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Hellooo can't wait to see the upcoming video ^^ Can't believe a graphics card broke, that just shows how hard y'all's team is working to bring us amazing history videos
Fun fact, Lütjens never gave permission to open fire. After not responding to Captain Lindemanns request to open fire, Lindemann supposedly said :” I won’t have my ship shot up under my ass, open fire “
@@thomasb1889 incorrect. Patton was AMAZING at logistical planning but he had a hooooorrible record at in the moment battle decisions he was a phenomenal general but a horrid battle commander on site.
KMS BISMARCK & KMS TIRPITZ Wasn't Even Spose To Be Out. Hitler Said That He Didn't Want His Capital Ship's To Be Sent Out Until He's Ready For Them To Be Sent Out. Germans Referred Their Ship's Males Not Females
Fun fact the Johnston's tonnage actually is more than the Yamato's. Most of that weight comes from the massive fucking titanium balls of her crew that day.
The Destroyer Escort Samuel B Roberts is smaller than the Johnston and charged at the Japanese Battle Fleet with the Johnston, and was also Sunk. The Sammy B fought a point blank gun fight with a Heavy Cruiser. Sammy B was so small and so close the Japanese Cruiser could not depress her guns low enough to hit the Sammy B.
Thanks! Update for anyone who see this in the future: RUclips is dangerous when you are sleeping LOL, oh well let this be my first youtube donation :P Such a great channel!
Seeing how your animation production has evolved just shows how brilliant and dedicated this channel is, proud to say I've been watching since the "friend and foe" video with the 101st Airborne division and I look forward to seeing more of your brilliant content
@@Yarnhub Yarnhub... The ship that sailed alongside the Bismarck... The ships' name (Prinz Eugen) is pronounced like this: Prinz Oigen (Last name spelled Eugen... Pronounced like it was spelled "Oigen")...
@@darrinwright5017 eh I'd disagree there's just as many modern day stories like this just they won't ever be told or remembered because they aren't part of a civil war or a world War
@@cloroxbleach3367 I remember a story told about a U.S. army soldier from Texas (I think) that were in the Iraq war. He and his Humvee crew got a call for help. There were 100+ enemy attacking a small U.S. site, w/ a hospital of 400+ injured and medical persons on the other side of a small hill that was the target. His crew got to the site which was a squad or so, making the U.S. forces out numbered by at least 5 to 1. The soldier, who's name I don't remember was manning the M-2, .50 cal. for over a half an hour before his gun fell silent. Yet, he and the rest of the men were able to hold the enemy off long enough for air support to arrive. When they examined his body, they fond 13+ bullet holes in his body. He stayed w/ his gun even after being injured time and time again, and the only thing he asked for was for more ammunition. They save all those lives. He told his family that he would either walk off the transport returning him home or be carried off. He was awarded the Metal of Honor. I am sorry that I don't not know the name of that fallen hero, yet I do know of what he did.
@@cloroxbleach3367The stories of these heroes won't be known if no one tells them. This is the whole point of the "Greatest Generation" thing -- they're called that because their stories were told. And telling such stories is all the more important because without them, people either stop believing in heroes or, far worse, start taking the wrong people to be heroes.
If anyone is interested in a story of immense heroism from WW2 look into that of Teddy Sheean. I Was told the story of his acts on the HMAS Armidale at a young age and it has always stuck with me. Mortally wounded strapping himself into his AA gun to protect his mates as the ship sank. Truly a giant of a man at such a young age.
The fact that the captain of the Japanese ship saluted the crew of the Johnston shows how valiant they were, the captain was just like "Yeah you did a good job you deserve some of the highest honors." Most likely.
I read "The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors" about the Taffy 3 and the Johnson. What a harrowing tale! Those guys, all of them, were some of the most courageous fighters in all of the war. They turned back a vastly larger force and almost certainly saved thousands of soldiers' lives, maybe tens of thousands. I'm so glad you included this battle. All the attention and resources spent on the Tirpitz has always seemed a little pointless to me. Since it was sitting idle in a fjord in Norway for years, why not just let it sit there and then get it when it tried to exit the fjord? Really great video. The only suggestion I would have for this type of video is to just give us a bit of a pause between each segment.
They can't just sit off coast and wait for it to move, they'd be targetted by subs. Tirpitz did actually take part of one offensive action, Unternehmen Zintronella, or Operation Lemon Flavor in English. Yes that was the name. Still not as bad as American bombing Operation Chattanooga Choo-Choo. Furthermore the English had to have a significant naval force for the purpose of containing the Tirpitz, which if Tirpitz was sunk could be used elsewhere. All of this while not being aware of Hitlers order to keep the Tirpitz in safe waters. Therefor it was paramount to sink the Tirpitz. It's also a major moral and propaganda victory
As long as Tirpitz was there and able to leave the fjord, the allies had to keep superior forces in the area in case she did try to leave. That meant that two battleships (plus the necessary escorts) had to be kept in the North sea instead of being available to do... anything else. Just the cost of operating the necessary opposition was expensive. Kill Tirpitz, save money, time, lives, etc. To see more on the damage a German battleship could do without firing a shot, see the story of PQ-17.
She was a “fleet in being”. The North Sea has some of the worst weather in the world, rivaled only by the Aleutian Sea on the Pacific Coast. She was a threat to any supply convoy headed to Murmansk. If she left Norway without detection she could decimate a convoy, particularly after the convoy was hit by Luftwaffe air attacks and U-Boots.
Few minor corrections about the U.S.S. Johnston part. First a 5 inch gun is not a 5" gun turret, it is a 5" gun mount. The second, the "colored dye" fired by the Japanese ships was not for range finding. Each ship had a specific color assigned to it. The reason was so each ship could see where their shells hit and not be confused with other ships rounds. For example Kongo was Yellow, Haruna was Green, Yamato Red and Nagato Orange. For the Iowa class battleships the color codes for AP rounds were: USS Iowa - Orange USS New Jersey - Blue USS Missouri - Red USS Wisconsin - Green
Those British commandos who died in the explosion of that ship... man... that's an unbelievable level of courage, dedication, and selflessness. I'd like to think I'm that brave, but I'm probably not.
