My dad was in the invasion of Leyte. He was in the army. These battles were fought in support of this invasion. He told me he saw MacArthur on Leyte. He said he was pretty far inland from the beach when he saw him drive by. I love how you use bits of Victory at Sea in your production.
Great production. Thank you, from the grandson of a U.S. Navy submariner who was a brother at arms with the Australian Navy heroes interviewed in this documentary .
I have uploaded this video again in an updated form as I hadn't noticed I'd somehow knocked the text and graphics overlays out of alignment in the second half of the first version.
48:23 still says that Musashi participated in Battle off Samar.. It might be they thought that at the time, well not sure, surely they all knew the Musashi had been sunk already ? .. I know, the video does tell of the fate of Musashi elsewhere, but at 48:23 he says "Musashi and Yamato " at Battle off Samar...
@@leong108 It's probably just a muddled memory that Musashi was initially part of Kurita's force that ended up at Samar - even though she (and a bunch of cruisers) had already been sunk.
@@ArmouredCarriers And then he says that the carriers fought off the attack, but there was another factor that turned Kurita back... It is said that Kurita received a message from Luzon HQ saying that the american capital ships were about to join the battle at Samar. Where this false info came from, its not well documented.. Maybe someone on Yamato made that info up to save themselves. Maybe it was faked by USA .. as they could decode messages, they could send fakes too !. Or maybe the Luzon HQ accidentally confused Kurita, by telling him about the USN capital ships near Cape Engano ....
Thank you, Aussies. For, kicking ass, in WWI, and WWII........! (From MT, USA.) I hope you know, we latter generation, were always taught - pride, honor, brother/sisterhood, and deep respect - for Australians, and what - like us - you stand and die for. ... From Britain's prisons... Gallipoli... Africa... France... France... Kokoda.........!!!!! Those who matter, know the truth. Just keep talking... Telling...! Make sure it all gets heard....Please. With, respect! Semper Fidelis...!
The importance of having the best radar sets on the Shropshire cannot be underestimated. Especially from the Battle of Leyte Gulf onward, when the first organized Kamikaze raids were conducted (& warning time against such attacks was vital). Interesting the radar set show at 9:33 has looks reminiscent of the modern S1850 unit carried aboard new Type 45 class destroyers of the Royal Navy. The Shropshire firing off 32 full broadsides in 12 minutes was very impressive, considering the American battleship Mississippi only fired one salvo & the Pennsylvania never even fired in the battle due to their inferior radar sets. Kudos to the HMAS Arunta bold torpedo run as well. Though a small fraction of the ships in the engagement the Australian contribution in the Battle of Surigao Strait deserves to be highlighted & remembered! Thanks for this..
The American Mark 8 radar was The premier radar in the world by 1944. In fact British ships were incorporating American radar in their ships for nearly a year by the time of this battle.
Dad was on the Battleship California that night,he told me they fired 63 rounds in 16 min.Tennesee fired first he said the everyone just a moment later.
Good on you Australia The lucky country cos Aussies make it lucky, from an old Pom that loves you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. My old Dad was a signalman aboard a destroyer on several Russian convoys one of those ships was sunk as a non swimmer in those freezing waters and survived to father me and my little sister. God save New Zealand and Australia......Rob the Pom ❤️
175 n.m. air aquisition radar is damn good for those days. I assumed it was much less. This guy speaking is the precursor to Air Intercept Controller (AIC) in the U.S. Navy. Don't know what they call it nowadays, but in my day it was almost exclusively an enlisted billet, Naval Enlistment Code (NEC), of the Operations Specialist rating.
The yanks love explosions! My uncle was with the British infantry in Afghan and they used to take a few sniper shots from a hill about a mile a way. It was not very accurate fire, usually the hill was left alone and it could be days between shots, so what could they do? Later the Yanks took over and when the sniper fired a single round the Yanks called in airstrikes until the hill was a smoking ruin. They must have spent a million dollars but no more sniping happened! haha!
This battle occurred almost entirely at night. Radar controlled fire by the battleships put an end to the Japanese coming through the straight. But the Japanese suffered losses by American subs and destroyers before the Japanese even got to the Battleships. The radar was the Mark 8 unit, it could even show its own ships shells splashes at many miles.
Robert Morris Page, was most instrumental in Naval Radar, for many years. I highly recommend his book on the development about the earliest radars. "The Origin Of Radar." Available from abebooks. Its now out of print but invaluable as a source. You can't have my copy. Well worth reading.
Fourunate that this ship had radar superior to all others. Shame super superior radar was not supplied to other RN and RAN ships. They had 282 sets with a range of up to 6000 yards, rather than the 308,000 yards this operators 282 set could achieve, acording to him. "175 miles" - welll over the horizon. "The first 50-cm set was Type 282. With 25-kW output and a pair of Yagi antennas incorporating lobe switching, it was trialed in June 1939. This set detected low-flying aircraft at 2.5 miles . . . ."
