepierce1724 Год назад +1

    My uncle was stationed with the constitution and I was 15 about 35 years ago I went to b party for it. 1000 people well a few had something under place mats. I won a door knocker shaped like an anchor ,are out of the original stuff from the ship when redone . Still in mom's bedroom

  • @johnstaley6337
    @johnstaley6337 Год назад

    What it takes.

  • @augiblutz2852
    @augiblutz2852 Год назад +1

    "we have only to recur"
    WTF?

  • @StevenLamkin-yz2rd
    @StevenLamkin-yz2rd 3 месяца назад

    Hellyeah navy seals 🤘

  • @Tom-kp2lv
    @Tom-kp2lv Год назад

    Who was the narrator?

    • @MrKeithkerr
      @MrKeithkerr Год назад

      sounded like Ted Cruz in second seat

  • @jamesireland6606
    @jamesireland6606 Год назад +1

    I love this documentary but for God's sakes don't quote Bill Clinton

    • @danielsmithiv1279
      @danielsmithiv1279 10 месяцев назад

      Bill got quoted and there's nothing you could do about it baby!!!!

  • @SteveMozena
    @SteveMozena Год назад

    👍

  • @mattkaustickomments
    @mattkaustickomments 11 месяцев назад

    I hadn’t remembered the beef with post Revolutionary France in the late 1790s until watching this.

  • @tagfu2226
    @tagfu2226 Год назад

    Obvious errors.
    1:09. Losses at Pearl Harbor we’re not 24,000.
    1:21. Bush’s single engine Avenger could not have “lost one of its engines. The Avenger had a crew of three, so he bailed out leaving two crew members behind.

  • @sirfrancis9619
    @sirfrancis9619 Год назад

    Remember the Maine! ...and the Gulf of Tonkin... and all the other False Flag ops... lol

  • @michaelschneider6106
    @michaelschneider6106 Год назад

    If you researched this at all you darn well know that there was a great deal of illegal munitions aboard Lusitania.

    • @herbertlewis8442
      @herbertlewis8442 Год назад +1

      They weren't illegal. Just ill-advised consider it wasn't supposed to be carrying arms

    • @michaelschneider6106
      @michaelschneider6106 Год назад

      @@herbertlewis8442 Under the then Laws of War there were TONS of Banned munitions.

    • @christopherc8563
      @christopherc8563 Год назад +1

      @@michaelschneider6106 what exactly is, or better maybe, was, the Laws of War? the only thing i can find on the subject are about manuals, which have absolutely nothing to do with illegality

    • @michaelschneider6106
      @michaelschneider6106 Год назад

      @@christopherc8563 Then, as now, a ship is not allowed to carry wartime contraband. To do so makes it a legitimate target. Lusitania was also a Royal Navy Auxiliary Cruiser. The Lusitania was carrying a cargo of rifle ammunition and shells (together about 173 tons) The ship's manifest made no secret that it carried weapons in its hold, including 4,200 cases of Remington rifle cartridges and 1,250 cases of shrapnel shells and fuses.
      "Successive British governments have always maintained that there was no munitions on board the Lusitania (and that the Germans were therefore in the wrong to claim to the contrary as an excuse for sinking the ship)," the department's North America head wrote in July 1982. "The facts are that there is a large amount of ammunition in the wreck, some of which is highly dangerous."
      A 1980s salvage operation on the wreck of the Lusitania, the Cunard luxury liner that was torpedoed in the first world war, triggered a startling Foreign Office warning that its sinking could still "literally blow up on us".
      Newly released secret Whitehall files disclose that a Ministry of Defence warning that "something startling" was going to be found during the August 1982 salvage operation raised such serious concerns that previously undeclared war munitions and explosives might be found that divers involved were officially warned in the strongest terms of the possible "danger to life and limb" they faced.
      Foreign Office officials also voiced serious concerns that a final British admission that there were high explosives on the Lusitania could still trigger serious political repercussions with America even though it was nearly 70 years after the event.
      The Foreign Office files released by the National Archives at Kew on Thursday show that news of the imminent salvage operation in 1982 sparked alarm across Whitehall.
      "The facts are that there is a large amount of ammunition in the wreck, some of which is highly dangerous. The Treasury have decided that they must inform the salvage company of this fact in the interests of the safety of all concerned. Although there have been rumours in the press that the previous denial of the presence of munitions was untrue, this would be the first acknowledgement of the facts by HMG."

