USS Casablanca - Guide 351

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  • Опубликовано: 18 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 568

  • @Drachinifel
    @Drachinifel  Год назад +37

    Pinned post for Q&A :)

    • @unryumaru2095
      @unryumaru2095 Год назад +1

      Had battleships remained dominant and 20 inch guns had been commissioned, could rates of fire of 2rpm have been achieved and sustained for these 20/20.1 inch guns like those on the Shikishima in WoWS?

    • @frosty3693
      @frosty3693 Год назад +3

      Hello, I heard some time ago that you liked to republish books that copyrights had expired, I didn't know they did?
      If true I have a very old paperback copy of "War Fish", George Grider as told to Lydel Sims, published in 1959 by Pyramid Books by arrangement with Little, Brown and Company.
      Grider Commanded the USS Flasher submarine in World War Two and was a junior officer on the USS Wahoo on it's last mission before it's loss. Dick O'kane was the XO.
      Or would just like a chance to read? I live in the USA, we met on the USS North Carolina.

    • @venomgeekmedia9886
      @venomgeekmedia9886 Год назад +1

      How usual was it to have battleships have their guns replaced by a greater number of lower caliber guns? Would it make a difference?

    • @elcastorgrande
      @elcastorgrande Год назад +3

      Weren't two escort carriers used in Korea, Baedong Strait and Sicily?

    • @QuizmasterLaw
      @QuizmasterLaw Год назад

      I should be learning Chinese.
      Oh god this is good.

  • @martinmarheinecke7677
    @martinmarheinecke7677 Год назад +283

    One of the most underrated ship classes. Among their crews, CVE was sarcastically said to stand for "Combustible, Vulnerable, and Expendable", but in the end "Kaiser's coffins" were Indispensable.

    • @Ushio01
      @Ushio01 Год назад +37

      They were expendable and in a war that's acceptable better a Casablanca lost than an Essex class.

    • @dreamingflurry2729
      @dreamingflurry2729 Год назад +7

      Exactly why the US needs to make a new version of this concept - NOW, not when shots are being fired! Supercarriers are nice and all, but if you park them within range of the Chinese Air Force, then it would be a lot better to have more smaller carriers (you'd lose less face if one is sunk and you'd lose less people, aircraft etc., too!)

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Год назад +14

      @@dreamingflurry2729We already have 10: Amphibious assault ships, AKA helicopter carriers, modernized for F-35B’s

    • @dreamingflurry2729
      @dreamingflurry2729 Год назад +7

      @@CorePathway Yeah! 10 and 10 < 50! Especially since ships (especially carriers!) take longer to build now than they did in the 40s! Can't slap some tripple-expansion-steam-engines on them anymore etc. - Hell, a modern radar-set is probably more complicated than a whole 1945 carrier-group!

    • @CorePathway
      @CorePathway Год назад +4

      @@dreamingflurry2729 So you want the US to build 30 small aircraft carriers? Why, when we now have cruise missiles?

  • @PeterOBraun
    @PeterOBraun Год назад +56

    My grandfather was an orphaned refugee from the Spanish Civil War, came to Portland and learned to weld building Casablancas. He later used those welding chops to become a successful artist. Very neat video.

    • @donwayne1357
      @donwayne1357 Год назад +2

      Just hold on a minute there.

    • @somebloke3869
      @somebloke3869 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@donwayne1357it's been more than a minute, what are we holding on for?

    • @donwayne1357
      @donwayne1357 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@somebloke3869 I'm waiting for the latex wang dapple.

  • @wolftamer5463
    @wolftamer5463 Год назад +101

    One of my favorite underrated ship classes. It’s a shame none were preserved as a museum ship considering it was the most numerous class of aircraft carrier ever.

    • @AdamMGTF
      @AdamMGTF Год назад +19

      Can't save them all and museums are often a business and as a result need people to visit. If a ship isn't "sexy" it won't bring people in.
      It's why HMS victory has visitors from the world over but HMS Trincomalee is a forgotten gem.

    • @wolftamer5463
      @wolftamer5463 Год назад +2

      @@AdamMGTF Sad but true.

    • @PorqueNoLosDos
      @PorqueNoLosDos Год назад +2

      Unfortunately you're both correct.

    • @Rob_F8F
      @Rob_F8F Год назад +13

      ​@@AdamMGTFRyan at the USS New Jersey has several videos on the economics of museum ships.
      Long story short, they are expensive to maintain and without adequate goverment and public support, they don't do well. The US Navy carefully looks at a "Save the [Insert Ship Name Here]" Group's proposal for financial viability before deciding whether to release a ship to become a museum. Navy doesn't want to release a shop that will just become a derelict.

    • @p4d_268
      @p4d_268 Год назад +6

      There was one (USS Cabot) that became a museum for a short time in New Orleans, but sadly they couldn’t afford to maintain it and it got scrapped. (That was a CVL though, not a CVE)

  • @Alex-cw3rz
    @Alex-cw3rz Год назад +307

    Interesting fact the Polish navy asked if they could have a Casablanca-class escort carrier and when refused that and the British refused to give the Polish one of their carriers as well. Admiral Swirski in 1944 decided the most logical next step was to takeover the IJN Hosho aircraft carrier, not sure how they planned on doing this and that's all I know about it but that was such a fascinating story and I feel like I need more detail. Also after the war the Polish Navy had huge plans which included building 3 battleships and aquiring 6 Cassablanca-class escort carriers.

    • @The_Laughing_Cavalier
      @The_Laughing_Cavalier Год назад +96

      "not sure how they planned on doing this". If I had to guess, they would sail right up to it, signal "I AM A POLE!" and then fire on it until it surrenders.

    • @bjorntrollgesicht1144
      @bjorntrollgesicht1144 Год назад +37

      Welp, nobody wanted us getting too strong. We were this convenient, but ultimately unfitting thing where we just wanted our country back, but that just wasn't sitting well with the fat cats of the day.