It sometimes came down to individual radar operators. HMS Illustrious, for example, in 1940 was detecting aircraft at 90 miles because the operator realised how these echoes were different to the direct returns he had been trained to watch for.
Watch.... PBS.... "Half the Sky": "FET"... ( In Part II). And, "Meet John Doe" (Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwick...)... A system that mixes those possibilities, as our secondary manual backup system.
I am a total Leyte historian buff. For the Australians. To even knock any the yanks did is sad considering they would a been just like the Philippines considering the British were blown completely out of the Pacific had the yanks not took a stalemate at coral sea and a mighty victory at midway. They would have been in Japanese hands. Your welcome Australia just like France so ungrateful
Japan had abandoned plans to invade Australia after Kokoda and Milne Bay. Learn the facts and stop getting so easily upset. We appreciate your help, it would be nice for it to be a two way street. As far as France is concerned - wouldn't the US never become to be without them?
HMAS Canberra being torpedoed and sunk by an American destroyer not that long beforehand may have had a bit to do with that. Maybe I'm wrong but to loose one of our biggest warship to friendly fire was a bit rough on the Australian navy at the time.
@@jimmywrangles your confusing the Japanese passenger ship monte video. With the canbera. The HAMS canbera was involved in action in battle of savo island. It was struck 24 times in less than two minutes. The us submarine sturgeon was ordered to Torpedo it the next morning after the ship was cleared of all hands. The montevideo was built in Nagasaki and was a Japanese passenger ship. She was transporting prisoners from rabul. Many of them Aussies. Brave men. This pains me. I'm sorry. The submarine had no way of knowing all hands were lost. No survivors. Australia. I am a historian. I love the stuff. And some of your efforts went unheralded. But this gentleman.saying the canbera was deliberately attacked is wrong. Yes it was attacked but by the Japanese. It was sank empty by the US Navy.
My dad was in the invasion of Leyte. He was in the army. These battles were fought in support of this invasion. He told me he saw MacArthur on Leyte. He said he was pretty far inland from the beach when he saw him drive by.
I love how you use bits of Victory at Sea in your production.
Great production. Thank you, from the grandson of a U.S. Navy submariner who was a brother at arms with the Australian Navy heroes interviewed in this documentary .
I have uploaded this video again in an updated form as I hadn't noticed I'd somehow knocked the text and graphics overlays out of alignment in the second half of the first version.
48:23 still says that Musashi participated in Battle off Samar.. It might be they thought that at the time, well not sure, surely they all knew the Musashi had been sunk already ? .. I know, the video does tell of the fate of Musashi elsewhere, but at 48:23 he says "Musashi and Yamato " at Battle off Samar...
@@leong108 It's probably just a muddled memory that Musashi was initially part of Kurita's force that ended up at Samar - even though she (and a bunch of cruisers) had already been sunk.
@@ArmouredCarriers And then he says that the carriers fought off the attack, but there was another factor that turned Kurita back... It is said that Kurita received a message from Luzon HQ saying that the american capital ships were about to join the battle at Samar. Where this false info came from, its not well documented.. Maybe someone on Yamato made that info up to save themselves. Maybe it was faked by USA .. as they could decode messages, they could send fakes too !. Or maybe the Luzon HQ accidentally confused Kurita, by telling him about the USN capital ships near Cape Engano ....
Thank you, Aussies.
For, kicking ass, in WWI, and WWII........!
(From MT, USA.)
I hope you know, we latter generation, were always taught - pride, honor, brother/sisterhood, and deep respect - for Australians, and what - like us - you stand and die for.
... From Britain's prisons... Gallipoli... Africa... France... France... Kokoda.........!!!!!
Those who matter, know the truth.
Just keep talking... Telling...!
Make sure it all gets heard....Please.
With, respect!
Semper Fidelis...!
cringe 🤦♂️
Cringe 🥶
@@guaporeturns9472 You are the cringe.
@@stischer47 Wow , brilliant comeback 👏
The importance of having the best radar sets on the Shropshire cannot be underestimated. Especially from the Battle of Leyte Gulf onward, when the first organized Kamikaze raids were conducted (& warning time against such attacks was vital). Interesting the radar set show at 9:33 has looks reminiscent of the modern S1850 unit carried aboard new Type 45 class destroyers of the Royal Navy. The Shropshire firing off 32 full broadsides in 12 minutes was very impressive, considering the American battleship Mississippi only fired one salvo & the Pennsylvania never even fired in the battle due to their inferior radar sets. Kudos to the HMAS Arunta bold torpedo run as well. Though a small fraction of the ships in the engagement the Australian contribution in the Battle of Surigao Strait deserves to be highlighted & remembered! Thanks for this..
Great comment! I think the people who wrote the wikipedia article on the battle must be Yanks, because the Shropshire is hardly mentioned!
The American Mark 8 radar was The premier radar in the world by 1944. In fact British ships were incorporating American radar in their ships for nearly a year by the time of this battle.
Thanks Uploader.
I always liked that Ship , it was Beautiful, and I liked the 3 Stack arrangement and style.
