The Sinking of the USS Wasp: The Most Devastating Torpedo Attack of WW2
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- Опубликовано: 17 янв 2024
- (Animated Battle Map)
In this video I explain the sinking of the USS Wasp by an incredibly lucky and destructive torpedo salvo from submarine I-19. I also include the Battle of Edson’s Ridge and show how the two events are connected.
Corrections:
07:08 I say "only an hour left of daylight" I meant to say "only an hour left till daylight".
22:40 I should have said overhead instead of ceiling.
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» paypal -www.paypal.me/montemayorytcha...
00:00 Introduction
01:10 Kawaguchi prepares to take Henderson
06:40 Battle of Edson’s Ridge
11:22 Torpedo junction
16:58 The “Almost” Carrier Battle of Sept. 14
18:25 The Sinking of the Wasp
21:16 Damage Control
25:25 The Spectacular Shot
28:04 Analysis
30:23 Aftermath
Map terrain data obtained by Maptiler. "© MapTiler © OpenStreetMap contributors"
Special thanks to :
Daniel N. - for help on the script
Michal A Piegzik - for help on research
And KANIM GROUP for the 3d Model.
Sources:
Blee, B. W. (2005). Battleship North Carolina. USS North Carolina Battleship Commission.
Boyd, C., & Yoshida, A. Y. (2012). The Japanese Submarine Force and World War II. Naval Institute Press.
Cox, Jeffrey (2019). Morning Star, Midnight Sun: The Early Guadalcanal -Solomons Campaign of World War II ... August-October 1942. Osprey.
Dull, P.S. (1978) A battle history of the Imperial Japanese Navy. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press.
Frank, R.B. (1990) Guadalcanal. Penguin Books.
Hammel, Eric. (2016)The Death of the U.S.S. Wasp: September 15, 1942 . Pacifica Military History.
Hornfischer, J. D. (2011). Neptune's inferno: The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal. Bantam Books.
Lundstrom, J.B. (2013) Black Shoe Carrier Admiral: Frank Jeck Fletcher at Coral Sea, midway, and Guadalcanal. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press.
Lundstrom, J. B. (2005). The first team and the Guadalcanal Campaign: Naval Fighter Combat from August to November 1942. Naval Institute Press.
Prados, J. (2013) Islands of destiny: The solomons campaign and the eclipse of the rising sun. New York: NAL Caliber.
Rottman, G. L., & Anderson, D. (2004). US Marine Corps Pacific Theater of Operations. Osprey.
Smith, M. S. (2003). Bloody Ridge: The battle that saved Guadalcanal. Pocket Books.
Stille, M. (2015) Guadalcanal: 1942-43 ; America's first victory on the road to Tokyo. Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
Stille, M. (2012) Santa Cruz 1942: Carrier Duel in the South Pacific. Botley, Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
Stille, M., & Wright, P. (2018). USN Fleet Destroyer vs IJN Fleet Submarine: The pacific 1941-42. Osprey Publishing.
Blee, B. W. (1982, July). Whodunnit? Whodunnit? By Captain Ben W. Blee, USN (Ret.) Vol. 108/7/953. Retrieved December 2023, from www.usni.org/magazines/procee....
For the Tabular Record of Movement of ships- www.combinedfleet.com/
Montemayor is the definition of quality, not quantity
Thanks Fenrir. Every video I do is passion project for me, that explains the long time between uploads.
@MontemayorChannel it shows. Your videos are always wonderful.
Absolutely the gold standard for quality and historical battle dynamics. The best.
@@MontemayorChannel I guess Santa Cruz comes next? That'll be a handful, too.
I haven’t even watched it and I know it will be excellent.
21:07 That switch from graphics to the actual photograph is *chef's kiss*
thanks!
Yes! This is why I don't just listen to these videos
I think on his midway video he also has this transition to a photo from b-17.
@bogdanivchenko3723 not to mention the sweet transitions he had in his Pearl Harbor video.
Very true! Talk about bringing a photo to life...
You are doing an incredible job! This visualization of naval battles is exactly what is missing when you read about them in books.
Thanks!! I'm glad I was able to visualize it clearly.
@@MontemayorChannel Youre quite literally the best at this. BazBattles has slightly better atmosphere but you do provide more information in a more understandable way.
17:01 The use of music in these videos is always subtle and excellent. Just a touch of drama and suspense.
Never obvious or obnoxious
haha thanks. adding music honestly my favorite step in production process. that song at 17 minute mark fit perfectly for that scene when i was looking at all the songs I could use.