    • @raymartcarreon6069
      @raymartcarreon6069 Год назад +18

      ​@@bjorntrollgesicht1144 Poland would be way too OP for both the Allies and the Axis

    • @Paludion
      @Paludion Год назад +43

      @@bjorntrollgesicht1144 Mostly the aging moustache twirling villain next door, and I'm not talking about the one stuck in his bunker.

    • @johneyton5452
      @johneyton5452 Год назад +15

      @@Paludion the cobblers son cutthroat and failed clergyman?

  • @The_Sly_Potato
    @The_Sly_Potato Год назад +105

    My great-grandfather served aboard a Casablanca-class, the USS Kitkun Bay, from 1944 to 1946. He was there during the Battle of Guam, and was part of Taffy III. He was partly why i served in the Navy from 2017-2022. Thank you for covering her and her sisters Drach!

    • @davidb6576
      @davidb6576 Год назад +6

      Great grandpappy would have been proud!

    • @connormclernon26
      @connormclernon26 Год назад

      Fanshaw Bay, Kitkun Bay, Kalinin Bay, White Plains, Gambier Bay, or St. Lo?

    • @The_Sly_Potato
      @The_Sly_Potato Год назад +3

      @@connormclernon26 Kitkun Bay boss.

    • @The_Sly_Potato
      @The_Sly_Potato Год назад +1

      @@davidb6576 thanks man

    • @baronoflivonia.3512
      @baronoflivonia.3512 Год назад +3

      Thank You for your Service. My Grand Dad served in Pacific on USS LST 864, saw occupation duty in Japan and I still have 2-IJN sake cups. Despite the sake cups, he had a hatred of Japan, I think from seeing film that US Navy found on almost every Island we took, they liked taking pictures those Japanese even then.

  • @Zephcas
    @Zephcas Год назад +33

    Oregonian here, I love the history of ship building in Portland and Vancouver during WW2. Vanport was a town built to house the workers but it sadly was destroyed by a flood in 1948. You can still see the remains of the Vancouver shipyard along the Columbia. The other two shipyards in Portland are near St John's and on Swan Island; the later being converted to a massive dry dock. We also had a few smaller shipyards that produced other vessels such as Tugs, Net Layers, Submarine Chasers, Landing Craft, etc.

    • @wheels-n-tires1846
      @wheels-n-tires1846 Год назад +1

      In a fun footnote, on the east side of what used to be the Vancouver Kaiser yard- warships of a sort are being built again. Vigor is building a new class of landing craft for the US Army now...

  • @benjaminnoakes5799
    @benjaminnoakes5799 Год назад +82

    Be worth noting that these have skinner unaflow steam engines not standard reciprocating type. Very modern efficient and reliable steam engines.

    • @darrellsmith4204
      @darrellsmith4204 Год назад +6

      And I do believe there is still one Skinner Unaflow still operating, on a car ferry between Wisconsin and Michigan.

    • @martinmarheinecke7677
      @martinmarheinecke7677 Год назад +5

      Unaflow steam engines are reliable and sometimes more efficient than small steam turbines. These engines (especially the Stumpf type in Germany) were able to assert themselves well in shipbuilding. In WW II many new build German minesweepers were powered by coal fired unaflow steam engines, because diesel fuel was scare.

    • @albertoswald8461
      @albertoswald8461 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@darrellsmith4204,the SS Badger has 2 3500 horsepower steeple compound Skinner Uniflow steam engines powered by 4 440 psi boilers with 2 Firite stokers per boiler. I think that the boilers were Babcock and Wilcox boilers but my memory is rusty.

  • @busterdee8228
    @busterdee8228 Год назад +31

    I've been a fan of escort carriers for a long time. Bogues are my favorite (because of their multi-theater resume), but the 'Kaisers' deserve their own accolades. Nobody wanted them, 'til the US Navy decided to keep them all. You gotta' love that Kaiser engineers sorted an unwanted engine (even by triple-expansion standards) and gained speed over their turbine stable mates to boot. An escort carrier's only 'armor' was its boldness. Thanks for this Drach.

    • @jimtaylor294
      @jimtaylor294 Год назад +6

      Well out. They need more attention I'd say.
      The British *MAC Ships* are also little known, even though they served well with no losses.

    • @busterdee8228
      @busterdee8228 Год назад +4

      ...and their dyslexic sisters, even less.

  • @comentedonakeyboard
    @comentedonakeyboard Год назад +18

    "just" 50 carriers, more then any other navy could have dreamed of.

  • @matthewcasey5059
    @matthewcasey5059 Год назад +20

    My ex-wife’s grandfather was a radioman on Lipscome Bay. As he told it he’d been in the shack most of the day and his buddy finally convinced him to go outside and smoke out there instead of filling the radio shack with smoke. He agreed and as he was lighting up and exhaling his first drag of his smoke he saw the torpedo about a second or two before impact. Because he was outside it blew him overboard, so he was one of the few survivors of her sinking, similar incident happened when he was on the Mississippi, he said he never went on the weather deck after that unless ordered to do so!😂

    • @feedingravens
      @feedingravens Год назад +2

      I can understand that, even without being superstitious otherwise
      On my first airshow one pilot was outstanding, the aerobatics of Harald Strößenreuther were way beyond what the others offered.
      I was looking forward to see his again next year. Not too long before that, it came on TV he had crashed while teaching.
      On another show Mark Hanna was demonstrating a P-51, again way beyond the standard fly-bys. Great, looking forward to next year.
      He crashed in a spanish license-built Me 109...
      Other airshow, interesting was a swedish guy that had built a repilca of the Spirit of St. Louis - a while later it broke up mid-air.
      Someone took me up in a Slingsby T.21, open side by side training glider. Amazing how peaceful and quiet, you could hear the birds singing on the ground. Some months later, he died on an airmeet in eastern Europe, from a banal burst appendix.
      I gave up visiting airshows. I do not want to risk other people's lives.