    • @herbertlewis8442
      @herbertlewis8442 Год назад

      @@michaelschneider6106 Perhaps you might do yourself some good by understanding the difference between illegal & banned. There was a rule the prevented the targeting of civilian vessels by the German navy. It's long been an open secret that Britain was using civilian ships to carry munitions between America & Britain to lessen the chances of being sunk. This was done so because the Atlantic Wolf packs were having the desired impact on England. The sole reasons the US got involved in the war was this sinking.
      No munitions are illegal for shipping ALL are dangerous. As I originally stated

  • @davejones2180
    @davejones2180 Год назад

    ARMY

  • @georgen9755
    @georgen9755 Год назад +1

    Morocco ....... colours ....... iron .......... they typically are ....... Koreans who appear like Chinese or Chinese who appear like Koreans ....but are potentially have Japanese outfits .....posing threat to coastal community ....the interior of the wall appears .....like a swimming pool but actually not a swimming pool ......... the roof top blue sloping on both sides ..... and the sea level is at 760 mm barometric level .......... ........ account saraswati karur vysas bank , Pondicherry ............... pwd ......account ..........

  • @Lafayettelyle
    @Lafayettelyle Год назад

    What really gets my goat is today's Navy has jumped "on board" with the sea level rise and climate change thingy at Norfolk Virginia. Yes, the Navy does need funding and they deserve that funding but they do not need to stoop that low. They watch to tide come in and the tide go out the same as the rest of us that live on the coast. If they predict they need higher sea walls because of hurricanes or geologic epics that cause things that cause a tidal wave, by all means, fund them. But, but but, to jump on the bandwagon of climate change for that purpose is not excusable to this John Q Taxpayer.

    • @annpeerkat2020
      @annpeerkat2020 Год назад

      None have the strength of belief of the blind! Hands you a pair of glasses so you can see the world, and perhaps start to understand it a bit more.

    • @GetNGhost
      @GetNGhost Год назад

      Ice is melting, sea is rising.... If a person leaves a car running in a building, temps in the building rises..... not rocket science, just facts. Also, the fumes are poisonous and doesn't disappear in earths atmosphere like Houdini. Its just common sense, keep listening to the oil companies propaganda and not believing facts.

  • @markrowland1366
    @markrowland1366 Год назад +1

    The greatest naval success of the Confederate states, during the war between the states, was a single confederate ship which sailed the world ocean, capturing or destroying about forty union ships. The most successful naval endeavour, blocked from history by fools.

  • @annpeerkat2020
    @annpeerkat2020 Год назад

    Classic imperialism.. 27:30 "commodore perry performed important work for the us and the world by opening up japan by threat of military force, forcing japan to open up to foreign exploitation "
    how often have we seen such US actions of self-interest at the expense of (other) sovereign nations? Not enough room in this post for such a list, I reckon!

    • @biffbutowski2447
      @biffbutowski2447 Год назад

      Japan should not have attacked Pearl Harbor but focus on the Chinese enemy, if they had defeated China, the Chinese communists woul not be a problem now

    • @cliffordljacksonjr8020
      @cliffordljacksonjr8020 Год назад

      This was the early 20 the century and such actions were not the sole province of the U.S. suggest checking docs on early Japanese history.Viewing the past threw a lens of the present can be misleading.Japan then was a feudal society closed to the outside world and consequently behind in technology and thus vulnerable.I neither defend or condemn it was history.Japan in a span of 20 years became a major power as a result of contact with the outside world.As far as imperialism Japan had its share as attested by China and Korea.