@@MontemayorChannel the delicious audio part is what makes your videos exceptional. I cannot emphasize enough how voice clarity, ease of listening, and careful music selection contribute to the overall production quality. At times when I need to concentrate attention the most, I listen to your narration, which serves to both aiding my concentration efforts and reminding me how situational awareness and possession of clear up-to-date reconnaissance data are important to success, yet how a seemingly random set of events might set back even one's most elaborate plans. Even if applied to a day-to-day civilian job (:
@@MontemayorChannel I am rewatching this part now. Impecable timing (on the Don, don, don - here's a threat).
@@uladzimirdarozhka how are you able to pick all that up from background listening, if you are focusing/consentrating on something completely different?
@@blindedbliss oh, I welcome you to work in supply chain management, then (:
When we needed him most, he returned...
In the nick of time :)))
I literally just finished a rewatch of all your previous Pacific War content a couple days ago. This video is a dream come true!
Some additional fyi: The reason why this torpedo attack was PARTICULARLY deadly to Wasp while carriers like Yorktown and Lexington relatively shrugged off other torpedo attacks was because Wasp was purposefully designed and built without ANY armor. USS Wasp was supposed to be a cheaper/smaller version of the Yorktown class so in order to keep her displacement and size down, the Navy ended up limiting her speed and removing all protection from the ship, including any underwater protection that might have protected her from torpedo hits.
Same lmao
Wtf same
Yeah I watched all these videos yesterday haha
Lucky I had to wait a year lol
Because of the Treaty, Wasp was designed from the keel up to be a semi-fleet carrier.
It was never intended to be a front line ship. Rather, the USN already figured on needing a carrier to shift (non-naval) aircraft thither and yon.
THIS is why the RN requested -- and got -- the Wasp for European duty -- namely shifting Spits to Malta.
The Wasp had a unique provision for hoisting aircraft -- at the dock -- up onto its flight deck. (non-naval rated planes -- w/o arresting gear.)
If you poke around, you can find some period photos showing this ship mounted crane.
Once you realize this, you understand that even bringing the Wasp to the Pacific was a desperation move by King & Nimitz.
The need to shift land based aircraft was solved via the 'boxed fighter' solution.
P-47s were shipped worldwide in boxes -- to be assembled in less than hours by quickly trained assembly crews.
Videos of this exact technique can be found on YT.
(In the beginning, the P-47 had top priority, not the P-51. Eventually, the P-47 had 'legs' as long as the P-51. But by then, Germany was gone.)
As a huge WWII Aviation buff, I'd often read the story that a Japanese submarine embarked on a secret mission to bring back blueprints for the ME-262 and ME-163 fighters to Japan, but was sunk on the journey. It was a surprise to learn Kinashi was the one who commanded that sub.
So did they get the blueprints in another submarine mission? Because Japan got the Me-262 and Me-163, the former being an airworthy prototype and latter having 7 built.
@@user-pn3im5sm7k Japan got Me-163 blueprints (unsure if that was another sub or if they got them some other way), but they never got ME-262 blueprints.
The Kikka jet fighter built by Nakajima was made by looking at photos of the ME-262 and eyeballing it lmao.
@@larsu-gx579 That's extremely impressive...
I had read that Kinashi was decorated by Hitler himself.
@@anibalcesarnishizk2205 That's fascinating, I had no clue
As a history teacher, this is my favorite supplementary channel. Pearl Harbor, the Fog of War at Midway, and now the Guadalcanal series are of superb quality and beyond anything remotely comparable that I have found in over a decade of teaching.
If you teach history, perhaps you can use his work in your class, or assign it as home reading? 😮
Also The Operations Room has a great series on this campaign as well as other Pacific and European battles. He's also well worth checking out if you enjoy this kind of content
Drachinifel is good, too.
Pass on operations room, that blunder on the Bastogne anecdote that didn't get researched on his end got me off of that channel @@Falkirion
@@ETRHeydrich what blunder?
Always substituting QUALITY for QUANTITY. Welcome back!
26:52 Imagine getting a kill feed notification a month later 😅
Lol same thought
Legend has it the sixth torpedo is still out there....
looking for an american ship to hit.
"Enemy Destroyer suck!!"
-WoWs Kill Ribbon
Thanks again for the "better than television" quality content, you are one* of the GOATs* for historical info/docs!
