Battleships of the Wyoming Class

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  • Опубликовано: 24 сен 2023
  • Play World of Warships here: wo.ws/3OqoO2u
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    USS Wyoming, BB-32, was commissioned on September 25, 1912, 111 years ago. The two ships of the “Wyoming” class would go on to serve with distinction for thirty five years.
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    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As very few images of the actual event are available in the Public Domain, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
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Комментарии • 253

  • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
    @TheHistoryGuyChannel  8 месяцев назад +33

    Play World of Warships here: wo.ws/3OqoO2u
    Thank you World of Warships for sponsoring this video. During registration use the promo code WARSHIPS to receive a huge starter pack including a bunch of Doubloons, Credits, Premium Account time, and a FREE ship after you complete 15 battles! The promo code is only for new players who register for the first time on the Wargaming portal.

    • @Camooses
      @Camooses 8 месяцев назад +3

      That Kleber gameplay was fantastic. Where did you get it?

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  8 месяцев назад +10

      @@Camooses WoW provided the reel. If that was me, I’d be missing my shots and running into torpedoes.

    • @GrubbyZebra
      @GrubbyZebra 8 месяцев назад +5

      I have an 1896 printing of The Influence of Sea Power upon History. Interesting to learn the history of it, the man behind it, and the legacy he left.

    • @robaitken4592
      @robaitken4592 8 месяцев назад +5

      I will have to keep an eye on the Horizon for any ship wearing a bow tie ^_^ @@TheHistoryGuyChannel

    • @steveaustin2686
      @steveaustin2686 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Those islands have it in for my ships. They are always ramming my ships when I'm not looking. ;)
      If you are TheHistoryGuy in game, you have a better main gun hit rate than I do. :) (Kizarvexis)

  • @mikemcclure9983
    @mikemcclure9983 8 месяцев назад +420

    When I was a Hospital Corpsman in the U.S. Navy a 92 y/o patient I was caring for was in Teddy's Great White Fleet. Mr. Mays told me about this cruise and others. In 1976 Charlie Mays was blind at this time and had many medical problems, but he would invite corpsman from the hospital over to his house to watch sports and drink beer in what he called his party room. Of course Mr. Mays didn't drink at his age, but told us a lot of stories and supplied the beer. A Sailor to be remembered.

    • @kordekukppodrozniczo1838
      @kordekukppodrozniczo1838 8 месяцев назад +11

      Amazing. Do You remember any of those stories? And if You do, could You share them with us?

    • @floepiejane
      @floepiejane 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@VioletSkyesGreat White Fleet heartwarming?! YEEESH

    • @robertkelley3437
      @robertkelley3437 8 месяцев назад +12

      Should write those stories down and share them, before they are forgotten.

    • @lovelessissimo
      @lovelessissimo 8 месяцев назад +8

      My grandfather was a corpsman in ww2 and a hospital administrator in Montana by the time he retired in the 70s. He didn't talk much about his time in the Pacific theater.

    • @donalddodson7365
      @donalddodson7365 8 месяцев назад +2

      @mikemcclure9983 Thanks, Doc. Must have been a grand adventure for young sailors. Thank you for your service, too.

  • @dn88s
    @dn88s 8 месяцев назад +60

    Never underestimate the power of telling people in power what they already want to hear.

  • @IdleDrifter
    @IdleDrifter 8 месяцев назад +83

    You can't save every ship from the scrap yard or to be sunk as a Naval target or artificial reef. But modelers can build painstakingly accurate scale models of ships. So that in a private collection or as Museum pieces, history is remembered.

    • @jamesdoyle5405
      @jamesdoyle5405 8 месяцев назад +7

      A brilliant solution, thanks.

    • @pilldickle1688
      @pilldickle1688 8 месяцев назад +2

      And now with 3D modeling technology and advanced graphics, you can bring them back to life in World Of Warships™, a free to play naval warfare online multiplayer experience!