Ex navy myself, lucky enough to have never been under real fire ... I can envision this event. Well narrated, obviously well researched; gave me goosebumps.
I think it would be cool if you did a video on USS Laffey (DD724) She survived getting attacked by dozens of kamikazes all in one day despite her wounds.
Awesome stuff here. If i may point out a slight innacuracy, Lütjens never gave an order to open fire. Captain Lindemann tells Lütjens "I will not have my ship shot out from under my ass" and orders the guns fired.
Every one join the channel membership! Just got it, and absolutely worth the few dollars a month, compared to how many I watch, only a few pennys each for excellent content and visuals!!
The first wave with all cannons shot by the Bismarck actually damaged it´s own main aim radar ; then the infrastructural damages destroyed it´s emergency aim radar, so the cannons were obligated to aim manually and independant from one another, so many were misshotting.
Ernest E. Evans was a full-blooded Native American warrior -- half Creek, half Cherokee. IMHO this goes a long way to explain why he fought so hard: going on the warpath came naturally to him.
Captain Lindemann was livid at Lutjens indecision when the Hood and Prince of Wales were firing upon them and furiously told Lutjens, while also ordering the Bridge crew himself, "I will not have my ship shot out from under my ass! Return Fire!"
Down through the years, people have groped for words with which to describe the incredible courage that enabled the tin cans of Taffy 3 to chase off a force of battlewagons led by the mightiest battleship of them all. Lately, I think I found four good ones: "Honey badger don't care." The honey badger is the African cousin of the North American wolverine. Both are renowned for being, pound for pound, two of the most ferocious creatures on Earth, furry balls of fury that are dreaded by beasts many times their size and weight. Honey badgers have been known to fight entire prides of lions -- and if they fail to kill them all before themselvea succumbing, it's not for lack of trying. The Yamato alone weighed more than all of Task Force Taffy 3's ships put togethet. This didn't deter Taffy 3's tin cans from fighting so fiercely that the Yamato's crew honestly thought USS Johnston was a cruiser. But then, she might as well have been. Honey badger don't care.
Captain Evans abandoned the bridge and was as giving commands from the rear steering station in basically his birthday suit. Talk about complete chaos….I could only imagine..
I jumped to my feet pointed at the screen and yelled when you said "it's an older code but it checks out"... Thank you so much for the Star Wars reference ❤
The Catalina had a USN advisor aboard. After this battle the USN sent three of their most modernized battleships (the entire New Mexico class) to be based in Iceland. The next month the USN did a massive operation, occupying Iceland with USMC troops, and supported by an elderly battleship. They also sent the carrier Yorktown from the Pacific to the Atlantic. By then Lend-Lease supplies were being shipped to GB and later to the Soviet Union. The USN also began escorting Allied convoys from East Coast ports to as far as Iceland.
Interessting stories. The mini-subs that strike the Tirpitz are destroyed her so bad that she can´t sail again. The british officers inform the germans at this time to save lifes. The first US-destroyer that sunk in Taffy 3 broke in two before it sunk. They found the wreck of it and after the first torpdeo luncher is no ship.
Yeah, the earlier animation isn't as good, and isn't as detailed, but it shows how impressive your progress has been. Imagine what your videos will look like in the future!
Captain Evans was a fucking Badass💪 Much Respect brother! A thank you for your service doesn't seem to suffice, in such displays of bravery, heroism, and Gallantry. Nothing but respect to all portrayed in this video!!! "This is going to be a fighting ship, anyone who doesn't want to be a part of that.. get tf off now". Never cease to be amazed by our WWII Heroes 🙏🙏🙏
The "Sammy B" The destroyer escort that fought like a battleship. What a honor to be bestoed upon you. That your bravery made you fight like 10× the ship you were.
I can't imagine what it would've been like to be on the deck of the Yamato when those 18.1" main guns opened fire. The concussion must have been nearly disabling for anyone unlucky enough to be manning an anti-aircraft gun nearby. I always thought that the crew of a battleship had to all be safely inside the vessel before the main armament could be fired.
Most aa mounts, if not all had protective covering from shockwaves, especially those close to the main battery. Yes the sounds of the guns going off would have been disturbing, most case it can be ignored as long as you have an ear plug.
it isnt ear plugs guys,, its the concussion,, imagine hitting a brick wall at 15 miles per hour every two minutes, for 20 to 180 minutes a day,,,, we had a 5 inch and I was below it in forward steering,, and it would shatter our lights,, those are 3 1/2 times a five inch gun,, and four times the powder!!
@@dreddj.9451 3 1/2 times the diameter run through the squared/cubed law says 18.1" is closer to 6000 times the powder of a 5". (5x5x5=125 18.1x18.1x18.1=5929.741) Its not quite that bad considering these are cylinders and not boxes, but the principle applies.
Gotta love the Return of the Jedi reference in there lol. Never understood why the DEs had the same hulls But not the same engines making them much slower
The Battle of the North Cape is also very important in WW2; the Nazi Germany battleship Scharnhorst was sunk by HMS Duke of York and other ships on 26 December 1943.
Loved the video. The Yamato segment sounds like poetry! I would like to know and see more but has isolated documentaries, I mean, more of each story in more detail.
Brilliant as ever ,heard with those Swordfish that they could fly under the Bismarck's guns .. Still amazes me the guts shown by those those crews who flew those things ..