Thank you for the kind words. I do put a lot of work on these videos so it's nice to see it recognized by others.
What does 'one of the GOATs' mean? 😅
@@blindedblissHe’s one of the greatest history related channels on RUclips.
@@MontemayorChannel You sir gave a Cult following
@@MontemayorChannel Sturgeon's Law applies to the myriad Hitler Trash Channels that infest cable tv. Your monthly bill is a horrible ROI. Pay for faster internet and stream if you can.
Also of note, Wasp was a small ship and product of the Washington naval treaties. Because the US only had 15 000 tones left, they made a comparatively tiny purpose built carrier, the Wasp. Being small and constrained by the tonnage limits of the Washington naval treaties; Wasp was very lightly armoured and small enough that a single hit would damage multiple systems at once. In short, Wasp was literally the worst ship possible to be on the receiving end of a submarine torpedo attack.
I do to give kudos to Wasp for her operations in the Med though, the grand lady helped the Royal Navy keep the RAF in the fight over Malta and the central Mediterranean against the Italian Regia Marina and Axis air forces. She may not have seen major action in the Pacific, but she did her part for the Royal Navy.
USS Ranger would have been worse off, based on what the commanding officers and crew said about its capabilities. Fortunately, it would not be sent to the Pacific during these trying times for the US Navy.
740 feet long! 3 lifts, 4 catapults.
Amazingly Wasp could carry the same air group as a Yorktown dispute being 25% smaller, however I wouldn’t even call her lightly armored. She only had armor over the magazines and there was zero torpedo defense
@@philb5593she also has 0 armored bulkheads between parts of the hanger unlike her yorktown sisters. Which definitly contributes to her quick downfall.
@@philb5593A thing of note is many American carriers did not have torpedo blisters like many of their cruiser and battleship counterparts early in the war.
Lone sub humbles the mighty. Lone passion-project filmmaker humbles documentaries with multimillion-dollar budgets. Respect, Montemoyor, respect.
Thanks William.
No. By this time Japan knew it was going to lose. What the fuck are you going on about? You don't CREATE history!!
I see a Montemayor vid drop, I immediately watch it, I'm a simple man
I've watched other RUclips channels such as Kings and Generals, Invicta, The Operations Room that also shows these kinds of documentaries. In my opinion, Montemayor is still the best in comparison with the others. It's just a shame we only get to see 1 or 2 uploads from him every year. Oh well, I'm still thankful to you Montemayor! For your next videos, I hope you can also include the battle of Leyte Gulf.
Ditto. And a double ditto on Leyte, but there are a lot of battles to go through before that. If we have to wait til 2032, so be it
Montemayor and Epic History TV (Lemmino too if he continues making history content) are the only history channels I'm subbed to. I respect the amount of time they both take in producing quality content even if it means not having a consistent schedule.
Historigraph and TIK are also pretty good
Kings and Generals is one of the worst RUclips channels, not just for history. He has a rabid unhinged hatred of MacArthur and he doesn't want to mention how the USN and everybody else except MacArthur fought poorly in the first 5 months of the Pacific theater (Dutch East Indies disaster is the best example because that was so humiliating that the USN never ever talks about it. Also the USN abandoned the Philippines on Christmas Eve 1941!!! Not MacArthur's fault that the USN didn't bother to spread out their torpedo warehouses and instead foolishly stored them all at Cavite.). He also doesn't want to talk about the fact that Peleliu and Iwo Jima were Nimitz' fault and how Iwo Jima was one of the worst strategic decisions of WWII. Worthless to the USN, Army, and USAAF. P-51s from Iwo Jima only flew escort missions for B-29s from there for about a week before they canceled them. With the way the altitude and angle needed for them to match the B-29s they learned after only a week that it was impossible. B-29s flew unescorted from March to August 1945. Another big lie from the Nimitz fanboys like Kings and Generals.
@@nogoodnameleftPreach ! Alot of fuzziness about different campaigns went on to protect some and denounce others. Alot of politics that shouldn't have been.
Nice to see your posting of another informative video. I had no idea that North Carolina and O'Brien we part of HORNET's escort, not WASP's! Once again, your maps and commentary make me see this battle in a completely different light.
Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed the video and that it brought you new information regarding the positions of the ships. It was quite a lucky shot.
30:12 A strange note is that Nimitz was actually startled enough to offer the use of the escort carrier Copahee as a frontline unit. He told Admiral Ghormley that he could use the stranded Saratoga and Wasp pilots to form a new air group on Copahee. Ghormley however felt that the carrier was best used as an escort role not a fleet one, so he declined Nimitz’s offer.