Dad was on the Battleship California that night,he told me they fired 63 rounds in 16 min.Tennesee fired first he said the everyone just a moment later.
My Father served on this ship in 1939 to 1940 around South Africa.
Good on you Australia The lucky country cos Aussies make it lucky, from an old Pom that loves you. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. My old Dad was a signalman aboard a destroyer on several Russian convoys one of those ships was sunk as a non swimmer in those freezing waters and survived to father me and my little sister. God save New Zealand and Australia......Rob the Pom ❤️
We have certainly heard of The Battle Of Surigao Straight.
The Pacfic War has a big fanbase in America.
175 n.m. air aquisition radar is damn good for those days.
I assumed it was much less.
This guy speaking is the precursor to Air Intercept Controller (AIC) in the U.S. Navy.
Don't know what they call it nowadays, but in my day it was almost exclusively an enlisted billet, Naval Enlistment Code (NEC), of the Operations Specialist rating.
My moms grandpa was on the destroyer USS Johnston DD557.
The yanks fired to much? Wasted ammo?
Kind of a bold claim.
your Grandpa was a brave soul amongst brace souls! he fought with a great leader, Cmd Evans. (hope i got his name right)
The yanks love explosions! My uncle was with the British infantry in Afghan and they used to take a few sniper shots from a hill about a mile a way. It was not very accurate fire, usually the hill was left alone and it could be days between shots, so what could they do? Later the Yanks took over and when the sniper fired a single round the Yanks called in airstrikes until the hill was a smoking ruin. They must have spent a million dollars but no more sniping happened! haha!
This battle occurred almost entirely at night. Radar controlled fire by the battleships put an end to the Japanese coming through the straight. But the Japanese suffered losses by American subs and destroyers before the Japanese even got to the Battleships. The radar was the Mark 8 unit, it could even show its own ships shells splashes at many miles.
Did the U.S. Navy have the SPA-25 repeater at that time?
Or was it still like the old timey oscilliscope type contraption?
Robert Morris Page, was most instrumental in Naval Radar, for many years. I highly recommend his book on the development about the earliest radars. "The Origin Of Radar." Available from abebooks. Its now out of print but invaluable as a source. You can't have my copy. Well worth reading.
HEY AUSTRALIA, We Americans LOVE YOU!!!
Anyone know the HMAS Shorpshire (D73) radar set please.
The two diagrams (starting 15:31) have the sets named. You should be able to catch them if you can pause a full resolution playback.
Fourunate that this ship had radar superior to all others. Shame super superior radar was not supplied to other RN and RAN ships. They had 282 sets with a range of up to 6000 yards, rather than the 308,000 yards this operators 282 set could achieve, acording to him. "175 miles" - welll over the horizon. "The first 50-cm set was Type 282. With 25-kW output and a pair of Yagi antennas incorporating lobe switching, it was trialed in June 1939. This set detected low-flying aircraft at 2.5 miles . . . ."
It sometimes came down to individual radar operators. HMS Illustrious, for example, in 1940 was detecting aircraft at 90 miles because the operator realised how these echoes were different to the direct returns he had been trained to watch for.
@@ArmouredCarriers "175 miles"
March, 2034. The Brits now can get only about 20 warships actually to the sea.
Shropshire ! I wondered where all those sheep came from !
Watch.... PBS.... "Half the Sky": "FET"... ( In Part II). And, "Meet John Doe" (Gary Cooper, Barbara Stanwick...)... A system that mixes those possibilities, as our secondary manual backup system.
I am a total Leyte historian buff. For the Australians. To even knock any the yanks did is sad considering they would a been just like the Philippines considering the British were blown completely out of the Pacific had the yanks not took a stalemate at coral sea and a mighty victory at midway. They would have been in Japanese hands. Your welcome Australia just like France so ungrateful
What did these veterans say that upset you so much?
Another nasty murican that refuses to believe anything other than "we won the war alone". Sad...
Japan had abandoned plans to invade Australia after Kokoda and Milne Bay. Learn the facts and stop getting so easily upset. We appreciate your help, it would be nice for it to be a two way street. As far as France is concerned - wouldn't the US never become to be without them?
HMAS Canberra being torpedoed and sunk by an American destroyer not that long beforehand may have had a bit to do with that.
Maybe I'm wrong but to loose one of our biggest warship to friendly fire was a bit rough on the Australian navy at the time.
@@jimmywrangles your confusing the Japanese passenger ship monte video. With the canbera. The HAMS canbera was involved in action in battle of savo island. It was struck 24 times in less than two minutes. The us submarine sturgeon was ordered to Torpedo it the next morning after the ship was cleared of all hands. The montevideo was built in Nagasaki and was a Japanese passenger ship. She was transporting prisoners from rabul. Many of them Aussies. Brave men. This pains me. I'm sorry. The submarine had no way of knowing all hands were lost. No survivors. Australia. I am a historian. I love the stuff. And some of your efforts went unheralded. But this gentleman.saying the canbera was deliberately attacked is wrong. Yes it was attacked but by the Japanese. It was sank empty by the US Navy.