Picture of the day

The wreck of the Imperial Japanese Navy battleship Hiei, the first battleship to be sunk by the Americans in WWII, during the Guadalcanal campaign in November 1942, has been located.

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The wreck was located by R/V Petrel (the late Paul Allen's research vessel) in nearly 3,000 feet of water northwest of Savo Island.

Pics at the link here.
 
Panzerlied : I love this song!

funny - remember singing this in the mess 40 years ago right after we took the cat
lyrics
ob's sturmt oder schneit, whether it's storming or snowing,
ob die sonne uns lacht, whether the sun is laughing,
der tag gluhend heis, the day is glowing,
oder eiskalt die nacht. or cold the night.
bestaubt sind die gesichter, dusty are the faces,
doch froh ist unser sinn, but glad is our sense,
ist unser sinn; is our sense;
es braust unser panzer, our tank is roaring,
im sturmwind dahin in the storm wind there
ob's sturmt oder schneit, whether it's storming or snowing,
ob die sonne uns lacht, whether the sun is laughing,
der tag gluhend heis, the day is glowing,
oder eiskalt die nacht. or cold the night.
bestaubt sind die gesichter, dusty are the faces,
doch froh ist unser sinn, but glad is our sense,
ist unser sinn; is our sense;
es braust unser panzer, our tank is roaring,
im sturmwind dahin in the storm wind there
ob's sturmt oder schneit, whether it's storming or snowing,
ob die sonne uns lacht, whether the sun is laughing,
der tag gluhend heis, the day is glowing,
oder eiskalt die nacht. or cold the night.
bestaubt sind die gesichter, dusty are the faces,
doch froh ist unser sinn, but glad is our sense,
ist unser sinn; is our sense;
es braust unser panzer, our tank is roaring,
im sturmwind dahin in the storm wind there
ob's sturmt oder schneit, whether it's storming or snowing,
ob die sonne uns lacht, whether the sun is laughing,
der tag gluhend heis, the day is glowing,
oder eiskalt die nacht. or cold the night.
bestaubt sind die gesichter, dusty are the faces,
doch froh ist unser sinn, but glad is our sense,
ist unser sinn; is our sense;
es braust unser panzer, our tank is roaring,
im sturmwind dahin in the storm wind there
 
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MV Awa Maru (1942)
While sailing as a hospital ship under the protection of the Red Cross in 1945, she was torpedoed by USS Queenfish (SS-393), killing all but one of 2,004 people aboard.
In 1945 the Awa Maru was employed as a Red Cross relief ship, carrying vital supplies to American and Allied prisoners of war (POWs) in Japanese custody. Under the Relief for POWs agreement, she was supposed to be given safe passage by Allied forces, and Allied commanders issued orders to that effect.[1]

Having delivered her supplies, Awa Maru took on several hundred stranded merchant marine officers, military personnel, diplomats and civilians at Singapore.[8] In addition, there were stories that the ship carried treasure worth approximately US$5 billion: 40 metric tons of gold, 12 (or 2[9]) metric tons of platinum (valued at about $58 million[9]), and 150,000 carats (30 kg) of diamonds and other strategic materials.[10] Less dramatic and more credible sources identify the likely cargo as nickel and rubber.[11] The ship was observed in Singapore being loaded with a cargo of rice in sacks; however, that evening the docks were reportedly cleared and troops were brought in to first unload the rice and then re-load her with contraband.

Her voyage also corresponded with the last possible location of the fossil remains of Peking Man, which were in Singapore at the time and were, on their own, priceless in value. There are various theories regarding the disappearance of a number of Peking Man fossils during World War II; one such theory is that the bones sank with the Awa Maru in 1945.[12]

The ship departed Singapore on March 28, but on April 1 was intercepted late at night in the Taiwan Strait by the American submarine USS Queenfish (SS-393), which mistook her for a destroyer. The Awa Maru was sailing as a hospital ship under the protection of the Red Cross, and under the agreed rules, she disclosed to the Allies the route she would take back to Japan. Her original route was promulgated through a minefield, an apparent ruse to draw attackers into the mined area. The area was known as mined, and would have been avoided at any rate. Her final route avoided the mines.[13]

The torpedoes of the Queenfish sank the ship. Only one of the 2,004 passengers and crew, Kantora Shimoda, survived.[2][14] He was the captain's personal steward, and it was the third time in which he was the sole survivor of a torpedoed ship.[citation needed] The commanding officer of the Queenfish, Commander Charles Elliott Loughlin was ordered by Admiral Ernest King to an immediate general court-martial. As the Awa Maru sank "she was carrying a cargo of rubber, lead, tin, and sugar. Seventeen hundred merchant seamen and 80 first-class passengers, all survivors of ship sinkings, were being transported from Singapore to Japan.…[The] survivor said no Red Cross supplies were aboard, they having been previously unloaded."[15]

Aftermath
Commander Loughlin was found guilty of negligence, and the U.S. Government offered, via neutral Switzerland, to replace the Awa Maru with a similar ship. Japan demanded full indemnification.