    • @user-ck9co5kd7q
      @user-ck9co5kd7q 8 месяцев назад +4

      I'm from Wyoming, two years ago I rebuilt a 1/350 scale resin model of the U.S.S. Arkansas into the U.S.S. Wyoming circa 1930 before she was converted into an AG. it's complete with metal turned gun barrels and 3D printed cage masts. The original shipbuilder's model from 1918 is in the Military Vehicles Muesum in Debois, Wyoming. It's about 8 feet long enclosed in a wonderful wood and glass case, it used to be on display at the Ford Wyoming Event Center in Casper, Wyoming until this year.

    • @steventroyer1463
      @steventroyer1463 8 месяцев назад +2

      David Warther Carvings is a delightful museum of sailing history with ninety exquisite models well worth the time and ten dollar admission if you are able to come to Ohio.

    • @jimtalbott9535
      @jimtalbott9535 8 месяцев назад

      Very true - though I also think we shouldn’t go the “British” route, scraping basically every last thing.

  • @richardklug822
    @richardklug822 8 месяцев назад +55

    Many thanks for highlighting the accomplishments of BB33 USS Arkansas, on which my father served 1939-40.

    • @NicholasA231
      @NicholasA231 8 месяцев назад +3

      My grandfather was on the Arkansas in Africa, at Normandy, and into the Pacific until the end of the war, and the transport of troops back home. We have some photos of the crew and things. I can't remember exact details at the moment, I'd have to check with my mom to figure out everything we have, but I'd be up for exchanging info.
      I guess they wouldn't have been on board at the same time, but still.

    • @carltonouzts4941
      @carltonouzts4941 8 месяцев назад

      My father servered on the Arkansas as one of the four ships he was on during the war. He was an engineer .Very proud of him and his service. He eventually retired from the reserves as a Lt. Cmd.{Jack E. Ouzts}.While he served in both the Atlantic and Pacific I think he mostly had an affection for his Pacific experiences.He eventually became a nuclesr engineer with Westinghouse and designed nuclear propulsion systems on our nuclear subs.

  • @NicholasA231
    @NicholasA231 8 месяцев назад +44

    If you look at a famous photo of the Bikini atoll nuclear test, there is a shadow - unmistakable - of a ship sitting vertically, just to the right side, in the rising column of destruction. That is the BB33 USS Arkansas, from whose decks and turrets my grandfather served in both theaters of the second great war. He was among those on hand to witness the end of his great ship; he even got the t-shirt.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  8 месяцев назад +10

      Yes- Arkansas standing on her stern

    • @kevinhaywood1268
      @kevinhaywood1268 8 месяцев назад +2

      That is a very old myth. What you actually see is a spot where the Arkansas capsized and displaced the water under her. She never stood on her ends, she capsized immediately.

    • @ut000bs
      @ut000bs 8 месяцев назад +2

      @@kevinhaywood1268 What you wrote is true although it was actually _the shadow_ of that depression in the water that made the picture a legend but we all love a good sea story.

    • @JohnPatterson-kz8jr
      @JohnPatterson-kz8jr 8 месяцев назад

      Hope he didn't develop cancer from the atom bomb tests!!

    • @rodgerjepsen7952
      @rodgerjepsen7952 16 дней назад

      😅​@@ut000bs

  • @davidcampbell4465
    @davidcampbell4465 8 месяцев назад +59

    I served aboard the USS Mahan (DDG-42). She has since been decommissioned & now there's a newer USS Mahan. An Arliegh Burke class DDG. GO NAVY!

    • @MaxCroat
      @MaxCroat 3 месяца назад

      There was also a US destroyer bearing the same name in the WW2 era. Built and comissioned a few years before the war and lost during the war in the Pacific.