  • @michaelkovacic2608
    @michaelkovacic2608 Год назад +126

    If someone asks you whether or not Japan could have ever won WW2, just show them this video.

    • @rashkavar
      @rashkavar Год назад +28

      Yeah, I've seen various what if scenarios regarding how successful Pearl Harbor was, etc, and really the only one that ends in a Japanese victory is the one where Pearl Harbor doesn't happen at all, Japan just invades the Philippines and the rest of the South Pacific, and America just imposes more sanctions. Thus Japan wins by not actually crossing the line that provokes America into actually going to war.
      Which has rather significant implications for the other half of the war too - even with Lend Lease still being in play, removing the Americans from the front lines in WWII Europe at the very least makes for a much harder war for the Soviets and the British and the various minor allies supporting them. Not sure it means Germany would have won - by the time America enters the war they're already suffering logistical challenges against the Soviets, Stalingrad's probably happening anyway, and the British forces in Egypt are starting to get a handle on the North Africa situation, all before Operation Torch brings American forces into play directly, so...things are not looking all that great for Germany even without American troops on the ground...but it certainly does change the face of the war.

    • @tombogan03884
      @tombogan03884 Год назад +20

      @@rashkavar Without Pearl Harbor, and the popular reaction to it, I don't think FDR could have built enough support to enter the European war.

    • @michaelkovacic2608
      @michaelkovacic2608 Год назад +5

      @rashkavar fully agree. In my opinion, after the conquest of Western Europe and Scandinavia, Germany and the UK were pretty evenly matched - for example, look at aircraft production numbers. If Germany had fully mobilised already in 1939, then perhaps they could have put enough pressure on the UK together with Italy to force them to the table, but not as in our timeline. And UK + USSR is too much to chew for Germany, although the Brits and the Russians likely could not have achieved a full victory.

    • @JeepWrangler1957
      @JeepWrangler1957 Год назад

      Agreed. Japan misread the media in the U.S. as being anti-war, which it was. They also didn't want to become involved in another war in Europe. Japan thus thought that the U.S. was so anti-war that we would just sit back and not risk American lives to save Asia. Well when you kill American military, we'll put a "boot in your a$$....it's the American Way!"

    • @Vnx
      @Vnx Год назад +13

      The channel Military History Visualized also has an excellent video, titled why Japan stood no chance in ww2. It is a day by day tally of warship production during the conflict, with totals for ship type like destroyer, cruiser, fleet carrier, and so forth.

  • @tobiasGR3Y
    @tobiasGR3Y Год назад +162

    Important to note. Doris Miller, Pearl Harbor-hero and Navy Cross recipient for actions aboard USS West Virginia, died on USS Liscome Bay in the Battle of Mankin.
    He may have been assigned to something combustible, vulnerable, and expendable in his final hours...
    *But his new namesake is a Gerald R. Ford-class supercarrier.*

    • @michaelray3865
      @michaelray3865 Год назад +21

      And that’s a better more honorable namesake than some other ships have had of late…

    • @johnthomas2485
      @johnthomas2485 Год назад +23

      Glad they stopped naming the damn things after politicians

    • @dreamingflurry2729
      @dreamingflurry2729 Год назад +1

      Doris? Hm...poor guy, for me that's woman's name!

    • @WarpedHorizon
      @WarpedHorizon Год назад +10

      @@johnthomas2485 At least they didn't continue naming ships after traitors (the last being the inexplicable SSBN-601 Robert E Lee)

    • @m33p0
      @m33p0 Год назад +6

      @@dreamingflurry2729 even if he was named Ashley or Elizabeth, you wouldn't be saying it's a woman's name to his face. he was a big man.

  • @adamalton2436
    @adamalton2436 Год назад +8

    Live in Chicago. Have visited U-505 since I could walk. Amazing how the capture happened.

  • @staberinde1794
    @staberinde1794 Год назад +20

    I do a lot of sailing on the Columbia. The remnants of those dockyards are still pretty distinct over at the Washington side.

  • @bkjeong4302
    @bkjeong4302 Год назад +82

    Not only did they do much for landing operations, the Casablancas also served in anti-surface-ship roles far more often than most people realize, including for part of Samar where they pretty much decided the result of the battle (but that was hardly the only time they did anti-surface work).
    The Little Giants covers CVE ops in significant detail.

    • @coachhannah2403
      @coachhannah2403 Год назад +5

      Biggest contribution: anti-submarine duty during transit.

    • @bkjeong4302
      @bkjeong4302 Год назад +1

      That was their intended purpose but it was not their only major role by any means (the video points out that amphibious operations ended up being their mainstay, and they also did anti-ship work surprisingly often).

  • @Maddog3060
    @Maddog3060 Год назад +15

    Also used to ferry replacement aircraft (and pilots) out to the fleets so they wouldn't have to go back to Hawaii or the West Coast to make up combat losses.
    I've always had a soft spot for the Casablanca-class. Just something about the whole idea of an escort carrier and having them properly, purpose-designed and built for it tickles my fancy. Pity that they were so soon obsolete, but history is like that.

  • @carlT1986
    @carlT1986 Год назад +4

    Drach does the work and speaks with authority. No one is perfect. I doubt anyone thinks he is anymore than they might think that of any of us are perfect.
    He does his homework and he has a broad and deep knowledge of what he speaks about.
    I can learn from Drach. I have been a history nut for most of my life. That means I have a huge amount of data that I have absorbed. That doesn’t mean my database is accurate or in the proper context. My sense is that Drach has earned his eagles and I can benefit from his knowledge. This is how his channel should be- a source of digested knowledge that is clearly explained. If I were to disagree it is incumbent on me to prove any point I would want to put forward.
    Well Done Drach - so far…. We now expect continuous excellence. I think you are good with that.