YARNHUB pls pls pls pls make a video on the battle of opium hill, for context The battle of Opium Hill took place on 14 February 1942 during the Japanese invasion of Singapore.1 Part of the wider battle for Pasir Panjang, the battle of Opium Hill is remembered for the heroic last stand of 2nd Lieutenant Adnan Saidi and the soldiers from C Company of the Malay Regiment’s 1st Battalion, against the 18th Division of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA).2 Today, a WWII interpretive centre named Reflections at Bukit Chandu stands near the battle site to commemorate the heroism of the Malay Regiment.3 Background Opium Hill, or Bukit Chandu in Malay, stands on Pasir Panjang Ridge (now Kent Ridge) and derives its name from the opium-processing factory located at the foot of the hill.4 During the closing stages of the Battle of Singapore, the entire ridge formed part of the western end of the final British defence perimeter around Singapore.5 The ridge also protected the Alexandra area, where the British Military Hospital (now Alexandra Hospital) and vital British ammunition depots were located.6 The Malay Regiment, with 1,400 men in its 1st and 2nd Battalions, was responsible for defending the Pasir Panjang Ridge.7 The 2nd Battalion defended the area between Ayer Rajah Road and the Gap (South Buona Vista Road),8 with A and C Companies of 1st Battalion guarding its left flank along the length of Reformatory Road.9 The 2nd Loyal Regiment, a British formation, was deployed to guard the 2nd Battalion’s right flank.10 Battle of Pasir Panjang On the morning of 13 February, the battle for Pasir Panjang commenced with an intense Japanese aerial and artillery bombardment of the Malay Regiment’s positions, inflicting heavy casualties and disrupting telephone communications.11 The 1st Battalion’s A Company was decimated by accurate Japanese artillery fire and was forced to withdraw from its advance positions.12 In the afternoon, the Japanese 18th Division, supported by mortars, tanks and aircraft,13 attacked the 2nd Battalion at Point 270 on Buona Vista Hill along the Pasir Panjang Ridge.14 Critically short of ammunition, the 2nd Battalion was forced to yield Point 270 and retreated through the Gap.15 The loss of Point 270 gave the IJA control over the western side of the ridge, exposing the right flank of C Company at Pasir Panjang Village to Japanese enfilade fire.16 Despite being outnumbered and outflanked, C Company held the Pasir Panjang Village crossroads against Japanese attacks, strengthened by the remaining soldiers of A Company and two Bren carriers of the Loyal Regiment.17 Unable to advance, the Japanese set fire to the nearby undergrowth and set up a mortar position to bombard the Malay Regiment defenders.18 Private Yaacob bin Bidin of C Company crawled through the burning undergrowth to eliminate this Japanese mortar team with his light machine gun.19 Private Yaacob survived the war and was later awarded the Military Medal by the British for his bravery.20 The battles on 13 February exacted a severe toll on the 1st Battalion, with four officers reported killed and eight wounded along with a “considerable” number of casualties from other ranks.21 The much-depleted 2nd Battalion became a brigade reserve and moved to Alexandra Brickworks, taking no further part in the battle.22 By midnight on 13 February, the 1st Battalion withdrew to reconsolidate its defence.23 C Company left Pasir Panjang Village to take up a new defensive position at Opium Hill on the Pasir Panjang Ridge.24 To its left, B Company was deployed to cover the approaches to Buona Vista Village, while D Company held the Labrador area on the right flank of C Company.25 C and D Companies were separated by a drain of burning oil that flowed from the nearby Normanton Oil Depot,26 whose storage tanks had been set ablaze on 10 February 1942 by enemy action.27 Taken from eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_457_2005-01-04.html
The usual practice in naval battles was to have the larger warship in the lead. But the Bismarck radar was damaged when the Bismarck had earlier fired on two British heavy cruisers following it. So the shorter Prinez Eurgen took the lead. This threw of the range calculator and the British salvos over shot the German warships in the beginning of the battle.
Around 1:02:40 where it shows two turrets falling out as she capsizes ... it shows only the turrets. Far as I know, all battleship main turrets were attached to barbettes 4-5 decks high.
I'm pretty sure the turrets sit on ball bearing rollers, their sheer weight is what keeps them there. As far as I know the Barbettes are attached to the ship.
@@cameronnewton7053 Barbettes are part of the turret, not the ship. The entire 4-5 deck structure is all one single piece. There are several famous cases of battleships capsizing upside down and the turrets falling out.
@@grizwoldphantasia5005 Barbettes are part of the ship itself, barbettes are the armored cylinders where the gun sits the only thing attached to the battleship guns are their sophisticated reloading mechanism such as ammo and powdered hoist / elevators even ammo racks ..
@@grizwoldphantasia5005 barbette's don't rotate it's was fixed welded on the hull of the battleship ,only the turret and the auto-loading mechanism inside the barbette that sits on the bearing rollers are the only parts in the turret that rotates not barbette's ..
I remember back in the day i would come on youtube and think that it was'nt your video becouse it had such good grhapics ahh the change in grhapics is fantastic
The HMS Hood sank because it had its powder magazine doors open and the conveyors fully laden with shells. The Royal Navy had a standard tactic of maximum rate of fire when going into battle and that meant having minimal obstruction to get ammunition into the turrets. My grandfather was on the HMS Rodney when the Bismarck was sunk. The HMS Rodney had 16 inch radar controlled guns and engaged at maximum range. HMS Rodney then went in as close as possible and basically had one objective to take down the Bismarck at any cost including ramming at the cost of all of its crew. My grandfather was a secondary gun turret officer and fired shells at Bismarck from very close range. He said, there was nothing left of Bismarck in the end. Shells from HMS Rodney were going straight through the hull as flat shots. HMS KGV stood well back and basically did not participate in a meaningful way until the late stages. The 20 year old HMS Rodney was to be sacrificed if necessary. This video at least recognizes the role that HMS Rodney played.