  • @johnskerry420
    @johnskerry420 8 месяцев назад +6

    Arkansas was a handsome ship. My father spent his 3/c midshipman cruise aboard her in the summer of 1937. They sailed to Europe including port visits in England and Germany. He left me several great pictures. Years later when I was in the Navy and standing in-port OOD a tug took the USS New Jersey under tow from PSNS Bremerton to begin her reactivation. It was a proud moment watching a battlewagon head for fleet duty again!

  • @jeffreymcfadden9403
    @jeffreymcfadden9403 8 месяцев назад +7

    Willis "Chin" Lee, the greatest WW2 battleship admiral of the USN passed away just before the end of WW2 aboard the USS Arkansas. A Wyoming class battleship and the oldest battleship in the navy.

  • @jdheadley9181
    @jdheadley9181 8 месяцев назад +14

    Thank you for this video. My grandfather was a Marine stationed on BB32 between 1917 & 1919. He passed away in 1969 when I was only seven years old, so I never heard him speak of his service.

  • @robertgoss4842
    @robertgoss4842 8 месяцев назад +10

    Mr. THG: I don't recall ever taking time to say this, so I will say it now: Your historical reporting is unmatched in its timeliness, thoroughness, and its relevance. Its practical applications seem boundless, but the sheer reading joy that I gain from your pages is sometimes euphoric. I have been a fanatical history consumer for my entire life, so I can say that. Thank you very much.

  • @josephpicogna6348
    @josephpicogna6348 8 месяцев назад +22

    Speaking is a big fan and a USN officer with 25 years service, , in surface warfare, a very big thank you! These were some of my favorite ships.

  • @jonrolfson1686
    @jonrolfson1686 8 месяцев назад +21

    Kudos on your explanation that Mahan emphasized the establishment and maintenance of control of the sea, not the sole need for a simple single decisive sea battle. Mahan is often mistakenly remembered, and disparaged, as recommending that single decisive sea battle as the only route to control of the sea.

    • @user-gl5dq2dg1j
      @user-gl5dq2dg1j 8 месяцев назад +2

      Whilst, I've never read Mahan myself, I have listened to a few people explain Mahan and a few other theorists from that time, and they all seem to agree that see power leads to control of the seas and doesn't need to come from a decisive battle.

    • @sharpright6887
      @sharpright6887 7 месяцев назад +3

      @jonrolfson1686. I have studied naval tactics and have heard disparaging arguments against Mahan but I have never heard anyone claim he was for singular decisive battles.

  • @Dudeguymansir
    @Dudeguymansir 8 месяцев назад +9

    Appreciate you, The History Guy.
    I grew up watching Modern Marvels and The History Channel when they still played history.
    Your videos are easily the closest modern replica to this seemingly forgot video format I’ve seen. Deep dive, fact heavy, rapid fired details, without resorting to reality TV BS.
    Fantastic work, in all of your videos. Thank you.

  • @BruceFJRay
    @BruceFJRay 8 месяцев назад +19

    Thank you for this very interesting video. As a point of interest, I had a first blood Uncle, George Maiella(my Mother's brother), a son of Italian immigrants(my grand parents), who was in service on the BB36, Nevada. My uncle was assighned to the Nevada right after it was repaired after the Pearl Harbor damage. And he remained on that ship for the rest of WW2.

  • @thumperjdm
    @thumperjdm 8 месяцев назад +22

    Great episode THG! So weird to see a full-sized battleship @15:38 with 5" guns where her main guns used to reside.

  • @matthewpoplawski8740
    @matthewpoplawski8740 8 месяцев назад +6

    AS ALWAYS, MR. LANCE, AN EXCELLENT VIDEO!!
    Your last comment about how the Navy casted the battleships when they were no
    longer needed made me think of the Utah rusting away at Pearl Harbor, the Massachusetts doing the same in Fall River,and, the Illinois converted into a "training ship(In the pictures that I've seen, she looks like a floating barn).
    The saddest one of all(at least to me) was the fate the USS OREGON.
    She was converted into a dynamite bunker.
    The picture I have shows with just her hull.
    No guns, no superstructure, NO NOTHING!!
    After her famous cruise rounding to get to Cuba(read Capt. Joshua Slocum's encounter with her in his book SAILING ALONE AROUND THE WORLD),and, had magnificent service during the Battle of Santiago (Spanish-American War).
    A sad end for a noble lady.

