The Longest Lived Ships of Pearl Harbor

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  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 85

  • @skyneahistory2306
    @skyneahistory2306  9 місяців тому +6

    If I’m not sure on a pronunciation, I look it up. God knows I’ve been burned on that before.
    In this case, what I was given for Taney was the pronunciation of the namesake. Evidently, the *ship* is pronounced completely different from the man.
    Good to know, when I do a dedicated video. Nothing to do for this one.

  • @evilned1
    @evilned1 9 місяців тому +8

    I've seen the Taney. I had a manager who told me once, "If you need to find my office, look through the cannon. It's aimed right at my window." Also, an alternate history writer used the Taney in one of his books. I told him it was a museum ship in Baltimore and he was surprised. He didn't know it hadn't been scrapped. He was very happy she was still afloat.

  • @kennethhanks6712
    @kennethhanks6712 9 місяців тому +25

    The Solace was originally the east coastal liner Iroquois (along with her sister Shawnee) built in 1927 for the New York based Clyde Mallory Lines. The Iroquois had just been recently acquired by the US Navy and converted to a hospital ship earlier in 1941.

  • @Myles0Harcourt
    @Myles0Harcourt 9 місяців тому +29

    It must have been strange for the American veterans of USS Phoenix to see the Royal Navy torpedo it and send it to the bottom 41 years later.

    • @user-xh3lz9xt4l
      @user-xh3lz9xt4l 9 місяців тому +13

      It was a threat to us on the Falklands Islands and had to be destroyed.thank you HMS Conquer. God Save our Queen, now King

    • @Myles0Harcourt
      @Myles0Harcourt 9 місяців тому +4

      @@user-xh3lz9xt4l absolutely, I am not saying it was unjustified to sink it. GSTK

    • @user-xh3lz9xt4l
      @user-xh3lz9xt4l 9 місяців тому +5

      @@Myles0Harcourt I wasnt saying you did but as I understand the history it was called the Luckiest Ship in the US Navy.

    • @johndonovan8062
      @johndonovan8062 9 місяців тому +9

      The ARA Belgrano/ USS Phoenix to date is the only ship torpedoed and sunk in action by a nuclear submarine.

    • @user-xh3lz9xt4l
      @user-xh3lz9xt4l 9 місяців тому +2

      @@johndonovan8062 yes I'd probably agree with you on that point but didnt the Indian Navy sink a ship although I'm not sure if it was a nuclear submarine.

  • @dkaustin98
    @dkaustin98 9 місяців тому +5

    I served on the Taney’s sister cutter the Ingram when it wore the gold hull numbers 35. Gold hull numbers are worn by the oldest active fighting ship in the U.S. fleet. I recommend reading a book named The Bloody Winter which is about the Secretariat class cutters during the war.

    • @dkaustin98
      @dkaustin98 9 місяців тому +1

      Sorry guys. Made a typo. Ingham. It is also in a museum. The Ingham is now in the Keys of Florida. When I was onboard we sailed out of Portsmouth, VA. Made stops in various ports in Florida. Did patrols out of Gitmo, Cuba.

  • @baronoflivonia.3512
    @baronoflivonia.3512 9 місяців тому +8

    Thank You. Everyone else forgot about this Infamous Day of December 7, 1941. I had a uncle who was in US Army Air Corp. at Hickam Field that day. Everyone in my family, and most of my friends in late 60's early 70's knew what happened on Today in 1941. The sneak attack by Japanese brought the US into the war, and everyone had a family member in the War and a lot had relatives that died. "Remember Pearl Harbor" was something I heard as kid.

  • @totheinferno
    @totheinferno 9 місяців тому +15

    So happy to see Hoga on here. She’s living a comfy life at our museum with USS Razorback: a Balao class sub that was in Japan on surrender day. Which gives the museum the distinction of having representatives from the beginning and end of the war. There’s also have the bell of the battleship Arkansas who was featured in a video on this channel and a fragment of Arizona on display. It’s a cool museum that you wouldn’t expect to find in Arkansas of all places.

    • @TheRazorbackpilot
      @TheRazorbackpilot 9 місяців тому +1

      I’ll have to come visit again since it’s been a long time, before Hoga showed up. I only see both of them every day.

  • @chuckmathis958
    @chuckmathis958 9 місяців тому +11

    Taney was not at Pearl Harbor, she was moored in Honolulu Harbor a couple miles away. The crew did fire on Japanese aircraft that strayed from Pearl Harbor.