I was a soldier for a long time in the 80s, 15 months of the JNA. Later in the war for the liberation of Croatian territories, volunteer 91-95. I was born by the sea, I was a sailor in litte sailing boat in my youth, but I wouldn't be a crew member on a ship in the Atlantic or the Pacific for all the money in the world. My worst nightmare is drowning. Loss of air. Where I live, there are 1,300 islands and reefs, so wherever you are, you are not far from land. When I was younger, I swam 2.5 nautical miles at once. I'm in bed today but not for long🤣 Praise the sea, cling to the shore.
Taffy 3 was the scene of heroism at a high level. Those US sailors were hopelessly out gunned yet put up such a resistance they succeeded in turning back a superior Japanese force.
The story of the Bismarck always reminds me of my time playing eve online where a battleship, properly fitted, can successfully evade and cause havoc with a local force trying to destroy them. Those guys always seemed to come out positive in the exchange after finally going down.
I like that on the battle of Samar it was the USS Johnstons last stands ship there aswell it was great we have a POV how it looked like on the USS Johnston
I bet you're talking about Captain Evans of the USS Johnston. Badass he was, but there are many other contenders for that title: Audie Murphy, William Marshall, Bishnu Shrestra, King Leonidas of Sparta ... the list goes on and on. The stories of such heroes need to be told in order to send into the future the values that gave them their courage. Without such stories, people either stop believing in heroes or, worse, start believing in the wrong people as heroes.
It amazes me how you do these animations! Greatest ones I've seen in a long time, you even explane it really detailed and your voice also helps with your videos! I subscribed when you did a beautiful one about Lydia the white lily of stallingrad! Keep up the good work! Be proud 😊
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Hellooo can't wait to see the upcoming video ^^
Can't believe a graphics card broke, that just shows how hard y'all's team is working to bring us amazing history videos
First
This channel is great
I would support but I got no money :(
@@MEX239 Sameee
How are you not at 1 million subscribers already? Thought more people would subscribe to this channel by now? The animations are great
ikr, i could spend hours watching these videos
fr he should have 10 billion
Because most people don't care about history.
@@iBeReaper pretty sad tbh
Yeah really great and good explanations.
On the other hand these teams from war are not so interesting for many people.
Fun fact, Lütjens never gave permission to open fire. After not responding to Captain Lindemanns request to open fire, Lindemann supposedly said :” I won’t have my ship shot up under my ass, open fire “
Yep, Lindeman was the kind of commander that Patton would have loved.
Yeah who ever wrote this didn’t pay attention to history 😂
Engaging enemy ships instead of her primary mission of only commerce raiding was her downfall. Lindemann doomed his ship when he opened fire.
@@thomasb1889 incorrect. Patton was AMAZING at logistical planning but he had a hooooorrible record at in the moment battle decisions he was a phenomenal general but a horrid battle commander on site.
KMS BISMARCK & KMS TIRPITZ Wasn't Even Spose To Be Out. Hitler Said That He Didn't Want His Capital Ship's To Be Sent Out Until He's Ready For Them To Be Sent Out. Germans Referred Their Ship's Males Not Females
“It’s an older code but it checks out” earned my like on this video.
Same
I noticed that too lol. Thought of when Han fooled Vader
“I was just about to clear them.”
She canna take much more captain.......🤣
The story of the Johnston could not possibly be more insane, honorable and lucky.
That one gets me every time. Im usually in tears about halfway through the story whenever I hear it. Those boys went down shooting. God bless
@@yankees29
Beautifully expressed 🇺🇸
The world’s smallest largest Battleship
Fun fact the Johnston's tonnage actually is more than the Yamato's. Most of that weight comes from the massive fucking titanium balls of her crew that day.
The Destroyer Escort Samuel B Roberts is smaller than the Johnston and charged at the Japanese Battle Fleet with the Johnston, and was also Sunk. The Sammy B fought a point blank gun fight with a Heavy Cruiser. Sammy B was so small and so close the Japanese Cruiser could not depress her guns low enough to hit the Sammy B.
Thanks!
Update for anyone who see this in the future: RUclips is dangerous when you are sleeping LOL, oh well let this be my first youtube donation :P Such a great channel!
Thank you very much for the kind support!
Seeing how your animation production has evolved just shows how brilliant and dedicated this channel is, proud to say I've been watching since the "friend and foe" video with the 101st Airborne division and I look forward to seeing more of your brilliant content
We have a remaster coming....
@@Yarnhub no way! That's awesome to hear
@@Yarnhub Yarnhub... The ship that sailed alongside the Bismarck... The ships' name (Prinz Eugen) is pronounced like this: Prinz Oigen (Last name spelled Eugen... Pronounced like it was spelled "Oigen")...
It really makes you appreciate what people did back in those times. Much appreciation for them ❤
That's why they were called the greatest generation.
@@darrinwright5017 idk about that
@@darrinwright5017 eh I'd disagree there's just as many modern day stories like this just they won't ever be told or remembered because they aren't part of a civil war or a world War
@@cloroxbleach3367 I remember a story told about a U.S. army soldier from Texas (I think) that were in the Iraq war. He and his Humvee crew got a call for help. There were 100+ enemy attacking a small U.S. site, w/ a hospital of 400+ injured and medical persons on the other side of a small hill that was the target. His crew got to the site which was a squad or so, making the U.S. forces out numbered by at least 5 to 1. The soldier, who's name I don't remember was manning the M-2, .50 cal. for over a half an hour before his gun fell silent. Yet, he and the rest of the men were able to hold the enemy off long enough for air support to arrive. When they examined his body, they fond 13+ bullet holes in his body. He stayed w/ his gun even after being injured time and time again, and the only thing he asked for was for more ammunition. They save all those lives. He told his family that he would either walk off the transport returning him home or be carried off. He was awarded the Metal of Honor. I am sorry that I don't not know the name of that fallen hero, yet I do know of what he did.
@@cloroxbleach3367The stories of these heroes won't be known if no one tells them. This is the whole point of the "Greatest Generation" thing -- they're called that because their stories were told. And telling such stories is all the more important because without them, people either stop believing in heroes or, far worse, start taking the wrong people to be heroes.