  • @FINNIUSORION
    @FINNIUSORION Год назад +3

    Both of my paternal grandparents built liberty ships in that shipyard. They made the drive every day from Kalama WA. My grandfather was a welder and grandmother a literal rosey the riveter.

  • @korbell1089
    @korbell1089 Год назад +58

    A true workhorse, no flash no thunder, and the ding, ding, ding as they came out of the shipyards must have driven the Japanese crazy!😅😅

    • @carloschristanio4709
      @carloschristanio4709 Год назад +17

      Japanese: we built one carrier that should do
      Americans: carrier printer goes brrrrr

    • @yoseipilot
      @yoseipilot Год назад

      Kamikaze: Allow me to introduce myself

    • @vinnynj78
      @vinnynj78 Год назад

      40mm Bofors: Allow me to introduce myself

    • @marckyle5895
      @marckyle5895 Год назад

      @@vinnynj78 Not enough dakka, we need 5"/38s with proximity detonation goodness!.

    • @vinnynj78
      @vinnynj78 Год назад

      @@marckyle5895 Xidawang wowk kuku bera fine

  • @patrickchase5614
    @patrickchase5614 Год назад +6

    The beauty of the Sangamons was that as converted T3 tankers they could carry an absolutely massive fuel load. This served them well in the North Africa landings, where they continuously refueled the DDs on station. They carried a crazy amount of draft, though (32 ft for a fully-loaded Sangamon vs 20 for a Casablanca).

  • @MrLogan62697
    @MrLogan62697 Год назад +2

    Portland Oregon resident here, love seeing our history. We can really crank em' out, given proper motivation! Love our port city!

    • @sadams12345678
      @sadams12345678 Год назад +2

      Except Vancouver, Washington is not a part of Portland, Oregon.

    • @elliottmcnear8516
      @elliottmcnear8516 Год назад +2

      @@sadams12345678 Oregonian jealously of us Washingtonians…what else is new

    • @MrLogan62697
      @MrLogan62697 Год назад

      @elliottmcnear8516 The video clearly mentions Kaiser yards on both sides of the river, did you miss that part or what?
      Did you wake up an ass?

  • @dennisharrington3384
    @dennisharrington3384 Год назад +3

    Sir. Thanks. Among the honored heroes who went down with the USS Liscome Bay was Dory Miller.🇺🇸

  • @KamikazKid
    @KamikazKid Год назад +4

    Very cool, my grandfather served as radioman on the 24th of the Casablanca class USS Savo Island. He was in a little shindig known as the Battle of Leyte Gulf, which my grandfather called "a rather minor battle."

  • @taftbarnett1156
    @taftbarnett1156 Год назад +2

    Cool! My grandfather was the navigator on the USS Mission Bay, CVE-59. They dodnt see much action, but they escorted FDR to the Yalta Conference.

  • @lafeelabriel
    @lafeelabriel Год назад +16

    A remarkable class for sure.
    Not the least of which because the entire class, near enough, was completed in eighteen months. From the laying down of the first to the commissioning of the last.

    • @donwayne1357
      @donwayne1357 Год назад

      Just hold on a minute there.

    • @lafeelabriel
      @lafeelabriel Год назад

      @@donwayne1357 Not something you'd hear said in Kaiser's shipyards that.

  • @melwinge9154
    @melwinge9154 Год назад +2

    Excellent timing. I just took my model of the CASABLANCA out of the package yesterday. However, I do not plan to build all 50 of them.

  • @RogCBrand
    @RogCBrand Год назад +3

    My Grandpa came to Vanport, from Tennessee, and my Grandma from North Dakota. That's how they met, working on ships there. My Grandma would be suspended on the side of a ship, welding, and my Grandpa would come along, eating a sandwich, and chat with her as she worked! I wish I knew what ships they worked on!

  • @MirelleLaRouge
    @MirelleLaRouge Год назад +7

    the Skinner Uniflow isn't exactly a 19th century design, rather it was the end of naval steam engines, the Skinner Uniflow being being the final development of this technology that strangely enough still lives on in the Great Lakes and had been designed in the 1930's. It was a 19th century design as much as the Bugatti WR16 is. It was the last steam engine to successfully compete with Turbines, the end of a matured technology.

  • @williamclifton8503
    @williamclifton8503 Год назад +4

    Love this. My grandfather served on the Casablanca from her commissioning through to the end of the war. I'm always looking for more information on her in particular.

  • @johngregory4801
    @johngregory4801 Год назад +3

    After my family moved back to the Portland atea in '74, my Dad took my brother and me to what's left of the Kaiser shipyard in Vancouver. Even aftet that visit, we didn't know that the Cadablanca class had been built there. All we knew about was the Liberty ships. Even though it was only about 30 years after the last ship went down the ways into the Columbia, there was almost nothing left but broken concrete slabs where the ships were built and some pilings rotting in the river where the they were tied up after their launch.
    Pity the shipyard wasnt preserved as a museum.

  • @CaptainCoffee37
    @CaptainCoffee37 Год назад +3

    I live just outside of Vancouver WA. There is a cool park on the Columbia with an observation tower where you can see all the old Kaiser Shipyard slipways.

  • @Charliecomet82
    @Charliecomet82 Год назад +16

    Henry J built 50 aircraft carriers over the objections of the Admirals, then he established a whole new health care system over the objections of the AMA-and succeeded both times.

  • @thomaswatt625
    @thomaswatt625 Год назад +2

    My father served aboard CVE81 USS Rudyerd Bay during the war, and immediately following the war when the ship served as part of the "Magic Carpet Fleet" bringing Marines and Soldiers back to the US mainland for mustering out.