  • @ditzydoo4378
    @ditzydoo4378 9 місяців тому +14

    My great Uncle Vernon D. "Mac" McCoy served aboard the USS Solace during WWII as one its lead X-Ray technicians. He would tell us of the campaign areas he worked in like Iwo Jima, were after the days wounded were brought aboard, the ship would move out to deep water anchorage for the night, and then light the whole ship with floodlights stem to stern to show they were a non-combatant. It helped that she was always accompanied by a small flotilla of Destroyer Escorts.

  • @marcusa3832
    @marcusa3832 9 місяців тому +4

    I served onboard Taney as Fireman in 1981. I worked in the boiler room. Steam propulsion was labor intensive. I went to Europe on that ship on a goodwill tour. We sailed up the Keil canal in Germany. She rode like a Cadillac. Good times..

  • @kevinmiller7792
    @kevinmiller7792 9 місяців тому +7

    I have spent several overnights on the Taney with my Scout Troop - ear plugs are a must!!👍😉

  • @santiagovictor2004
    @santiagovictor2004 9 місяців тому +12

    Woah woah okay hold on… phoenix is on this list..??!?? My great grandfather served on her in ww2, he was actually aboard her when Pearl was attacked, thank you so much for giving light to phoenix as imo she is overlooked because her sisters are more “famous”

    • @cliffthelightning
      @cliffthelightning 9 місяців тому +7

      Phoenix became rather famous later in life however

    • @user-bd3ds4ev5f
      @user-bd3ds4ev5f 9 місяців тому +6

      I’d argue she’s on par with them. Such a shame the British sank her.

  • @Peace2U-ec6es
    @Peace2U-ec6es 9 місяців тому +6

    There was one other IJN ship that survived the attack on Pearl Harbor, and that was the Battleship* (corrected) 'Nagato' that served as Adm. Yamamoto's flagship.
    She was in very bad condition- shot up and bombed but still afloat with a crew of dead Sailors still on board when CPO Jim Oswein and his crew came aboard with orders to get her running again, which they did.
    I was fortunate to meet Mr Oswein many years ago, and he gave me a copy of his book "Sailorboy" which is a great read if you can find it.
    He said 'Nagato' was a beautiful ship, but sadly it was sunk after the war in the Atomic Bomb tests at Bikini Atoll where she rests upside down under the waves.
    She is a popular dive for experienced divers.

    • @g.t.richardson6311
      @g.t.richardson6311 9 місяців тому +1

      It wasn’t a battle cruiser, and it was not in the Pearl Harbor task force
      But it did survive the war
      When commissioned, it was the most powerful battleship in the world

    • @Peace2U-ec6es
      @Peace2U-ec6es 9 місяців тому +1

      'Nagato' was Yamamoto's flagship but I think you're correct in that she wasn't actually in the task force- however she did transmit the famous coded message to the carrier strike force... "Climb Mt. Niitaka."
      All Good stuff for this day of remembering.

  • @Kw1161
    @Kw1161 9 місяців тому +2

    My brother had a tenant who was in on the USS Vestal on December 7 who had the mid to 4 duty. He was woken up by being thrown out of his rack….and then described the chaos afterwards…with spellbinding detail especially when the Arizona bow up. He had the Perl Harbor Survivors book which was really interesting.
    Hopefully this lesson will not be forgotten and be repeated.
    Have a great day!

  • @alephalon7849
    @alephalon7849 9 місяців тому +3

    No matter what kind of ship they were and how long they lasted after The Day That Lives In Infamy, these ships continued to admirably serve their nation in the early days of apparent defeat to the victorious conclusion of WW2 and through the Cold War for some of them.

  • @timheller8475
    @timheller8475 9 місяців тому +10

    Thank You for putting up a video for Pearl Harbor day, our local news and most of You Tube have nothing about it, maybe it's been canceled

  • @chrisv7193
    @chrisv7193 9 місяців тому +4

    There are a couple other yard craft that survived past 2000 and were present for the attack. Hoga’s sister Nokomis (YT-142) survived until 2010. YO-44 survived until 2017. Lastly, the hulk of the Coast Guard Cutter Tiger (WSC-152) is still semi-afloat today as a breakwater in Tacoma, Washington.

  • @patrickwentz8413
    @patrickwentz8413 9 місяців тому +7

    I got to spend a night on the USCG Cutter Taney with my sons cub scout troop. Thank god I was not accepted into the CG Academy as there were two men who snored all night long on the ship. Jesus the sound was horrible.

  • @LostShipMate
    @LostShipMate 9 місяців тому +7

    The IJN Yukikaze(Destroyer) survived the war, and was scrapped in 1966. Not sure if it was the last IJN ship though.
    The Luck Vampire outlasted them all from what I can tell.
    edit: Scrapped 1970, dismissed from Chinese service 1966. She was transferred in 1947 to Chinese control.