Although Copahee was relatively slow and small, a part of me likes to wonder what would’ve happened if Ghormley did decide to put her into frontline service. Because of the lessons learned from the Wasp sinking, no more Japanese subs managed to attack a carrier until the Gilbert Islands Campaign.
Also edit:
I also want to note that it seems like Admiral Halsey would later take up a similar offer. Three Sangamon-class escort carriers were in the Pacific and were already battle tested in Operation Torch. So combined with their size, handling characteristics, and fuel storage, they were treated like psuedo-light carriers of Carrier Division 22. Halsey would use them to join the Enterprise and Saratoga in what he believed to be an imminent carrier battle in February of 1943 (it was actually Operation Ke). Here, the three escort carriers had (assuming Sangamon had the same layout as in Operation Torch) 41 Wildcats, 17 Dauntlesses, and 33 Avengers.
It probably would have been sunk by a sub.
I thought Gormley had already been fired and replaced by Halsey at this point of the battle.
@@mglenn7092I think that would be about a month after the sinking of the Wasp. Halsey wasn’t made ComSoPac until October 18.
Excellent BGM transition with the realization of nearby Japanese carrier groups at 17:02 I could really feel the dread!
Thanks for noticing it Catherine! It was the feeling I was aiming to create for the audience. So I'm glad to see it worked!
I appreciate including the information about the land battle and tying it to the naval battle. It's important to remember that both air and sea power ultimately are in service to land campaigns. You made this clear how they're linked.
Thank you! I was a little concerned some people may not see the connection between the two. I'm glad it was clear.
Indeed, I believe that more US sailors died than marines and soldiers.
OMG.
As an italian passionate of Ww2 with a family who served in the army in the past generations...
This is better than pure gold.
I love to read all of these pacific events, and to have the possibility to watch a so well done documentary about these battles is a blessing.
My respect to all of lives lost during the war, both sides.
And my salute to you, sir. Keep doing this.
Old guy here. This was an awesome visual presentation! Great way of linking up the Guadalcanal land offensive with the coordination of the navy and their tactics and strategy. My biggest surprise was that, I knew the Japanese had superior torpedoes, but my gosh 5 miles plus and they still hit an unintentional target. Wow, just amazing.
Excellent video.
The return of the king. Glad to see you continually raising the bar.
Thank you! My grandfather was on the USS Lardner in Wasp's screen when this happened. His ship picked up a bunch of survivors. He talked about many of them being covered in oil and some of them very badly burned.
Thank you for posting this. My grandfather and his brother were in the Wasp when it sank. This was before the Sullivan brothers and both brothers were on the same ship. The story was they jumped overboard on opposing sides of the ship and didn't know if the other survived for 3 whole days. They both made it out and continued to serve until 1945. This video just makes his story even crazier!
Have you seen the photos and footage of RV Petrel diving on USS Wasp?
Whatcha think of it?
@gocubs1815 - I'm glad they made it home safe. There are many great war stories. I wish we could learn to confine war to stories, for war, real war, with real people, death and destruction is a horrible thing. Do you know how many made it out alive? 24:45
@@TrickiVicBB71 yes, I got to show my dad who told me that Grandpa was a flight deck crewman, so he was probably topside when the Wasp was hit recovering aircraft.
Amazing stuff mate, imagine how your Grandfather and his brother went through life when coming back to civilian life…. nothing would compare mate.
The transition from clear informative graphic to an angle that matches with an available photograph to then displaying that photograph trick continues to be the most beautiful single element of these I think.
You're the only RUclipsr who causes me to stop whatever I'm doing and immediately watch your video. Thank you!
Love how Montemayor disappears for nine months, then comes back, gives birth to this excellent video and then leaves again, refusing to ellaborate. The man truly is The Ghost of RUclips.
Here's to you, mate. For a great 2024.
haha Thanks underdog. you too!
I just read about this last month on the North Carolina. Wild stuff. Even more knowing that for more than a year after this triple collat the Americans would continue to underestimate the Long Lance.
A main reason for this was the casualties taken during the Guadalcanal campaign actually. A lot of the people who were trying to raise awareness about the long lance got killed in the cruiser engagements around the island.
The submarine version was smaller than the cruiser launched Long Lance. U.S. cruisers were designed without any torpedoes!