On the very day of Japan's surrender, 14 August 1945, Foreign Minister Togo forwarded a message to the United States through Bern, Switzerland, demanding payment of 196,115,000 yen ($45 million) for the loss of 2,003 lives; 30,370,000 yen ($7.25 million) for the goods aboard the Awa Maru; and various other claims, for a total demand of 227,286,600 yen or approximately $52.5 million.…No gold bullion is mentioned in the message.[13]

The Japanese bill was never paid, and in 1949 the matter was closed.[13][16]

In 1980, the People's Republic of China launched one of the biggest salvage efforts on a single ship in history. They had successfully located and identified the wreck site in 1977 and were convinced that the vessel was carrying billions in gold and jewels. After approximately 5 years and $100 million spent on the effort, the search was finally called off. No treasure was found. However, several personal artifacts were returned to Japan.

In the aftermath of the salvage attempt, the NSA scoured thousands of intercepted communications to determine what exactly happened to the treasure. From the communications, they determined that the treasure was not to be taken back to Japan. It was to be sent from Japan to Singapore where it would then be delivered to Thailand. The gold was successfully delivered and the Awa Maru was reloaded with a cargo of tin and rubber for the return trip to Japan.[13]
 
Tupolev_ANT-22.jpg

Wiki:
"The Tupolev ANT-22 (also known as the MK-1) was a large flying boat built in the Soviet Union in 1934. A huge aircraft consisting of two hulls and powered by six engines in three nacelles in a push-pull configuration, it was based on the ANT-11, which was never build.[1] Its enormous weight severely crippled its performance, and it never got beyond the experimental stage."
 
You can tour the Spruce Goose at the Evergreen Air Museum in McMinville Oregon. Its an excellent museum with a lot of good displays. I enjoyed seeing their Grumman OV-1 Mohawk, a very spiffy aircraft in which I logged a few hours in many moons ago.
 
Did it ever got off the water?

Yes ,it did.Must have been a brick to fly since it was parked after testing and never produced.

Rumor has it it was flown in early days of German invasion over to Murmansk or Arkhangelsk (way up north) and damaged in the process.It was parked again and stripped of engines and anything useful to equip patrol boats.

Nobody knows anything solid on its fate.
 
Sunken aircraft carrier Hornet — best known for Doolittle Raid — located miles below the waves

Sunken aircraft carrier Hornet — best known for Doolittle Raid — located miles below the waves
By: J.D. Simkins   13 hours ago

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An International Harvester aircraft tug can be seen as clear as day onboard the USS Hornet, which was sunk nearly 77 years ago. The wreckage was located late last month by the late Paul Allen's R/V Petrel expeditionary team. (R/V Petrel)