  • @frankbodenschatz173
    @frankbodenschatz173 8 месяцев назад +9

    Thanks for the Wyoming pics with the multi 5" turrets!

  • @Andrewm714
    @Andrewm714 8 месяцев назад +5

    Aaah! You sunk my battleship! (I still play Battleship - the one from when I was a young child, choosing to have either the red or the blue fold-out game board with my PT Cruiser hidden in plain sight.) And, I still have all of the white (miss) and red (hit) pegs.

  • @jamesrosa38
    @jamesrosa38 8 месяцев назад +4

    It is interesting that you did not mention where the main mast of the USS Wyoming ended up, That is the parade grounds at F. E. WARREN Air Force Base in Cheyenne, Wyoming. It was once a major Cavalry outpost of the US Army, And now where many of the crews for Minuteman missile sites work out of.

  • @MegaFortinbras
    @MegaFortinbras 8 месяцев назад +7

    In The Influence Of Sea Power Upon History, Mahan says that modern ironclad ships -- which at the time he was writing, meant pre-dreadnaughts -- had not been tested in battle. Remember that the Battle of Tsushima Straits wasn't until 1905.

  • @michaelgow7461
    @michaelgow7461 8 месяцев назад +2

    My great-grandfather did his gunnery training on Wyoming before the war began, I have some of his journals where he talks about life at the academy and aboard the Wyoming.

  • @MyName-tb9oz
    @MyName-tb9oz 8 месяцев назад +9

    My platoon leader (2nd Lt.) was Lt. Mahan back in the late 80s. He was a pretty good guy for a butter-bar.

  • @richardkelso9478
    @richardkelso9478 8 месяцев назад +3

    I grew up in Wyoming but never heard the history of the ship or the Wyoming class. Thanks for a very interesting and informative program. Ironically, I saw this on 25 September, the anniversary of Wyoming’s commissioning.

  • @ALRIGHTYTHEN.
    @ALRIGHTYTHEN. 8 месяцев назад +4

    12:05 The war was "won" by ships that were designed and build after those naval treaties had been abandoned. The ships that were built while navigating the treaties simply held the line until the war winning navy became available.

  • @kapitanleutnantschneider2076
    @kapitanleutnantschneider2076 8 месяцев назад +8

    The USS Wyoming is one of my favorite low teir battleships in WoWS. Yes she's slow and her air defense is laughable but she packs one hell of a punch.

  • @thesleepyweasel3775
    @thesleepyweasel3775 8 месяцев назад +3

    I've been playing World of Warships for years, and it's very cool to see them sponsor an episode!

  • @gregorytoddsmith9744
    @gregorytoddsmith9744 8 месяцев назад +2

    Hello from the State of Wyoming.🤠

  • @TKay44
    @TKay44 8 месяцев назад +1

    A 12 inch gun taken off the USS Wyoming is in Battery 519 Fort Myles Delaware. It is in the south gun room. The battery is restored to it WWII configuration. Since no US Army 12 inch gun exists a Navy type was used. It is on a reconstructed mount.

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 8 месяцев назад +3

    That was great trivia about it, having fired more ammunition than any other ship.

  • @TheTiffanyAching
    @TheTiffanyAching 8 месяцев назад +2

    Always a treat. Thank, HG!

  • @timsimms65707
    @timsimms65707 8 месяцев назад +2

    Two tough old battlewagons, thanks History Guy!

  • @metalspork323
    @metalspork323 8 месяцев назад +5

    Thanks for always coming up with wonderful content! Glad to see your partnered with World of Warships!