    • @kristoffermangila
      @kristoffermangila 5 місяців тому

      Among IJN auxiliaries, two are still around: the NYK ocean liner Hikawa Maru (which was requisitioned and converted into a hospital ship) and now preserved as a museum ship in Yokohama, and the icebreaker Soya, which served the IJN as a survey ship and ammo carrier before becoming a lighthouse tender and eventually an icebreaker for what became the Japan Coast Guard. Today Soya is preserved as an exhibit at the Museum of Maritime Science in Tokyo.

  • @franksposato6072
    @franksposato6072 9 місяців тому +10

    @skynea history could you possibly make a video covering the last of the IJN? what ships were still in service after Yamato sinks, the last IJN operation? what ships survived the war? which ships lasted beyond the end of war maybe past 1950?

    • @kristoffermangila
      @kristoffermangila 5 місяців тому +1

      Among IJN combat vessels, Yukikaze was the last survivor, serving in the ROC Navy (as the ROCS Dan Yang) until 1966. Among non-combatant IJN vessels, two are still around as museum ships. The first is the NYK ocean liner MS Hikawa Maru, which, after being requisitioned by the IJN, was converted into a hospital ship like USS Solace. She was eventually returned to NYK, and resumed passenger service up until the 1960's, when she was retired. Today, she is berthed at Yamashita Park in her homeport of Yokohama. The second ship is the icebreaker Soya. Originally built for the Soviet Union, she was requisitioned by the IJN as an auxiliary survey vessel and ammo ship. After the war, she was transferred to what eventually became the Japan Coast Guard, serving initially as a lighthouse tender and eventually as an icebreaker, serving in several Antarctic expeditions. She was retired in 1978, and now is a museum ship at the Museum of Maritime Science in Tokyo.

  • @barryobee1544
    @barryobee1544 5 місяців тому +1

    As a former coast guardsman, enjoyed USCG Cutter Taney story!

  • @user-pg3gb5mr9e
    @user-pg3gb5mr9e 9 місяців тому +3

    My father was a antiaircraft officer on the Phoenix at Pearl

  • @scootertrash911
    @scootertrash911 9 місяців тому +5

    Taney is pronounced by Coast Guard sailors as (Tain-ee).

  • @Patrick_Cooper
    @Patrick_Cooper 9 місяців тому +3

    In 76-78 I served on the Taney's sister ship the Campbell #32.

  • @billharrall5654
    @billharrall5654 9 місяців тому +1

    My father, William B Harrall served on the Taney's sister cutter Spencer in the early 50's. Thank you for your presentation.

  • @rbtsubs
    @rbtsubs 9 місяців тому +1

    She was moored at Aloha Tower near the Honolulu power station both of which are still there . She kept planes from taking out the station . Quite important

  • @user-if7xr8di7r
    @user-if7xr8di7r 9 місяців тому +3

    YO 44 aka Kodiak Queen was in pearl harbor December 7 th 1941 as well and was in service until 1967 and then worked in the Alaska fishing industry I fished King crab aboard her in 1980 in the bearing sea she ended up sunk intentionally in a dive park in British Virgin Islands just a few years ago.

  • @wilsonle61
    @wilsonle61 9 місяців тому +5

    How about the USS Jason AR-8? She was still at Pearl in the eighties and I believe was commissioned in the late 30s?

    • @skyneahistory2306
      @skyneahistory2306  9 місяців тому +1

      Late ‘40s, actually. Specifically, 1944.

    • @wilsonle61
      @wilsonle61 9 місяців тому

      Oh yeah, it wasn't at Pearl during the attack. But still, it just looked old when I was on a DDG at Pearl in 1982. @@skyneahistory2306

    • @gregsbiplays9899
      @gregsbiplays9899 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@@skyneahistory2306That's early forties

  • @sethstanleystowellviii6986
    @sethstanleystowellviii6986 9 місяців тому +1

    Ex USS Phoenix was sunked by Royal Navy submarine using WW2 era torpedo thus being the last WW2 ship to be sunk by WW2 weapons

  • @fredhayes6162
    @fredhayes6162 9 місяців тому +1

    I'm heading to Little Rock to see Hoga, I served on Taney in early 1980's ( we called her T A-ney (long "A" sound)

  • @RussellMiller-gh7fb
    @RussellMiller-gh7fb 9 місяців тому +1

    The only piece left of the USS Tennessee after they scrapped it is the ships bell Sen Howard Baker took it from the National Archives It is still on display in his private museum at his hometown in Huntsville Tn

  • @caseydamiano269
    @caseydamiano269 9 місяців тому +3

    Nice compilation! Good job! However, TANEY is pronounced "TAY-nee," being named after Secretary of the Treasury Roger B. Taney. 'Looking forward to your next posts!