The research vessel Petrel crew members are no strangers to historic underwater archaeological discoveries, having located sunken World War II aircraft carriers, destroyers and cruisers scattered across the floor of the vast Pacific Ocean.
Originally championed by deceased Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen — a philanthropist who also owned the Seattle Seahawks — the Petrel crew found a new wreck about 3.3 miles below the South Pacific’s surface, the Yorktown-class flattop Hornet (CV-8).
Finding the carrier famous for launching the harrowing April 18, 1942, Doolittle bombing raid on Tokyo — the first American air raid on the Japanese homeland since entering the war ― was the Petrel’s first mission of 2019, one that was documented and can be viewed as part of a two-part series on CBS.
“We had the Hornet on our list of WWII warships that we wanted to locate because of its place in history as a capitol carrier that saw many pivotal moments in naval battles,” Robert Kraft, Vulcan’s director of subsea operations, said in a press release.
“Paul Allen was particularly interested in aircraft carriers so this was a discovery that honors his memory.”
Allen, who passed away on Oct. 15 in Seattle, helped blaze a trail for the crew’s previous finds, which included the Juneau, the Atlanta-class light cruiser famous for carrying all five Sullivan brothers, and the Indianapolis, the sunken Portland-class heavy cruiser that remains the Navy’s single greatest loss at sea.
Sunken ship of legendary Sullivan brothers discovered nearly 3 miles beneath the surface
Sunken ship of legendary Sullivan brothers discovered nearly 3 miles beneath the surface
A total of 687 men from the Atlanta-class light cruiser died in the attack, including all five Sullivan brothers.
By: J.D. Simkins
Months after launching the Doolittle Raid and subsequently joining in a decisive naval victory at Midway, the Hornet sailed toward the hotly contested Solomon Islands — notably Guadalcanal — to provide air cover for U.S. ground forces mired in a seesaw campaign.
Learning that a large force of Imperial Japanese Navy ships were approaching, the Hornet and the aircraft carrier Enterprise maneuvered to attack.
On Oct. 26, 1942, the Battle of Santa Cruz Island began. Aircraft from both navies pounded opposing ships.
The Hornet came under a coordinated attack by Japanese dive bombers and torpedo planes. Within 10 minutes, the carrier was dead in the water, all power and communications disrupted.
An 18-year-old gunner on board the Hornet, Richard Nowatzski, looked on frantically as his flattop was struck by three bombs and two torpedoes.
“The two torpedoes that came in … it took that Hornet and shook it just like a dog with a bone," Nowatzski, now 95, told CBS News. “They used armor piercing bombs, now when they come down, you hear 'em going through the decks … plink, plink, plink, plink … and then when they explode the whole ship shakes. ... We stopped dead in the water."
Two bombers damaged by anti-aircraft fire then slammed into the flattop, one into the carrier’s island and the other into the its port side.
A smoke trail can be seen from a Japanese
A smoke trail can be seen from a Japanese "Val," a type 99 shipboard bomber that struck the carrier Hornet's tower after being damaged by anti-aircraft fire just hours before the ship went under. Bursts of anti-aircraft fire fragmentation can be seen striking the water adjacent to the ship. (Naval History and Heritage Command)
Still afloat, the Hornet was being towed by the heavy cruiser Northampton until another wave of Japanese planes approached, one of which put a torpedo into the Hornet’s starboard side, causing a 14-degree list.
Over a 35-minute span, 11 more Japanese bombers flying in two waves attacked the Hornet.
Thirty-two minutes after the last bomb detonated on the carrier’s flight deck, Capt. Charles P. Mason gave the “abandon ship” order.
Then four more dive bombers swooped down, scoring a hit on Hornet’s forward hangar.
But the flattop still didn’t sink.
Two American warships fired 16 torpedoes to scuttle the carrier. It continued to float.
As enemy forces neared, they set Hornet ablaze with shell fire and hightailed it to the southeast to outrun Japanese scout planes dropping flares to signal the American retreat.
Two Japanese destroyers fired four more torpedoes at the Hornet on Oct. 27 and the carrier finally slipped under the surface, ferrying the bodies of 140 American sailors with it.
Nearly 77 years after the Hornet nuzzled into a watery grave, CBS shared the R/V Petrel’s crystal clear video with Nowatzki, who quickly noticed the gun he worked on.
“I used to stand on the right side of that gun,” he said. “That’s where my equipment was.”
With vivid imagery bringing on a flood of memories, the old sailor then cracked a smile.
“If you go down to my locker, there’s 40 bucks in it. You can have it!”
More photos from the R/V Petrel crew’s discovery of the Hornet can be seen below.
 
US-Japanese naval battles in the South Pacific in 1942/early 1943 are fascinating. The US prevailed by having bigger numbers and by the use of airpower. The Japanese did very well in surface actions around Guadalcanal where they consistently outclassed the US in ship to ship combat through superior tactical handling, training in night fighting and outstandingly effective torpedoes. The seabed around Savo Island is populated by far more sunken US ships than Japanese ones.

The US did have the advantage of radar in surface actions, but seemed to have a hard time exploiting it. In a strategic context the US had the numbers and the determination, as well as a massive production capability for aircraft and ship production; something foreseen by Japanese Adm Yamamoto before the war. US capabilities only got better while those of the Japanese diminished.
 
US-Japanese naval battles in the South Pacific in 1942/early 1943 are fascinating. The US prevailed by having bigger numbers and by the use of airpower. The Japanese did very well in surface actions around Guadalcanal where they consistently outclassed the US in ship to ship combat through superior tactical handling, training in night fighting and outstandingly effective torpedoes. The seabed around Savo Island is populated by far more sunken US ships than Japanese ones.

Ironbottom Sound.
 
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