  • @bobfenster3690
    @bobfenster3690 Год назад +13

    My dad helped build these ships. One day my dad's crew boss got injured and my dad was put in charge of the crew. After delegating tasks to the crew my dad went about his own work. Shortly thereafter half the manhole covers in the shipyard were blown sky high. My dad and the rest of the crew were questioned by the FBI who were investigating the incident as possible sabotage. Turned out one of the guys on the crew was colorblind and too afraid of losing his job to tell anyone. He couldn't see the color coding on the oxygen and acetylene lines and got them swapped around. I guess the old crew boss had known and made sure he never got that job, but my dad didn't know so when he gave the task to the guy the guy just said to himself "fuck it. fifty-fifty odds."

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 Год назад +4

      A good reason to have Left-hand threads on certain cylinders and the usual Right-hand threads on others.
      Even high pressure air is a more powerful oxidiser.

  • @thunderK5
    @thunderK5 Год назад +1

    Chicago native here, thanking you for the reference to USS Guadalcanal.

  • @robertdendooven7258
    @robertdendooven7258 Год назад +18

    The Gambier Bay and the St. Lo were lost about eleven months (Oct. 1944) after the Liscombe Bay (Nov. 1943) and not one month as stated.

    • @matthewlok3020
      @matthewlok3020 Год назад +4

      Dorie Miller was lost with the Liscombe Bay

  • @davidvik1451
    @davidvik1451 Год назад +2

    You packed a lot into only eight minutes. I new several people that had worked in the Vancouver yard. One in particular remarked that working there was some of the happiest days of her life, " As a 19 year old woman I was to do thing that a woman had never before been allowed to do". She worked on the Casablanca's out of a shop that moved as the construction progressed, starting on the ground and then lifted to the flight when there was room for it.
    I highly recommend the following two book for anyone interested the Portland-Vancouver WWII ship production:
    "War on the Home Front"', by Chauncey Del French, and "Liberty Factory", by Peter Mash. Both a available on line.

  • @markmclaughlin2690
    @markmclaughlin2690 Год назад +2

    My Father Kenneth McLaughlin WT/3 served aboard USS Gambier Bay. He crossed the bar in 1969 when I was 3.

  • @cooperleighgaming1486
    @cooperleighgaming1486 Год назад

    My grandpa served on the USS Windham Bay Casablanca Class Carrier. Never got to here any stories but I know it was hit by a kamikaze and went through a typhoon that had the flight deck get rolled up. Thanks for doing this video. I will make sure to show my kids something that their great-grandfather served on.

  • @patfontaine5917
    @patfontaine5917 Год назад +1

    My mom built liberty ships and carriers for Kaiser. Great video documentary

  • @robertwaid3579
    @robertwaid3579 Год назад +2

    Another Great short Documentary. My Only Comment is that both My Mother and Our Aunt were Welder's on those Particular Ship's. What the USA did once they Entered the War. And Ramped up the Industry of Democracy with it's Tremendous Effort's. There wasn't anything They couldn't really Accomplish. The Results we're Fantastic. Thank You.

  • @sharonelliott2366
    @sharonelliott2366 7 дней назад

    My father served on the USS Kadashan Bay, a Casablanca Class escort carrier. While on board, he made a balsa wood model of her using the blueplan drawing you provider here.

  • @crapphone7744
    @crapphone7744 Год назад +2

    This represents what made America great. Used exactly and no more resources then necessary to do their job efficiently. Consideration was also given to survivability.

  • @danielstickney2400
    @danielstickney2400 Год назад +14

    Admiral Daniel Gallery's book "U-505" is full of great stories about his time as Captain of USS Guadalcanal in addition to the story of the actual boarding and capture of the submarine. Not only were Gallery's the first to conduct 24 hour flight operations off an escort carrier, they even managed to conduct flight operations with the captured submarine in tow, which was considered so unlikely Gallery had the ship cinematographer film it for proof.

  • @mikeyost3672
    @mikeyost3672 Год назад +17

    The Guadalcanal was not on escort duty, it was out actively hunting U-Boats. "The Happy Time" was decidedly over.

    • @Drachinifel
      @Drachinifel  Год назад +15

      The hunting groups were part of escort activities, just more remote from the convoys :)

    • @chashague8479
      @chashague8479 Год назад +1

      @@Drachinifel Beg to differ. To my mind, "Escort" means assigned to a specific convoy, staying with them across the (Atlantic, usually) Ocean. Hunter-Killer groups ranged the sea independently, looking for U-Boats.
      And if you are looking for another similar ship, may I suggest USS Valley Forge? She was a movie star -- and you'd never guess what movie

    • @AWMJoeyjoejoe
      @AWMJoeyjoejoe Год назад +1

      ​@@chashague8479Silent Running.

    • @washingtonradio
      @washingtonradio Год назад +2

      @@chashague8479 When the Allies had more than enough ships for close convoy escort duty they were split up into 3 distinct groups: close escort (classic convoy escorting), support groups who would aid convoys under attack, and hunter-killer groups tasked with trying to attack U-boots in likely patrol areas independent of any specific convoy. The hunter-killer groups presence meant U-boots could be under attack while no convoys were in the immediate area. And when convoys did move through that area there were likely fewer U-boots available and they would have been under irregular attack before the convoy arrived.

    • @mikeyost3672
      @mikeyost3672 Год назад

      @@chashague8479 a movie that featured music by P.D.Q.Bach and the cutest robots ever?

  • @cutler1862
    @cutler1862 Год назад

    Thank you for this excellent video! My father served aboard the USS White Plains (CVE-66) as an aviation machinist mate (AMM) petty officer first class during the invasion of Saipan in June/July 1944, after having served at CASU-1 and CASU-2 from 1942 until the Mariana Islands Campaign. A piece on the Carrier Aircraft Service Units at Ford Island and Barber's Point and the invasion of Saipan would be awesome.