    • @Arkus-Duntov
      @Arkus-Duntov 9 місяців тому +1

      The cutter is pronouced TAY-nee however the man is TAW-nee as is the town in Maryland named after his family, Taneytown.

  • @MrTherende
    @MrTherende 9 місяців тому +4

    Taney is pronounced as tAney (long 'A')

  • @byronharano2391
    @byronharano2391 9 місяців тому +1

    Thank you for remembering 12/7/1941.

  • @KennyDodge-of2sp
    @KennyDodge-of2sp 9 місяців тому +3

    Thanks.its my birthday

  • @glencrandall7051
    @glencrandall7051 9 місяців тому +3

    The US began the war with a relatively modest fleet. We rapidly became the largest and mightiest fleet in the world. As soon as the war ended our fleet soon reverted back to modest numbers again. Build them and use them. Then give them away. We did the same with all of our services. Will we never learn?😐😐

  • @moosifer3321
    @moosifer3321 9 місяців тому +3

    L Ron Hubbard`s `Heroic` WWII Career off the West Coast? Deserves Coverage/Roasting!

  • @majscrap2629
    @majscrap2629 9 місяців тому +1

    They had a survivor in Susuin Bay in CA. the name of it is escaping me. An auxiliary.I wonder if they saved it.

  • @rupturedduck6981
    @rupturedduck6981 9 місяців тому +4

    In a documentary on the Falkland Islands War the Argentine ship GENERAL BELGRANO was identified as the USS PORTLAND not the USS PHOENIX. ?????

    • @MidnightMoon2267
      @MidnightMoon2267 9 місяців тому +7

      Portland was scrapped 1959.

    • @drewjohnson-85
      @drewjohnson-85 9 місяців тому +5

      It was Phoenix that’s well documented

    • @rupturedduck6981
      @rupturedduck6981 9 місяців тому +1

      @@MidnightMoon2267 thank you

    • @rupturedduck6981
      @rupturedduck6981 9 місяців тому +1

      @drewjohnson-85 thank you

    • @drewjohnson-85
      @drewjohnson-85 9 місяців тому +2

      @@rupturedduck6981 no problem I know how annoying it can be when documentaries get something wrong.

  • @erichammond9308
    @erichammond9308 9 місяців тому +1

    Fact: the oldest ship in commission gets gold numbers, the USCG held the gold numbers for so long between USCGC Ingham and USCGC Taney and others, the Navy made sure that they'd regain the gold numbers and rebuild and recommissioned USS Constitution. 😂😂

  • @robertunderwood6011
    @robertunderwood6011 9 місяців тому +1

    well done thank you for remembering.

  • @jec9126
    @jec9126 9 місяців тому +5

    It amazes me that none of the battleships were saved

    • @johnpisciotto7115
      @johnpisciotto7115 9 місяців тому +1

      Technically, Arizona and Utah are preserved

    • @Legitcar117
      @Legitcar117 9 місяців тому +1

      To me West Virginia, Nevada and Pennsylvania would have been good candidates!

    • @jec9126
      @jec9126 9 місяців тому +2

      California to me is the no brainer. Coastal state, plenty of places to put her and a large population that could have raised the money to save the ship

    • @derekkline8098
      @derekkline8098 9 місяців тому +2

      Nevada has my vote, but glad we still have texas

    • @kennethhanks6712
      @kennethhanks6712 9 місяців тому +3

      Unfortunately the movement to save numerous naval vessels as museum ships did not really "get up a head of steam" until the 1950s when the population and economy had recovered from WWII and Korea by which time most of the older pre-war navy ships had been scrapped being worn out and there being a surplus of much newer ships in reserve. That is why we have mostly WWII and newer ships as museums.

  • @jasonz7788
    @jasonz7788 9 місяців тому +1

    AWESOME thanks

  • @johncunningham6928
    @johncunningham6928 9 місяців тому +3

    USS St Lewis...??!!!

  • @ColKorn1965
    @ColKorn1965 9 місяців тому +2

    I've been to the Coast Guard ship!!!!

  • @sonofadoy
    @sonofadoy 8 місяців тому

    What about Keosaqua?

  • @davidsachs4883
    @davidsachs4883 9 місяців тому +1

    Don’t worry about last December seeming a long time ago. Years slip by faster as you age. When you were ten the next year was an additional 10% of your life. At twenty the next year would be +5%. At fifty the next year +2%. My monthly mortgage payments seem to come quicker now then spelling tests did in second grade when I was 7.

  • @tomhorn6679
    @tomhorn6679 9 місяців тому +1

    try oldest there. Vastal. predates most 20th century shipping