We definitely need more of yarnhub cat. Keep going. Your job is great
If anyone is interested in a story of immense heroism from WW2 look into that of Teddy Sheean. I Was told the story of his acts on the HMAS Armidale at a young age and it has always stuck with me. Mortally wounded strapping himself into his AA gun to protect his mates as the ship sank. Truly a giant of a man at such a young age.
Jutland Jutland Jutland Jutland
I think they’re working on something with Sabaton.
ruclips.net/video/tEQuAwhsrKQ/видео.html
@@alexmaccrae7511 Unopposed under crimson skies!!!
Jutland
The greatest clash of
DREADNOUGHTS
IN HISTORY
Just became a member because I enjoy this channel. Definitely worth $5 a month
Thank you Reaper for supporting us !
The fact that the captain of the Japanese ship saluted the crew of the Johnston shows how valiant they were, the captain was just like "Yeah you did a good job you deserve some of the highest honors." Most likely.
Ggs bro.
only someone with steel of balls can try to fight with the most powerful battleship Yamato
and that ship alone will survive tthe ww2, others would perish in battles of layete gulf and philipinnes war
I read "The Last Stand of the Tin Can Sailors" about the Taffy 3 and the Johnson. What a harrowing tale! Those guys, all of them, were some of the most courageous fighters in all of the war. They turned back a vastly larger force and almost certainly saved thousands of soldiers' lives, maybe tens of thousands. I'm so glad you included this battle.
All the attention and resources spent on the Tirpitz has always seemed a little pointless to me. Since it was sitting idle in a fjord in Norway for years, why not just let it sit there and then get it when it tried to exit the fjord?
Really great video. The only suggestion I would have for this type of video is to just give us a bit of a pause between each segment.
They can't just sit off coast and wait for it to move, they'd be targetted by subs. Tirpitz did actually take part of one offensive action, Unternehmen Zintronella, or Operation Lemon Flavor in English. Yes that was the name. Still not as bad as American bombing Operation Chattanooga Choo-Choo. Furthermore the English had to have a significant naval force for the purpose of containing the Tirpitz, which if Tirpitz was sunk could be used elsewhere. All of this while not being aware of Hitlers order to keep the Tirpitz in safe waters. Therefor it was paramount to sink the Tirpitz. It's also a major moral and propaganda victory
As long as Tirpitz was there and able to leave the fjord, the allies had to keep superior forces in the area in case she did try to leave. That meant that two battleships (plus the necessary escorts) had to be kept in the North sea instead of being available to do... anything else. Just the cost of operating the necessary opposition was expensive. Kill Tirpitz, save money, time, lives, etc. To see more on the damage a German battleship could do without firing a shot, see the story of PQ-17.
She was a “fleet in being”.
The North Sea has some of the worst weather in the world, rivaled only by the Aleutian Sea on the Pacific Coast. She was a threat to any supply convoy headed to Murmansk. If she left Norway without detection she could decimate a convoy, particularly after the convoy was hit by Luftwaffe air attacks and U-Boots.
After their experience with the Bismarck, can you blame the Brits for hating Bismarck's sister so much?
@@seanbigay1042 I guess not. It was more personal than strategic.
Commander Earnest Evans of the USS Johnston was called Big Chief because of his Native American Heritage. Born in Pawnee Oklahoma.
"It's an older code, but it checks out." I know where you got that one from!
Stories like the USS Johnston, HMS Glowworm, HMS Campbeltown and many more are why i love history. 🙏
Few minor corrections about the U.S.S. Johnston part. First a 5 inch gun is not a 5" gun turret, it is a 5" gun mount. The second, the "colored dye" fired by the Japanese ships was not for range finding. Each ship had a specific color assigned to it. The reason was so each ship could see where their shells hit and not be confused with other ships rounds.
For example Kongo was Yellow, Haruna was Green, Yamato Red and Nagato Orange.
For the Iowa class battleships the color codes for AP rounds were:
USS Iowa - Orange
USS New Jersey - Blue
USS Missouri - Red
USS Wisconsin - Green
Thank you. Learned something new
I feel emotions that I can't describe after watching this
The 7 being in the explosion is clever
Yes totally agree
Totally
You should tell the story about HMAS Sydney vs. HSK Kormoran.
Those British commandos who died in the explosion of that ship... man... that's an unbelievable level of courage, dedication, and selflessness. I'd like to think I'm that brave, but I'm probably not.
39:34 “she cannae take much more Captain”
I’m happy with Scotland being represented by Scotty from Star Trek, very fitting, it’s perfect! 🏴
Fun fact, there was a cat on the bismarck Call the unsinkable Sam
Cats kept the ship free of other pests.
Ex navy myself, lucky enough to have never been under real fire ... I can envision this event. Well narrated, obviously well researched; gave me goosebumps.
I think it would be cool if you did a video on USS Laffey (DD724)
She survived getting attacked by dozens of kamikazes all in one day despite her wounds.
Did you know uss lexonton had good aa
Awesome stuff here. If i may point out a slight innacuracy, Lütjens never gave an order to open fire. Captain Lindemann tells Lütjens "I will not have my ship shot out from under my ass" and orders the guns fired.
Every one join the channel membership! Just got it, and absolutely worth the few dollars a month, compared to how many I watch, only a few pennys each for excellent content and visuals!!
Thank you.
@@Yarnhub cant too broke 😢
En español
My dad was one of four men in aft steering who Evans barked orders to at 31:20. Passed away 10 years ago this month.
Nah that’s insane, need sources
Honor to him.
hey man don't forget to take a break to so u don't get to tired and keep up the good content dude(:
I agree with you man!