I've been binging your videos lately just longing for you to post again
well, It finally came. Thanks Gab
Another banger, the wait for your videos is torture but the quality and detail more than makes up for it! The 3D animation with the Wasp was CLEAN.
It's kind of insane how much damage Japanese submarines did to American carrier strength during the first half of the Pacific war. Saratoga was torpedoed twice (first when she was returning from the Wake Island relief attempt, second after the Eastern Solomons), Yorktown was finished off after Midway by I-168, and Wasp was destroyed by I-19 as shown in the video. That's two carriers destroyed and one put out of action for over several months out of a total of 6 carriers from 1941-Summer of 43. Considering the damage to Allied power in the Pacific caused by these losses, along with the several near misses other carriers had (like the one with Hornet and I-11), it's a damn good thing that the Japanese didn't build up their submarine force more.
Tbf with Hornet she had already been brought to death's door by air attacks, it was a miracle that she somehow still refused to die after everything she'd been through including the fact that she had only had two days of repair before Midway. Though it does demonstrate the value of having subs to finish off stubborn ships.
The details on the Logistics is greatly appreciated!
Helps form a complete picture.
I've read several books on the Guadalcanal campaign, so I'm familiar with I-19s amazing spread. But these animated maps really make so many details clear. Outstanding work.
Thank you for this, my great Uncle Arthur Nyberg was on this ship during this attack. He was pulled from the water and served on the new Lexington for the rest of the war. And served on the Missouri in Korea
I find it really funny that I think I have learned all of my WW2 Pacific Front knowledge from you!
Montemayor, the birds-eye view grand master strategist of WW2 animations has blessed us with another video!
The quality of research, content and presentation is simply outstanding. After reading most, if not all published (and many unpublished) works of the Guadalcanal campaign, battle of Savo Island, the Japanese evacuation at Cape Esperance, etc., over the past decades, I can say that Montemayor has mastered the art of information compilation and presentation.
Peak historical youtube kino! Love seeing these pop up on the subscription tab every few months (or years). Will love the future installments on the Pacific war (and all else you do)!
haha Thanks! I know I take a while, but I hope I make up for it the videos are released.
LET'S GOOO! I'm going to watch this over dinner later. Love the content! Keep up the awesome work!
Enjoy the dinner and the video too haha
The addition of rare photos pertaining to the events highlights the superior quality of your presentations. Well done sir.
You kindled my love of history, Montemayor! Thank you for all the wonderful content you've shared with us FOR FREE!
Yes!!! He`s back! Another video to watch and re-watch and re-watch again. Thank for all you work!
I just re-watched your video on Savo Island yesterday, and boy am I glad I checked RUclips again now! Always appreciate the high-quality work you put into your videos, looking forward to the next one!
The Best is back on RUclips. You nailed it on this one. Fantastic video.
The quality is through the roof as always !
Amazing work with both great context and aftermath breakdowns.
I’ve got work in ten minutes but when I’m home I’m gonna eat this vid up
Of all of the historical based channels on RUclips, this one is by far my favorite. Wonderfully researched and beautifully presented.
Great video, as always. A well balanced combination of maps, photos, graphics and a brilliant script to tell the story in a both comprehensive and entertaining way.
Montemayor, I salute you! 😅
Better than any history professor I ever had. Context + essential details make this channel a must.
Just a spectacular story teller. Sets the benchmark for historical content and your knowledge of the Pacific Theatre is unparalleled.
Huge thanks for the background on the Guadlcanal situation, that was vital in my understanding how things tied together and well worth the time spent. I was aware of those separate events, but never made that connection. How awesome to still learn new things about the WWII pacific theater!!
Thanks so much! I can't overstate how much of a treat it is when a new video is uploaded.
I am so glad to see your high quality content. I am always impressed and surprised about the total quality and dedication to your work.
thank you Erich!
So glad you uploaded again! Keep up the consistent videos!
Thank you again and again. Never stop uploading!
Just finished re-watching a lot of my favourite montemayor videos then I see this, you are a true blessing sir !
A lot can be learned by watching your videos and the research you do to make them. Thank you
Thanks, I appreciate that you notice the effort i put into them.
@@MontemayorChannel I appreciate your videos more than you know. During Covid, I was waiting for new ones just to get me through, lol
Its always a good day if Montemayor uploads!
Was caught off gaurd by the upload but still a nice surprise.
One thing I love about seeing all your Naval videos on the Guadalcanal Campaign is seeing just how brutal it was. To think the whole affair was a close call during the entire campaign duration.