  • @chrismaverick9828
    @chrismaverick9828 Год назад +2

    Three months to build a baby carrier! truly a part of American history I am proud of. Wish we could get some of that can-do hard working attitude these days.

  • @CurlyTheBass
    @CurlyTheBass Год назад

    Obligatory "My Grandfather Served on the Casablanca" post. I miss you, Grampa, and all your stories about your ship mates on the Casablanca. Thanks for this, Drach.

  • @ag7898
    @ag7898 Год назад +3

    Interesting side note on Vancouver, WA.
    It actually predates both its now larger neighbor to the south, Portland. AND the much more well known Vancouver, BC.

  • @sewing1243
    @sewing1243 Год назад +2

    I had an employer that served on the USS Wake Island (CVE-65) in the Pacific as a Machinist Mate. He was the Petty Officer of the Watch in engine room when the Wake Island was hit by a Japanese plane in the bow on April 3rd 1945 off of Okinawa. He said he was sitting on a stole watching the gauges one moment and the next moment he found himself laying on the deck when the aircraft hit the bow.

  • @downix
    @downix Год назад

    One of my favorite WW2 carrier classes. Glad to see this video this morning.

  • @svgproductions72
    @svgproductions72 Год назад

    One of my favorite ship classes, for some reason I always loved the idea of little carriers. If you look at the list of how many the US made, it really shows the industrial power we truly had

  • @Big_E_Soul_Fragment
    @Big_E_Soul_Fragment Год назад +19

    "We'll always have a five minute guide"

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape Год назад +8

      I'm shocked to find a Casablanca reference in the comments! Shocked!

    • @stopspammandm
      @stopspammandm Год назад +4

      ​@@RCAvhstape"Here is you're 5 minute guide, sir"

  • @johnlovett8341
    @johnlovett8341 Год назад

    In the most relevant comment ever, I do miss the old music a bit. Love me the Drac vids! Thanks!

  • @jackusmc2542
    @jackusmc2542 Год назад +10

    You mentioned the last Escort carriers were scrapped in the 1960's. Look at the movie Magnum Force with Clint Eastwood. There is a chase at the end that ends up on what looks like an escort carrier. That movie I believe was made in 1972-73. I wonder if there was another class of escort carrier or they were Casablanca class vessels? Just a scrap of useless information from a Lunatic mind. Love these guides on Saturday, Coffee and a Guide.

    • @DavidSmith-cx8dg
      @DavidSmith-cx8dg Год назад

      I've always wondered what it was and it's story .

    • @scottpeters371
      @scottpeters371 Год назад +3

      Might have been one of the Commencement Bay class CVE's, the class that came after the Casablancas. Some of them weren't scrapped until the early 70's

    • @kenkahre9262
      @kenkahre9262 Год назад +5

      I was stationed in Alameda at the time when that movie was filmed. Those carriers were in the process of being towed over to Japan for scrapping. The producers saw them and thought it would make a great setting for the finale and got in touch, and that, as they say, was that.

    • @CaptainColdyron222
      @CaptainColdyron222 Год назад +5

      The ship in Magnum Force was CVE-116 USS Badoeng Strait, a Commencement Bay class escort carrier.

    • @kenkahre9262
      @kenkahre9262 Год назад +1

      @@CaptainColdyron222 I didn't know their names at the time, but I did see them parked over in Oakland, not far from where I was stationed.

  • @nolananderson4782
    @nolananderson4782 Год назад +1

    Best new intro music so far

  • @sail4horizon
    @sail4horizon Год назад

    My dad's uncle was on the USS Kalinin Bay, part of Taffy 3. He survived and is 99 years old and able to still tell stories about the battle and his time aboard.

    • @sail4horizon
      @sail4horizon Год назад

      Here he is talking about it earlier this year. He was an aircraft mechanic on the hangar deck. ruclips.net/video/hoX3_e2TzX0/видео.html

  • @FirstLast_Nba
    @FirstLast_Nba Год назад +23

    3.5 months to build an aircraft carrier, let's be real, the Japanese never stood a chance.

    • @phantomship3935
      @phantomship3935 Год назад +1

      It’s easy to build, but easy to sunk.
      The Japanese have might be stood a chance earlier

    • @MrGunlover12
      @MrGunlover12 Год назад

      The Japanese never had a chance because even if they sank the American battle fleet the Americans had the industrial capacity to simply build another one. So it becomes a matter of we sunk the American fleet, now what?

    • @daleburrell6273
      @daleburrell6273 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@copter2000...YOU'RE COMPARING APPLES AND ORANGES...

  • @NAACat81
    @NAACat81 Год назад

    Extremely valuable for those interested in naval history, particularly the lesser known ship classes. Thank you!!

  • @nathanbot5373
    @nathanbot5373 8 месяцев назад

    Love videos about older ships. Great video

  • @agesflow6815
    @agesflow6815 Год назад

    Thank you, Drachinifel.

  • @therealuncleowen2588
    @therealuncleowen2588 Год назад

    Of the new intro music choices you've been trying, in my opinion this one is the best.

  • @rpreto72
    @rpreto72 Год назад

    That last photo is incredible.

  • @sse_weston4138
    @sse_weston4138 Год назад +8

    The loss of Liscome Bay is always something that stands out, as does HMS Avenger and Dasher, for the sheer ferocity of their sinkings. Obviously a magazine going up will be violent, but it still is unbelievable when reading about the eye-witness accounts. I can't remember who, but when telling of Avenger's loss, a sailor aboard a troopship immediately astern of the escort carrier articulated the swiftness in which Avenger sank by emphasizing she already was under when reaching the smoke of the explosion. Liscome Bay's survivors from below in the engineering spaces reporting walking out at the waterline, still well below decks, and walking out then off of the ship. Water lapping into an exposed engineering compartment that was aflame and had its top peeled off. And of course Dasher just spontaneously exploding and sinking, joining many accidental magazine detonations of warships.