@@Thermotriangle yeah u should never over work your self bc u will hit the wall then
IS NOT YOUR VIDEO!!!!😡
@@Wolfywolf925 what never claimed it was mine
@@Wolfywolf925 what do you mean
The first wave with all cannons shot by the Bismarck actually damaged it´s own main aim radar ; then the infrastructural damages destroyed it´s emergency aim radar, so the cannons were obligated to aim manually and independant from one another, so many were misshotting.
Commander evans what a legend men like this won the war...a true captain went down with his ship
They go down with the ship so they can't get promoted to a desk job
Ernest E. Evans was a full-blooded Native American warrior -- half Creek, half Cherokee. IMHO this goes a long way to explain why he fought so hard: going on the warpath came naturally to him.
Captain Lindemann was livid at Lutjens indecision when the Hood and Prince of Wales were firing upon them and furiously told Lutjens, while also ordering the Bridge crew himself, "I will not have my ship shot out from under my ass! Return Fire!"
Down through the years, people have groped for words with which to describe the incredible courage that enabled the tin cans of Taffy 3 to chase off a force of battlewagons led by the mightiest battleship of them all.
Lately, I think I found four good ones:
"Honey badger don't care."
The honey badger is the African cousin of the North American wolverine. Both are renowned for being, pound for pound, two of the most ferocious creatures on Earth, furry balls of fury that are dreaded by beasts many times their size and weight. Honey badgers have been known to fight entire prides of lions -- and if they fail to kill them all before themselvea succumbing, it's not for lack of trying.
The Yamato alone weighed more than all of Task Force Taffy 3's ships put togethet. This didn't deter Taffy 3's tin cans from fighting so fiercely that the Yamato's crew honestly thought USS Johnston was a cruiser. But then, she might as well have been. Honey badger don't care.
I've learned more from yarnhub than school.
"It's an older code, but it checks out."
You can identify a good channel by the decent use of star wars quotes 😂😍
Have you heard of the USS Laffey? "The Ship that would not die!". Still here, a museum ship though. Still not dead.
I really don't think you need to apologize for the quality of the older videos. I watch these battles with just map data. These are all amazing.
Nothing like sailing on the high seas with Yarnhub and the British Royal Navy. Great video my friend.
Then we ride along with the legendary Taffy 3…..They just refused to go down without a savage fight.
Captain Evans abandoned the bridge and was as giving commands from the rear steering station in basically his birthday suit. Talk about complete chaos….I could only imagine..
May god bless the USS Johnston and her brave crew. 😢RIP
I believe the Roberts lit the bridge of Chikuma on fire with starburst shells. Edit: you actually mentioned exactly that!😂
I jumped to my feet pointed at the screen and yelled when you said "it's an older code but it checks out"... Thank you so much for the Star Wars reference ❤
If I'm not mistaken, I believe the HMS hood was actually a battle cruiser
yes it was,good knowledge :)
And the Sharnhorst was a battleship, not a battlecruiser as the video stated.
The Catalina had a USN advisor aboard. After this battle the USN sent three of their most modernized battleships (the entire New Mexico class) to be based in Iceland. The next month the USN did a massive operation, occupying Iceland with USMC troops, and supported by an elderly battleship. They also sent the carrier Yorktown from the Pacific to the Atlantic. By then Lend-Lease supplies were being shipped to GB and later to the Soviet Union. The USN also began escorting Allied convoys from East Coast ports to as far as Iceland.
Such a cool idea to make this 7… videos, thank you yarnhub!
Tirpiz took up 3 stories!
Awesome premier man! Thanks for being with us in chat! Also you are where I got my WWII interest from! All I can say is Thank you sir!
Interessting stories.
The mini-subs that strike the Tirpitz are destroyed her so bad that she can´t sail again.
The british officers inform the germans at this time to save lifes.
The first US-destroyer that sunk in Taffy 3 broke in two before it sunk.
They found the wreck of it and after the first torpdeo luncher is no ship.
One of the deepest wrecks ever discovered.
Yeah, the earlier animation isn't as good, and isn't as detailed, but it shows how impressive your progress has been. Imagine what your videos will look like in the future!
Captain Evans was a fucking Badass💪 Much Respect brother! A thank you for your service doesn't seem to suffice, in such displays of bravery, heroism, and Gallantry. Nothing but respect to all portrayed in this video!!! "This is going to be a fighting ship, anyone who doesn't want to be a part of that.. get tf off now". Never cease to be amazed by our WWII Heroes 🙏🙏🙏
YES I am going to be waiting all day for this!
The "Sammy B" The destroyer escort that fought like a battleship. What a honor to be bestoed upon you. That your bravery made you fight like 10× the ship you were.
"It's an older code, but it checks out" plus the Imperial March equals a like plus a subscribe.
Maybe you should make a video about the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Would be fun to watch!
Has to be one of the most dramatic naval battles in history.
I can't imagine what it would've been like to be on the deck of the Yamato when those 18.1" main guns opened fire. The concussion must have been nearly disabling for anyone unlucky enough to be manning an anti-aircraft gun nearby. I always thought that the crew of a battleship had to all be safely inside the vessel before the main armament could be fired.
That was a problem with all battleship main guns, to the point you couldn’t use them at the same time as the AA guns.
I never even considered this….wow that’s an incredible observation.
Most aa mounts, if not all had protective covering from shockwaves, especially those close to the main battery.
Yes the sounds of the guns going off would have been disturbing, most case it can be ignored as long as you have an ear plug.
it isnt ear plugs guys,, its the concussion,, imagine hitting a brick wall at 15 miles per hour every two minutes, for 20 to 180 minutes a day,,,, we had a 5 inch and I was below it in forward steering,, and it would shatter our lights,, those are 3 1/2 times a five inch gun,, and four times the powder!!
@@dreddj.9451 3 1/2 times the diameter run through the squared/cubed law says 18.1" is closer to 6000 times the powder of a 5". (5x5x5=125 18.1x18.1x18.1=5929.741) Its not quite that bad considering these are cylinders and not boxes, but the principle applies.