I patiently waited for your video... 100% worth it as ever!❤
Your videos are always of exceptional quality, thank you for making them. I especially like how you take the time to research the perspectives of both sides, such attention to detail is not found anywhere else on youtube!
As much as I hate the long wait, the content is beyond worth it. Your videos are amazing, easy to understand, and incredibly informative. Love your work!
Montemayor's videos are a real bliss. Thank you so much for all your hard work.
You have no idea how happy I was to see a new vid from you. Hope there's more to come
And when the world needed him most... he returned.
Thank you for this amazing work Montemayor. I like how you narrate the events, I always get immersed! Keep it up and happy new year.
It's always a good sight when a Montemayor video appears. It's worth waiting for.
Excellent work! I love seeing content that gives context to battles in the bigger picture of a conflict and the huge number of variables that influence history
Montemayor is the type of RUclipsr who uses the most reliable sources for these videos. That's why I enjoy them so much. Get Montemayor to 1 million subscribers by the end of the year.
Yes!!! You made my day with another update, thank you!
I just found this channel and im very impressed with the calm narration and attention to detail.
Kudos to you sir for putting in the work!
Glad you are back Montemayor! I’ve watched all of your WW2 videos several times and I look forward to some more.
this is incredible. for the 6 years i’ve been here it’s been amazing watching these videos get better and better. thank you for all you do for us!
What a spectacular explanation of history. I know alot about the pacific battles but I've learned multiple things from this video. Keep doing this. A lot of people can learn important history from you.
WHOOOOOOOOO! The biggest stealth historian on RUclips comes in out the dark with another finely-crafted masterpiece!
This series you've created is simply phenomenal. It is very novel to animate the battle map with details like air groups, torpedo paths and ships taking evasive action.
You know its a happy day when you get notification of a new Montemayor video. Thanks for all you do!!!
I don't even check my notifications all the time since I get too many. I just happened to log in and there is a Motemayor video under a minute ago. I feel as lucky as Commander Kinashi.
And the legend is back!!!
Yeah! He's back!
Yes sir!
I may have binged 6 years worth of videos in 1 night. Flawless pieces of work here sir. I’d even consider them art. Your explanation is so easy to understand and so informative in all of these videos. I’ll be showing some of my friends this channel without a doubt!
SO HYPED TO WATCH THIS. LOVE YOU MONTEMAYOR
you have some of the best reaccounts of military actions. great job.
It's like Christmas morning every time Montemayor posts a video. Appreciate the hard work!
I LOVE these videos. I can't wait for the next one. Awesome job @montemayor!
Yeeessssss, thank you. Your videos are a holiday for me. Your way of telling the plot is so captivating
Hundreds of subscriptions but only one with notification enabled.
Montemayor, you are awesome!
haha thanks. means a lot.
When a new Montemayor pops up. The order of the day is stop what you are doing, watch and enjoy the great content. Thank you Montemayor.
So glad to hear from you again, Montemayor! Your videos are the best!
You have done this amazing piece of history justice with a very in depth, well thought out presentation. More uploads like this please. Your hard work has not gone unnoticed.
He returns!
This guy makes my week every time these drop. Thank you!
Not even going to watch it now, will set aside some time at the weekend to do it justice 😊
Montemayor sets the standard for this genre. WAY more detail and succinctly delivered. Bravo!
Wonderful, as is all of your work. Captain Montemayor, I salute you!
Who else came here immediately after receiving the notification?
Everyone bro
Love this channel!
Right here
My heart skipped a beat when I read and understood the notification that the video posted.
No notification…it was like I was led here by the gods of war themselves. These videos are like mana…heaven sent
He is back! Thanks that I can trust that it will be quality content, you are amazing!
I'm glad to see you back again! Your content has really awakened my fascination with the Pacific theater. Thank you so much for the work you put into these.
Great video as always. Love how you always emphasize how small events have huge knock on effects on the big picture. Keep up the great work.
Another fantastic presentation. Montemayor, I salute you!
@Montemayor, another fantastic job! I enjoy and look forward to your WW2 battle analysis videos. I can't imagine how much goes into the animations you do. At some point, I think it would be interesting if you made a "behind the scenes" video, and talk about how you animate and make your videos. Again, great job!
I am so happy you are sharing more new content. Essential viewing. Happy New Year, Mr. Montemayor! 👍
Another great volume, in the best naval battle documentaries I've ever seen. Thank you!