    • @robertmoffett3486
      @robertmoffett3486 Год назад +1

      The Juneau disappeared entirely before the smoke cleared, as well. It was assumed there were no survivors, as a consequence. Tragically, for the few who were left behind.

  • @dlfendel2844
    @dlfendel2844 Год назад +2

    My father served as an Electrician's Mate aboard the CVE-111 Vella Gulf. He said the most dangerous thing he ever did in WWII was to be hung in a bosun's chair over the edge of the flight deck to change the running lights in a high sea up in Puget Sound! :)

  • @annehersey9895
    @annehersey9895 6 месяцев назад

    I’ve never seen actual names for escort carriers before! In documentaries you usually just hear something like “and several escort carriers.”. Thanks Drach!

  • @JonHedberg
    @JonHedberg Год назад

    As always sir, I really enjoyed your historical video snippets. I would also allude to the Commencement Bay Class escort carriers that were started as an improvement to the Casablanca class. They were still slow (19 kts) even though they had steam turbines, but they fielded around 34 aircraft. 19 were completed and many served into the early 1950's.

  • @Gromit801
    @Gromit801 Год назад +1

    My uncle flew with VC-19 off the Bogue and the Guadalcanal. He was a TBF pilot, he didn’t come home.

  • @looneyflight
    @looneyflight Год назад +1

    I like the intro music for this one. Kinda similar to the last but even better.

  • @kelmech
    @kelmech Год назад

    I love the escort carriers so much. My favorite ships of the war!

  • @williestyle35
    @williestyle35 Год назад

    Drachinifel ,thanks for the glorious start to My Saturday morning !! 😉 Havin' a drink on my back porch ; with the sun looking bright and clear, after a night with the second day of a Blue Super Moon, no serious storms around here, super sunny Central Florida kind of day, occasionally popping in to help my wife, sometimes ... restless, blazing a couple of times, not even hot out yet, trying to live my 'Semi - Charmed Kinda Life' ... _then lo an behold !_ A "new" 5 minute Guide to Warships WWI - WWII (more or less) video lands in my tired face, with new opening music! ( and it is actually under 5 minutes! 😉 ) Totally awesome! (think there might be a couple of new ship views in dat opening too?) Thank you again Drachinifel, I had hoped a few of these "smaller" America escort aircraft carriers would make your list of ships to cover. ( Especially because Adm Gallery had captured the U 505 using a small task force that included use of an "escort carrier [could not resist mentioning that "fun fact", because I am from Chicago. - enjoy your upcoming visit to my hometown. *get your deep dish pizza (Chicago's famous for) from Paisano's (old school), or Gino's East (touristy, but fairly good in that over the top "Chicago waayyy", with a sausage disk in the pie* ]. )

  • @martinhill486
    @martinhill486 Год назад +1

    Obviously a different class of small US carrier, but four of them went to breakers are the Richmond end of the Richmond San Rafael Bridge in SF CA Bay area. This would have been mid to late 70's as we did not move to CA till '70. We would pass them on the way to skin diving for abalone on the coast. Only decades later I would see them again in a Dirty Harry movie.

  • @Cholin3947
    @Cholin3947 Год назад +3

    I like the intro music.

  • @jeffantonson2304
    @jeffantonson2304 Год назад +2

    Another advantage over the Bogue/Attacker/Ruler class was that as purpose built ships, they had a flat hanger deck rather than following the curvature of the hull, making aircraft handling easier. However, they performed worse in the heavy North Atlantic seas which is one of the main reasons they went to the Pacific.

  • @scrambledganglia6946
    @scrambledganglia6946 Год назад +2

    Gotta give Kaiser credit, dude could pump out ships at 3/4 impulse speed.

  • @Modernnannenginemarineengine
    @Modernnannenginemarineengine Год назад +3

    You have to imagine that a Ship class like CASABLANCA WAS a modern equivalent of a small MISSILE ship. Having 45 missiles // planes etc.

  • @jamesduffin9417
    @jamesduffin9417 Год назад

    Loving the music on this one!!

  • @chardtomp
    @chardtomp Год назад +1

    My father served on two of those, one in WW2 and another in the Korean War.

  • @Pointclearius
    @Pointclearius Год назад +18

    I like this pick for the new intro music
    I do still miss the old track though

  • @davidyoung5114
    @davidyoung5114 Год назад +6

    Will there be a similar respective about the Sangemon-Class escort carriers? There were only four, but they had a very high reputation because their conversion from tankers to escort carriers meant they had a larger flight deck, a steadier landing deck, and could spend longer times at sea.

  • @josephstevens9888
    @josephstevens9888 Год назад +7

    How quickly shipyards and other production facilities were set up and put into operation during WW2 is truly outstanding.

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 Год назад +6

      It's hard to fathom, honestly. These days everything seems to take forever. There's an old rail bridge in our town that's being pulled out and scrapped with a lighter replacement bridge being put in in its place for a biking/walking trail on the old line's route, and it was initially supposed to take six months of road closures, now bumped up to over a year after the replacement bridge buckled two days after they started to put it in. I'm pretty much certain you could have given this job to the SeaBees to do on any given Monday and their only question would have been what do you want us to do on Friday?

    • @tombogan03884
      @tombogan03884 Год назад +1

      That was the real source of victory in both world wars.
      America's factories built the victory.

    • @tombogan03884
      @tombogan03884 Год назад

      @@richmcgee434 I live near Portsmouth Naval Shipyard, in Maine.
      I worked in machining and fabrication.
      I would not hire shipyard workers.
      Their work ethic is crap.
      Yes, they COULD repair a sub in a week, but it's scheduled for 6 months, and it will darn well take 6 months, maybe a bit over.
      In their defense I will say that in peace time the job is not producing ships, it is retaining the skilled workers for when you DO need ships.