Damn, that Cpt. Evans from the Yamato battle is a bad azz warrior.
Gotta love the Return of the Jedi reference in there lol. Never understood why the DEs had the same hulls But not the same engines making them much slower
Money. They were supposed to be just fast enough to keep up with slow convoys, so didn't need real speed. And engines were *expesnsive*.
Where do you think the writers of "Return" got the line?
Though one could argue that it was an air battle fought at sea, none are more epic than Midway.
The Battle of the North Cape is also very important in WW2; the Nazi Germany battleship Scharnhorst was sunk by HMS Duke of York and other ships on 26 December 1943.
Loved the video. The Yamato segment sounds like poetry!
I would like to know and see more but has isolated documentaries, I mean, more of each story in more detail.
At minute 39:44 the kongo is sailing backwards. Idk if this was intended but it's definitely hilarious 😂😂😂
How the heck don’t you the diamond play button you deserve it like the content, I’m left speechless
This is gonna be on my birthday best birthday gift ever
happy early B-day
@@BrixFilms thanks
Happy birth day ik im early but anyways(:
No it's not it's in 18 hours it will be a different day by then. Plus this is videos he has already so you prolly saw them
Happy (early?) birthday mate, fellow naval history guy?
USS Johnston's Captian: *rips off his shert)
Hagen: "I sure as hell can see that."
Brilliant as ever ,heard with those Swordfish that they could fly under the Bismarck's guns ..
Still amazes me the guts shown by those those crews who flew those things ..
YARNHUB pls pls pls pls make a video on the battle of opium hill, for context
The battle of Opium Hill took place on 14 February 1942 during the Japanese invasion of Singapore.1 Part of the wider battle for Pasir Panjang, the battle of Opium Hill is remembered for the heroic last stand of 2nd Lieutenant Adnan Saidi and the soldiers from C Company of the Malay Regiment’s 1st Battalion, against the 18th Division of the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA).2 Today, a WWII interpretive centre named Reflections at Bukit Chandu stands near the battle site to commemorate the heroism of the Malay Regiment.3
Background
Opium Hill, or Bukit Chandu in Malay, stands on Pasir Panjang Ridge (now Kent Ridge) and derives its name from the opium-processing factory located at the foot of the hill.4 During the closing stages of the Battle of Singapore, the entire ridge formed part of the western end of the final British defence perimeter around Singapore.5 The ridge also protected the Alexandra area, where the British Military Hospital (now Alexandra Hospital) and vital British ammunition depots were located.6
The Malay Regiment, with 1,400 men in its 1st and 2nd Battalions, was responsible for defending the Pasir Panjang Ridge.7 The 2nd Battalion defended the area between Ayer Rajah Road and the Gap (South Buona Vista Road),8 with A and C Companies of 1st Battalion guarding its left flank along the length of Reformatory Road.9 The 2nd Loyal Regiment, a British formation, was deployed to guard the 2nd Battalion’s right flank.10
Battle of Pasir Panjang
On the morning of 13 February, the battle for Pasir Panjang commenced with an intense Japanese aerial and artillery bombardment of the Malay Regiment’s positions, inflicting heavy casualties and disrupting telephone communications.11 The 1st Battalion’s A Company was decimated by accurate Japanese artillery fire and was forced to withdraw from its advance positions.12 In the afternoon, the Japanese 18th Division, supported by mortars, tanks and aircraft,13 attacked the 2nd Battalion at Point 270 on Buona Vista Hill along the Pasir Panjang Ridge.14 Critically short of ammunition, the 2nd Battalion was forced to yield Point 270 and retreated through the Gap.15 The loss of Point 270 gave the IJA control over the western side of the ridge, exposing the right flank of C Company at Pasir Panjang Village to Japanese enfilade fire.16
Despite being outnumbered and outflanked, C Company held the Pasir Panjang Village crossroads against Japanese attacks, strengthened by the remaining soldiers of A Company and two Bren carriers of the Loyal Regiment.17 Unable to advance, the Japanese set fire to the nearby undergrowth and set up a mortar position to bombard the Malay Regiment defenders.18 Private Yaacob bin Bidin of C Company crawled through the burning undergrowth to eliminate this Japanese mortar team with his light machine gun.19 Private Yaacob survived the war and was later awarded the Military Medal by the British for his bravery.20
The battles on 13 February exacted a severe toll on the 1st Battalion, with four officers reported killed and eight wounded along with a “considerable” number of casualties from other ranks.21 The much-depleted 2nd Battalion became a brigade reserve and moved to Alexandra Brickworks, taking no further part in the battle.22
By midnight on 13 February, the 1st Battalion withdrew to reconsolidate its defence.23 C Company left Pasir Panjang Village to take up a new defensive position at Opium Hill on the Pasir Panjang Ridge.24 To its left, B Company was deployed to cover the approaches to Buona Vista Village, while D Company held the Labrador area on the right flank of C Company.25 C and D Companies were separated by a drain of burning oil that flowed from the nearby Normanton Oil Depot,26 whose storage tanks had been set ablaze on 10 February 1942 by enemy action.27
Taken from eresources.nlb.gov.sg/infopedia/articles/SIP_457_2005-01-04.html
Idk why, it’s even better when you guys edited it into compilation.
I like how you used the same battle twice but from a different perspective
Yay! The Cat showed his face!
All these stories were well done. Its shocking how many men perished.
Love this compilation of naval battles in major wars. You are underrated
11:25: That reference... and the very very subtle music change. brilliant.
“It’s an older code, but it checks out.” I see what you did there. Someone needs to warn them, that’s no moon!
Gah! Line Stealing!
The usual practice in naval battles was to have the larger warship in the lead. But the Bismarck radar was damaged when the Bismarck had earlier fired on two British heavy cruisers following it. So the shorter Prinez Eurgen took the lead. This threw of the range calculator and the British salvos over shot the German warships in the beginning of the battle.