  • @johncristancho9536
    @johncristancho9536 2 года назад +6

    GO ARMY BEAT NAVY !!!

  • @vypr8846
    @vypr8846 Год назад +1

    And dishorable.

  • @at5840
    @at5840 Год назад

    How about the history of us navy boxing tradition

  • @thomasfoley8316
    @thomasfoley8316 Год назад

    I'm,

  • @cyrushundt1117
    @cyrushundt1117 Год назад

    Haha seamen

  • @markwagoner3599
    @markwagoner3599 Год назад +7

    The United States did not exist in 1775, so the United States Navy did not exist either. Sorry, but it was called the Continental Navy.

    • @teslacoils5881
      @teslacoils5881 Год назад +3

      that’s what is said in the video

    • @justa12packofrccola81
      @justa12packofrccola81 Год назад

      You’re splitting hairs here man

    • @markwagoner3599
      @markwagoner3599 Год назад

      @Just a 12 Pack Of RC Cola I spent 8 years in the US Navy as a corpsman. I'm not "splitting" hairs. Try reading some history. We weren't even the United States until 1781. Yes, it took that long for it to be ratified. 5 years ain't "splitting hairs". Now, that whole concept of the United States Navy being around since 1775 is something that they push in boot camp to inspire you. The fact that so many people take that up as a point of pride is disingenuous.

    • @justa12packofrccola81
      @justa12packofrccola81 Год назад +3

      @@markwagoner3599 Yes, the US didn’t exist until 1781 but Continental Navy was a Navy protecting Americans, made up of Americans, and was made by an American Congress. The only thing that changed between the Continental Navy and the US Navy was the US going from a colony to a country

    • @lancew.6568
      @lancew.6568 4 месяца назад

      @markwagoner3599
      Sorry, Bubba, I got to call BS on you.
      If you spent "8 years in the Navy as a corpsman" then how do you NOT KNOW that October 13, 1775 is the OFFICIAL BIRTHDAY of the United States Navy?!?
      Let me ask you a history question, Mr. Expert.
      On what date did the American Revolutionary War BEGIN? TO SIMPLIFY THE QUESTION FOR YOU: When were the first shots fired?
      (Additional comment after reading a few more of your replies.)
      What do you think was ratified in 1781? The US Constitution??? (LOUD BUZZER)
      WRONG AGAIN, MR. EDUCATED IDIOT. 1781 was the year Washington defeated Cornwallis at the Battle of Yorktown. The war wasn't OFFICIALLY OVER until the naval battles near the English coast in 1783. The Continental Congress went to work drafting a constitution during the summer of 1787 and approved the final draft on, I believe, "the 17th day of September IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD, 1787". (The bold type there is for the ignorant people who say that the US Constitution makes no reference to God.) It then took 10 MONTHS for it to become "the law of the land". Delaware was the first state to ratify it in December of 1787 and New Hampshire became the ninth (and deciding) state to ratify it in June of 1788.

  • @skunk9939
    @skunk9939 Год назад

    wanted to watch it but the sound is so bad

  • @vexxa7562
    @vexxa7562 Год назад

    This funny

  • @TheDENTAGE
    @TheDENTAGE Год назад

    Fantastic documentary, now they fly rainbow flags and have to have a nosering, mental illness haircuts and earplugs against the enemys insults.

  • @derekchristophernordbye7710
    @derekchristophernordbye7710 11 месяцев назад

    Admiral Elmo M. Zumwalt, the late CNO, said it best about the United States Navy:
    "The United States Navy ALWAYS BEEN &, ALWAYS WILL BE, THE FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE FOR THE UNITED STATES 🇺🇸 !!!!!"
    Because, my Air Force and, Army friends. Before ANY Iinvading army can get to the United States 🇺🇸, THEY HAVE TO CONTEND WITH AND, TRY TO DEFEAT THE UNITED STATES NAVY!!!!!! And, ahhh, by the way, WE ARE UNBEATEN ON THE HIGH SEAS!!!!! BET!!!!!