  • @frankgulla2335
    @frankgulla2335 7 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you, THG, for the succinct history of the Wyoming class BB ships.

  • @jebsails2837
    @jebsails2837 8 месяцев назад +2

    I grew up on Aquidneck Island, which is linked by causeway to Coasters Harbor Island, home of the US Naval War College. Visiting and later working there. First as a youngster, as my father was a serving W-4 and then as a DoN employee, at the NWC. Prior to the establishment of the NWC the property / island was used by Newport County as the Poor Farm for indigents and Asylum. Narragansett Bay

  • @mattblom3990
    @mattblom3990 8 месяцев назад +2

    I've dumped almost $6000 into World of Warships since 2015. I'll dedicate that to the sponsorship they give you and Drachinifel. Great video though, smiled big when I saw today's topic!

  • @bigsarge2085
    @bigsarge2085 8 месяцев назад +5

    Interesting history about the battleship class named after my home state! Thank you.

  • @sd906238
    @sd906238 8 месяцев назад +3

    Sounds like Mahan was much better at writing books than commanding ships.

  • @SabreAce33
    @SabreAce33 8 месяцев назад +7

    This was a nice balance of the technical aspects and history of the class as well as the strategic and theoretical environment that birthed it. Now we'll need a collaboration with @drachinifel!
    Thanks for the excellent content!

  • @jimparsons6803
    @jimparsons6803 Месяц назад +1

    I recall reading about the world circumnavigation from school. Did not know about the later Board that organized the later constructions. My thanks.

  • @jamesfetherston1190
    @jamesfetherston1190 8 месяцев назад +2

    “Navel gazing continues “. 😀😀

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 8 месяцев назад +12

    As a former USN Sailor this history lesson is appreciated. I was aboard USS Kitty Hawk CV 63 during that collision in the Sea of Japan with a USSR Victor Class SSN. Yahweh bless our United States of America 🇺🇸

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  8 месяцев назад +1

      ruclips.net/video/ACSzlEX362o/видео.htmlsi=0hLBoV4NS9nQzLGf

  • @Nicksonian
    @Nicksonian 8 месяцев назад +21

    Ironic that a class of ships would be named for an under-populated, landlocked state with few if any navigable natural waterways.

    • @user-jg6bd7se8u
      @user-jg6bd7se8u 8 месяцев назад +1

      Or is the irony the naming of the state? I suppose you'd have to decide the origin of the word "Wyoming". If it arose o ly at the formation of the state... then it is indeed odd to name a vessel after a land locked state. But where did the word originate?

    • @malcolmmeer9761
      @malcolmmeer9761 8 месяцев назад +4

      How about The Nevada , maybe The Arizona,or The Indianapolis

    • @LyrusLLupo
      @LyrusLLupo 8 месяцев назад

      Didn't state gov bid to have ships named after their state? I could of swore i heard something about that and it being part of how the construction is funded.

    • @connorhulegaard2012
      @connorhulegaard2012 8 месяцев назад +1

      Ironic or iconic?

    • @shenghan9385
      @shenghan9385 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@connorhulegaard2012I guess both.

  • @therob4371
    @therob4371 8 месяцев назад +1

    Now I remember! It was an earlier episode of The History Guy, and you said something like 12" 50 calibre guns and I thought you'd lost your mind, having never heard that terminology before. A quick search of the interweb pulled it up and I learned a thing.

  • @kevinmiller7792
    @kevinmiller7792 7 месяцев назад +1

    As always, your precursor discussion is just as interesting as the discussion of the ship itself. Thank you for such an interesting site, with great research and attention to detail.👍😉

  • @scottgromoshak7118
    @scottgromoshak7118 8 месяцев назад +3

    Admiral Willis Lee died on USS Wyoming's tender training those men.