Around 1:02:40 where it shows two turrets falling out as she capsizes ... it shows only the turrets. Far as I know, all battleship main turrets were attached to barbettes 4-5 decks high.
I'm pretty sure the turrets sit on ball bearing rollers, their sheer weight is what keeps them there. As far as I know the Barbettes are attached to the ship.
@@cameronnewton7053 Barbettes are part of the turret, not the ship. The entire 4-5 deck structure is all one single piece. There are several famous cases of battleships capsizing upside down and the turrets falling out.
@@grizwoldphantasia5005 Barbettes are part of the ship itself, barbettes are the armored cylinders where the gun sits the only thing attached to the battleship guns are their sophisticated reloading mechanism such as ammo and powdered hoist / elevators even ammo racks ..
@@su-57stealthfighter73 Not at all. Barbettes are part and parcel of the turrets themselves. They rotate together.
@@grizwoldphantasia5005 barbette's don't rotate it's was fixed welded on the hull of the battleship ,only the turret and the auto-loading mechanism inside the barbette that sits on the bearing rollers are the only parts in the turret that rotates not barbette's ..
Animations are great. Voice is great. The way you tell the story is just great. Overall, great. Deserves a sub!
Really great stuff - well done. Good writing and fabulous graphics make this really engaging to watch. Thank you
I remember back in the day i would come on youtube and think that it was'nt your video becouse it had such good grhapics ahh the change in grhapics is fantastic
40:27 it was evans who was waving. Like if you noticed too
Wow good eyes.
The Johnston and Samuel B. Roberts were two of the most ferocious little ships the world has ever seen.
A sincere salute to every military man ✊ ✊
The HMS Hood sank because it had its powder magazine doors open and the conveyors fully laden with shells. The Royal Navy had a standard tactic of maximum rate of fire when going into battle and that meant having minimal obstruction to get ammunition into the turrets.
My grandfather was on the HMS Rodney when the Bismarck was sunk. The HMS Rodney had 16 inch radar controlled guns and engaged at maximum range. HMS Rodney then went in as close as possible and basically had one objective to take down the Bismarck at any cost including ramming at the cost of all of its crew. My grandfather was a secondary gun turret officer and fired shells at Bismarck from very close range. He said, there was nothing left of Bismarck in the end. Shells from HMS Rodney were going straight through the hull as flat shots. HMS KGV stood well back and basically did not participate in a meaningful way until the late stages. The 20 year old HMS Rodney was to be sacrificed if necessary. This video at least recognizes the role that HMS Rodney played.
Man he should get an oscars award for Being a great animator and a narrator
I was a soldier for a long time in the 80s, 15 months of the JNA. Later in the war for the liberation of Croatian territories, volunteer 91-95. I was born by the sea, I was a sailor in litte sailing boat in my youth, but I wouldn't be a crew member on a ship in the Atlantic or the Pacific for all the money in the world. My worst nightmare is drowning. Loss of air. Where I live, there are 1,300 islands and reefs, so wherever you are, you are not far from land. When I was younger, I swam 2.5 nautical miles at once. I'm in bed today but not for long🤣
Praise the sea, cling to the shore.
250k away Yarnhub! The big deserved mil is on its way🎉 thanks for these big uploads, I fucking love them.
How do you not have more subscribers, besides the infographics show, you are my favorite and probably the best history youtuber
Thanks so much for the battle of the Denmark strait! Could we have Battle of Raseiniai with the unkillable KV-2?
Taffy 3 was the scene of heroism at a high level. Those US sailors were hopelessly out gunned yet put up such a resistance they succeeded in turning back a superior Japanese force.
At 39:30 star trek reference "I'm giving her all shes got capatan"
32:43 I'm glad the kitty cat made it out as well.
The story of the Bismarck always reminds me of my time playing eve online where a battleship, properly fitted, can successfully evade and cause havoc with a local force trying to destroy them. Those guys always seemed to come out positive in the exchange after finally going down.
I don;t think the 115 Bismarck survivors felt there was much "positive outcome" for the ship.
I like that on the battle of Samar it was the USS Johnstons last stands ship there aswell it was great we have a POV how it looked like on the USS Johnston
Two of the battles in this video are the same but from different perspective of the johnston and EOT right ?
Yep
1:22 "Alle von euch - Gefecht stationen!!!"
3:07 "geegnerische Schlachtschiff zerstoert"
Any chance to do a video on the ORP Piorun? Poland's efforts deserve some light.
Highly recommend Animarchy History's video on the Bismarck!
LazerPig’s video on it is superb.
I AM A POLE!!!!! *fires pistol and throws trash at the Huns *
About 0:50 "The flagship of the German navy, the terror of the seas"
New Sabaton cooperation incoming? ;-)
I love when you post I all Waze want to watch it when a new video comes out 😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤!
26:10 literally the most badass man of all time
I bet you're talking about Captain Evans of the USS Johnston. Badass he was, but there are many other contenders for that title: Audie Murphy, William Marshall, Bishnu Shrestra, King Leonidas of Sparta ... the list goes on and on.
The stories of such heroes need to be told in order to send into the future the values that gave them their courage. Without such stories, people either stop believing in heroes or, worse, start believing in the wrong people as heroes.
Great job making this compilation, Yarnhub!
A couple of suggestions for your next video:
1.Operation Oyster (The Eindhoven bombing)
2.Paddy Mayne
i liked how the 2 stories crossed paths
Rip to all the fallen graphic cards.
Hollywood will make 7 movies out of this brilliant 1+ hour documentary. Amazing 👏
It amazes me how you do these animations! Greatest ones I've seen in a long time, you even explane it really detailed and your voice also helps with your videos! I subscribed when you did a beautiful one about Lydia the white lily of stallingrad! Keep up the good work! Be proud 😊