    • @richmcgee434
      @richmcgee434 Год назад

      @@tombogan03884 Been watching the old 70s Warship show and I just hit one of the episodes where the laziness of unionized dockies is a major plot point. It's pretty funny how just plain sacred of the union the navy is. Somehow I doubt the situation's has improved any in the intervening fifty years since the show was made.

    • @kenkahre9262
      @kenkahre9262 Год назад

      When you hear the expression on how WWII was won, "It was British Intelligence, Russian Blood and American Steel", now you know what that means.

  • @aerx
    @aerx Год назад

    Best new intro so far

  • @SamAlley-l9j
    @SamAlley-l9j Год назад

    Thanks Drach.

  • @franktozier3184
    @franktozier3184 Год назад +8

    A Knox Class FF would be an interesting ship to look at

    • @connormclernon26
      @connormclernon26 Год назад +3

      A bit outside the channels scope, but I agree

    • @AdamMGTF
      @AdamMGTF Год назад +3

      Yep. Channel ends at 1950. I'm sure there are others out there that cover newer ships

    • @JimmyCricket93
      @JimmyCricket93 Год назад

      @@AdamMGTF bilge pumps if they ever release another episode

  • @samspock11
    @samspock11 Год назад +1

    An uncle of mine that I never got to meet died on Bismarck Sea at Iwo Jima. He was a fireman and would most likely gone down trying to save the ship. My mother said I looked a lot like him.

  • @robertn2
    @robertn2 Год назад +1

    My father was on one of those Casablanca class. U.S.S. Makin Island

  • @MakeMeThinkAgain
    @MakeMeThinkAgain Год назад

    Again, I would recommend the book "The Men of the Gambier Bay" by Edwin P. Hoyt. It does a splendid job of telling the story of both the ship and her air group from construction/formation to the end. What is amazing is how these little ships were such complete warships in most details. And just what can be accomplished with emergency ships and green crews.

  • @dtvconsult
    @dtvconsult Год назад +2

    My mother-in-law’s first husband was one of those that didn’t survive the sinking of the Bismarck Sea.

  • @rickhobson3211
    @rickhobson3211 Год назад

    MUCH better music and great video as always! Thanks for posting!

  • @sobersubmrnr
    @sobersubmrnr Год назад

    Much better music, Drach. Bravo!

  • @gerardburton3741
    @gerardburton3741 Год назад +45

    Hi Drach, Do like the new music.

    • @cpt_nordbart
      @cpt_nordbart Год назад +2

      I dislike change of stuff I'm used to. :|

  • @kenneththompson2249
    @kenneththompson2249 Год назад +3

    I they were designed by the George Sharpe firm rather than Gibbs & Cox which did design the later Commencement Bay class. My father worked for Gibbs & Cox during this period and never said anything about the Casablanca Class. Th e G&C model shop produced a model of the Commencement Bay class that was displayed at the entrance to the office well after the war was over.

    • @Drachinifel
      @Drachinifel  Год назад +1

      I went by what was recorded in Friedman :)

    • @michaelimbesi2314
      @michaelimbesi2314 Год назад +1

      Mark Stille (US Navy Escort Carriers 1942-1945) also lists the designers as Gibbs & Cox, and TBH it wouldn’t surprise me if your father never interacted enough with the Casablanca class for them to be worth mentioning for him. Gibbs is a big firm now, and was absolutely massive in those days. It would be entirely possible for an employee to spend the entire 18-month period of their construction working other projects, and because they’re not the famous front line combatants or the wave of Liberty ships, they just sort of fade into the background. G&C did a lot of work both designing and procuring things during WWII. Some of it is less well remembered than others. We also did the LSM, and hardly anybody who isn’t a historian or a huge history buff even remembers that one existed.

    • @kenneththompson2249
      @kenneththompson2249 Год назад +1

      @@michaelimbesi2314 I'm going by my fathers copy of "Gibbs & Cox, Inc. Naval Architects and marine Engineers" 1948. It lists everything designed by G&C up to that time and the only CVE's listed is the CVE105 class on page 74.

  • @prussianhill
    @prussianhill Год назад +5

    I like this video's intro music the most of the new songs that you've been sampling.

  • @Hazmatt4700
    @Hazmatt4700 Год назад

    For all of the amazing work that Keizer did, very little of his legacy remains.

  • @patrickmcneela217
    @patrickmcneela217 7 месяцев назад

    My grandmother christened the Thetis Bay. I have the inscribed marble and silver cigarette case that was presented to her.

  • @JGCR59
    @JGCR59 Год назад

    I liked the old intro better, it has such a classic newsreel style to it

  • @analogman1496
    @analogman1496 Год назад

    CVE-Combustable, Vulnerable, and Expendable. My dad's older brother was a US Naval Aviator flying General Motors made FM2's in the Pacific as a Plankowner of the USS Makin Island CVE-93 from 1944 till wars end. The FM 2's were designed for the escorts and had a bit larger engine than the F4F's made mostly by Grumman, enabling them to gain adequate take off speed on the short flight decks.

    • @patrickmcneela217
      @patrickmcneela217 7 месяцев назад

      My dad flew Avengers off the Makin Island during the battle of Okinawa. He was with VC-91 and they moved to the Makin Island after the Kitkum Bay was kamikazed

  • @Troglodytarum
    @Troglodytarum Год назад

    Holy sh*t i missed this! Thank you so much! Escort carriersdestroyers have been so fascinating to me ever since I saw battle 360s episode on taffy 3 during the battle of somar.

  • @josipbroztito6763
    @josipbroztito6763 Год назад

    Ayyyy raised in Portland, now i live in Vancouver about 400 yards from the shipyard pictured!