  • @robertkoons1154
    @robertkoons1154 8 месяцев назад +5

    Actually there were 2 battleships older than Wyoming serving in World War 2. USS Utah which had been demilitarized due to 1922 naval treaty, sering as gunnery training ship like Wyoming and as a remote controlled target ship, sink Dec 7 1941. And the former USS Kearsarge, serving as a crane ship throughout the war, and only scrapped around the time Wyoming was scrapped.

    • @Ron52G
      @Ron52G 8 месяцев назад +2

      The Utah wasn’t a battleship when WW2 started.

    • @robertkoons1154
      @robertkoons1154 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@Ron52G Neither was Wyoming. And the crane ship Kearsarge hadn't been a battleship since 1922.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  8 месяцев назад +2

      But I referred to the Wyoming class. Arkansas was actually a battleship throughout the war.
      Kearsarge and Utah are both interesting stories that I hope to tell someday. Sadly, though, Utah cannot be said to have served throughout the war, as she was stricken from the rolls in 1944.

    • @bobmartin4942
      @bobmartin4942 8 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@TheHistoryGuyChannelAdd the fact the she is still sitting wrong side up across Ford Island from the Arizona. Also a memorial to that day in 1941.

  • @HM2SGT
    @HM2SGT 8 месяцев назад +11

    Thank you for doing this sir. I always enjoy history & trivia, & such a rich variety of subjects & depth of info- generous of you.

  • @rohmarts
    @rohmarts 8 месяцев назад +2

    The Great Whlte Fleet was such a flex.

  • @benjaminscribner7737
    @benjaminscribner7737 8 месяцев назад +1

    You made this old Navy man smile today

  • @dougjb7848
    @dougjb7848 8 месяцев назад +2

    To paraphrase the great Hacksaw Jim Duggan: “WYOOOOOOO!!!”

  • @futsuu
    @futsuu 8 месяцев назад +3

    The history guy is the human version of a paper plate with plain ruffles on it in the proximity of a bandstand.

  • @davidcashin1894
    @davidcashin1894 13 дней назад

    Love the history of ship design and building so much. Thanks

  • @distracting_games
    @distracting_games 8 месяцев назад +2

    WoWS is one of my favorite games.

  • @ArtistryBranson
    @ArtistryBranson 8 месяцев назад

    What a special, spectacular episode, Mr. Guy! You moved me. God bless you and the Mrs!

  • @KawaiiFlandre495
    @KawaiiFlandre495 8 месяцев назад +2

    I know because I have played as her in World of Warships.

  • @Ice_Karma
    @Ice_Karma 8 месяцев назад +2

    A great video about a class of ship I didn't know about. That was a pretty rough transition to the outro, though. 🙀

  • @richardcobb4287
    @richardcobb4287 8 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome to hear you play WoWS. It's a fun game and I log in daily.

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for the lesson.

  • @Eric_Hutton.1980
    @Eric_Hutton.1980 8 месяцев назад +6

    USS Wyoming The Chesapeake Raider.

  • @ollierobinson4339
    @ollierobinson4339 8 месяцев назад +2

    What a sad ending for those great battleships

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 8 месяцев назад +3

    THG knows that must of his viewers are military buffs. Do it's an extra guarantee of success.

  • @mattgeorge90
    @mattgeorge90 8 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent episode as always! ❤

  • @KartiacKID
    @KartiacKID 8 месяцев назад +1

    Heigh-ho, Heigh-ho
    It’s of to sea we go
    Heigh-ho, Heigh-ho, Heigh-ho
    It’s off to the galley we go
    I think I’m crazy-hungry…but not staving

  • @georgeperkins4171
    @georgeperkins4171 8 месяцев назад +1

    Down where I live, they scrap ships at the port of Brownsville. Alot of famous carriers like the coral sea. Soon the enterprise

  • @dennisammann9104
    @dennisammann9104 8 месяцев назад

    At the 7 minute, 50 second mark, The Times of London proclaimed him “The New Copernicus.” What a grand title to acquire, as Nicholas Copernicus is the “Father of Astronomy.” He took astronomy out of hocus pocus astrology and made astronomy into a science! 🤔😁👍

  • @danielbrown503
    @danielbrown503 8 месяцев назад +1

    Excellent and fascinated video!!!

  • @Hawkeye2001
    @Hawkeye2001 8 месяцев назад +1

    Early in WWII my father was stationed in the Chesapeake Area serving as a Corpsman with a gun training ship. I wonder if he was with the Wyoming group.

  • @jimtalbott9535
    @jimtalbott9535 8 месяцев назад +1

    It’d be fantastic to be a fly on the wall if you could listen in on a conversation between Mahan and Rickover. Bring them back for a few hours for a chat.

  • @notahotshot
    @notahotshot 8 месяцев назад +1

    I'm going to play this video at my next party, and tell everyone to take a drink every time you say cameo. 😂

  • @royshobe6642
    @royshobe6642 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for making this video

  • @jesstreloar7706
    @jesstreloar7706 8 месяцев назад

    I served onboard the USS Prairie AD-15 from 1974-78. She was a Dixie-class destroyer tender, but in fact her hull started out as the USS Dixie AD-14. There was a fire that would have delayed the commissioning of AD-14 so the next hull was substituted. Prairie repaired battle damage on HMS Ajax after her tangle with Graf Spee in 1939 just after her commissioning. I choked up when I discovered after 54 years of service she was sold for scrap to a ship breaker in Singapore.

  • @Makeshift_Mulder
    @Makeshift_Mulder 8 месяцев назад +2

    Navel Gazing?
    Humor In Uniform? 😆

  • @BasicDrumming
    @BasicDrumming 8 месяцев назад

    I appreciate you and thank you for making content.

  • @flashwashington2735
    @flashwashington2735 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you sir.

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt 8 месяцев назад +1

    thanks

  • @dutchman7216
    @dutchman7216 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you, that was interesting.

  • @rwarren58
    @rwarren58 8 месяцев назад

    Why is this channel so relaxing?

  • @carlosbond5062
    @carlosbond5062 8 месяцев назад

    You should do a video on the USS IDAHO! Thanks! Good video!

  • @speedy29676
    @speedy29676 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks!

  • @ralphstacey5743
    @ralphstacey5743 8 месяцев назад +1

    always great videos Have considered spending time with the Canadian Parliament after this weekend they could use your help Cheers

  • @CwL-1984
    @CwL-1984 8 месяцев назад +2

    Splendid 👍👍

  • @user-gx5xp9zz7q
    @user-gx5xp9zz7q 4 месяца назад

    Alfred T Mahan is my 3rd Great Uncle (my paternal grandmother's great uncle), and Mahan is my grandmother's maiden name, and regardless of how the name is spelled, it is pronounced may-han. Of course, everyone mispronounces it as M'Hon, but I figured I'd go ahead and let you know the right way to say it.

  • @robertmcgovern8850
    @robertmcgovern8850 8 месяцев назад +1

    Irony: the whole class of large battleships is named for a US state 1200 miles from any large body of water, whose biggest lake is about 8 miles long.🙃 (Says a person in Wyoming with two sailboats in my back yard.)

  • @Alyeska23
    @Alyeska23 8 месяцев назад +2

    Never expected a sponsor with World of Warships on THG. Huh.

  • @nathanokun8801
    @nathanokun8801 8 месяцев назад

    IMPORTANT NOTE: The "bottom-up" idea for warship maintenance, where the actual crewmembers who are fixing things can bypass the "brass" and get needed help for more complex maintenance work from various shore facilities, was upgraded enormously when modern complex guided-missile and, later, computer-controlled systems began to take over ship operations, starting in the early 1960s when it was realized that such equipment had to make do with ship-based materiel and crew. Up to then, this had "fell on its face: but the US Naval Ship Missile Systems Engineering Statio0n (NSMSES) on the SeaBee base in Port Hueneme, CA, was commissioned to find out ways to perform such in-house support. They succeeded by introducing a version of the NASA methods of rocket and control and support equipment based on the "man in the loop" aboard ship being the top rather than the bottom of the warship crew hierarchy. This was radical in US Navy order or control on warships, but it worked perfectly when coupled to the correct shore-establishment upgrades in their interactions with the Fleet. This is used today and will continued to be used with any needed adaptations in the future to keep US warships operational at all times.

  • @peterbrazier7107
    @peterbrazier7107 8 месяцев назад +2

    An advert for WoWs when I am already playing it. 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
    The Wyoming fired more shells than the rest of the US fleet during the war.

  • @Eric_Hutton.1980
    @Eric_Hutton.1980 8 месяцев назад +3

    @TheHistoryGuy I hope you will discuss the South American Dreadnought Race.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 8 месяцев назад

      👍 I hope he includes the dreadnought that was abducted by aliens while under tow. I can't remember if it was Brazilian or Argentinian, but that story always tickled me

  • @arthurschipper8906
    @arthurschipper8906 8 месяцев назад

    Can't help but think that Mahan's ideas still ring true today.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins7029 8 месяцев назад +1

    An expanded version of the THG theme tune!

  • @richardross7219
    @richardross7219 8 месяцев назад +2

    The ships were treated just like us old soldiers.

  • @Doc_Tar
    @Doc_Tar 8 месяцев назад +2

    I always regret when these historic ships are sent to the breakers, but they aren't like cars that can just be stashed in a farm shed for decades. There's real cost and expensive challenges in maintaining them and keeping them for future generations.

    • @MyName-tb9oz
      @MyName-tb9oz 8 месяцев назад

      You're kinda wrong there. When you're a major government it really is pretty much the same. Those ships could have been kept as floating museums and even a nominal fee would have been enough to pay for what little maintenance they would have required.
      Only sailors understand the pain of the 'death' of a ship.

    • @marckyle5895
      @marckyle5895 8 месяцев назад +2

      They could have at least saved Enterprise and Warspite. No other ships symbolized their navies more.

  • @richardbeckenbaugh1805
    @richardbeckenbaugh1805 8 месяцев назад

    The point you are missing is that Mahan pointed out the existence of “choke points” that needed to be defended or captured in order to control the seas. Mahan was not interested in imperialism as such, he was interested in the choke points of the world and who would control them. He identified those choke points and they are still being fought over in the present day. They still have value after more than a century.

  • @Daledavispratt
    @Daledavispratt 8 месяцев назад +1

    I've always heard it pronounced "MAhan", at least by me, and all the other shipmates I served with on her (DDG-42).

  • @FIRSTNAMELASTNAME-zt4kf
    @FIRSTNAMELASTNAME-zt4kf 8 месяцев назад

    Why do i have the urge to hear this man say "inconceivable"

  • @petestorz172
    @petestorz172 8 месяцев назад

    Before the Wyoming class, the Delaware and Florida classes were already using steam turbine engines. While these were more durable than VTE engines, they were less efficient - important for a Navy that had to operate in the larger Pacific Ocean. Consequently, the class after the Wyoming class, the 14" gunned New York class, used VTE engines. The Nevada class had one turbine ship, and one with VTE engines, the USS Oklahoma. The Oklahoma was the USN's last battleship with VTE engines. Also, the Wyoming class was just a little over 19% larger in displacement that the previous Florida class rather than a third larger.

  • @georgeherod4252
    @georgeherod4252 8 месяцев назад

    What a story!

  • @jastrapper190
    @jastrapper190 8 месяцев назад

    Wow is really fun.

  • @jeffbangkok
    @jeffbangkok 8 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing man. Good night

  • @joellangenfeld1058
    @joellangenfeld1058 8 месяцев назад +1

    So... This episode is all about the influence of the influence of seapower upon history upon history?