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"The Admiral Chester W. Nimitz Story" (1958) - WW2 REEL History 

LionHeart FilmWorks
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This 1958 special episode of "The Big Picture" profiles the greatest American Naval Commander of WW2 -- Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz (February 24, 1885 - February 20, 1966). He was a fleet admiral of the United States Navy and played a major role in the naval history of World War 2 as Commander in Chief, United States Pacific Fleet (CinCPac), for U.S. naval forces and Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas (CinCPOA), for U.S. and Allied air, land, and sea forces during World War 2.
Nimitz graduated seventh in the Annapolis class of 1905. He became a lieutenant in 1910. Between 1918 and 1922 Nimitz had short tours in the office of the chief of naval operations and as executive officer of the battleship South Carolina. He was promoted to rear admiral in 1938.
When Nimitz began his tenure as CinCPac on 31 December 1941, his principal assets were three aircraft carriers and the various cruisers and destroyers that had come through the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor unscathed. He also had under his command many submarines, but defective torpedoes would hamper their effectiveness for over a year.
After Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the only offensive actions Nimitz's command could undertake were hit-and-run raids on scattered Japanese bases. (None was more heartening than the raid on Tokyo carried out by air force bombers operating from the carrier Hornet in April 1942.)
At the end of March 1942 Nimitz was given the additional title of commander in chief Pacific Ocean Area. With the exception of the Tokyo raid, Japanese forces retained the initiative in the Pacific throughout 1942. Relying on timely information provided by his intelligence experts, Nimitz ordered carrier task forces to the Coral Sea in May and to the vicinity of Midway in June to thwart Japanese plans to occupy Port Moresby, New Guinea, and Midway Island. Beginning in August 1942, the struggle for Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands dominated events in the Pacific.
By the last half of 1943, the combined air groups from the new carriers that Nimitz had available numbered some 700 planes, enough to give his forces air superiority in any operation they undertook. Among those taken by American forces were Tarawa in the Gilberts, Kwajalein and Eniwetok in the Marshalls, and Saipan, Tinian, and Guam in the Marianas.
Planners in Pearl Harbor and Washington agreed on taking Leyte in the Philippines after the conclusion of the Marianas operation, but King then wanted to seize Formosa while Generals George C. Marshall and MacArthur favored a return to Luzon, the northernmost of the major Philippine Islands. The capture of Okinawa in the spring of 1945 turned out to be the last of the great amphibious operations undertaken by Nimitz's forces.
Nimitz's place in history rests primarily on his command of the Pacific Fleet and the Pacific Ocean Area during the Second World War. For almost four decades after the end of the war historians treated him kindly, but thereafter they raised questions about his grasp of strategy, his knowledge of logistics, and his proclivity to compromise on issues of planning and on personnel assignments. While some of these criticisms have merit, in the largest sense Nimitz was a superior leader.
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7 окт 2021

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Комментарии : 70   
@ducewags
@ducewags 2 года назад
Gramp's was a Navy PT boat runner in Pearl Harbor befor the attack day. His dream at the time was to do his service years in the Navy. Back in the day it was a honor to join the service and do service duty for America. Now day's it's a loss of what our duty to America is about. Back in the day, you were expected to serve in the service just out of high school. Thank you all the brave men and women that served our nation, in war and peace times.
@bombasticbuster9340
@bombasticbuster9340 2 года назад
I am very sad about the destruction of this nation.
@rachaelsdaddontdrink
@rachaelsdaddontdrink 2 года назад
Really? Pre WWII most men in the service joined for 3 squares a day and access to good shoes... Or they were conscripted by order of Mr. Roosevelt...
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink that's true people forget just how rough life was in the past, military life was actually better than what civilians could expect in the working class or maybe even in the lower middle class. you got 3 meals a day. clean (free) clothes/socks/shoes/undergarments place to sleep in hot showers pay all your toiletries provided
@robertjoanneneis1434
@robertjoanneneis1434 2 года назад
Adm Nimitz museum in Fredericksburg TX is massive and outstanding.
@johnstephenson7620
@johnstephenson7620 2 года назад
We need military leaders like this in todays world 🌎🇺🇲🙏
@azia5051
@azia5051 2 года назад
100% true, if these people were alive today they will end up see the mass that we make.
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
ww2 sported a group of officers that was literallly once in a millennia /lifetime calibur that we might never see again. they were that damn good.
@douglasturner6153
@douglasturner6153 2 года назад
Nimitz early extensive service with Submarines is a major reason that he pushed those types of operations so confidently and successfully against Japan's shipping lifeline.
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
his grounding of the uss decatur would've finished his career but he's just lucky that a superior officer saw his future worth and decided to just give him a letter of reprimand
@kiethwilson2731
@kiethwilson2731 2 года назад
we need him now in 2021
@tonydavidson7873
@tonydavidson7873 2 года назад
No you don't, you've got Admiral Biden and General Obama to head up your forces. Americans don't know how lucky they are.
@lonpearson2134
@lonpearson2134 2 года назад
My uncle Cal Pearson, was Admiral Nimitz’s personal pilot for his PBY flights.
@SarahsAtticOfTreasures
@SarahsAtticOfTreasures 2 года назад
Awesome . Great production
@DDGVET4
@DDGVET4 2 года назад
"Tough old bastards!" My God how we need them now!
@JEM133
@JEM133 2 года назад
We just need to man the hell up,we CANT have them back,but we can learn from them.No more woke crap,in our military, thats gonna get us wrecked.
@DDGVET4
@DDGVET4 2 года назад
@@JEM133 as if it were that easy. I served my time starting 43 years ago. The Admirals of my time served under Nimitz, Halsey, Spruance and King during WWII.
@scottmcgahey891
@scottmcgahey891 2 года назад
Great Man
@saintmichael1874
@saintmichael1874 16 дней назад
Thanks!
@LionHeartFilmWorks
@LionHeartFilmWorks 16 дней назад
Thank you for the super chat, you are a hero in my books! Thanks for helping to keep our content rolling out.
@zmajodnocaja5088
@zmajodnocaja5088 2 года назад
"We defeated the wrong enemy" - Gen. Patton
@azia5051
@azia5051 2 года назад
Yep true.
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
patton just didn't know when to stop talking because that's what cost him his job.
@carywest9256
@carywest9256 2 года назад
@@joeswanson733 You mean his life!
@JEM133
@JEM133 2 года назад
But,Billy bad ass,none the less.This is war,not some game."We're gonna run thru their ass,like shit thru a goose"!
@mikehaynes1769
@mikehaynes1769 2 года назад
The Nimitz WWII Pacific Theater museum in Fredericksburg TX is worth a visit. Nimitz was from the area, which coincidentally was a big German community, as were many small towns in central Texas.
@stevetadlock5223
@stevetadlock5223 2 года назад
A true American Hero!
@kathrynbillinghurst188
@kathrynbillinghurst188 2 года назад
Thank you AGAIN, until now I thought the NIMMITZ was a BATTLE SHIP. Chester, the humble, brilliant Texan also handsome and brave. Submarines are fascinating and the men must have bee so mentally strong to live and fight under the sea! I’m not racist, but the Japanese were brutal and callous. It must be so hard to forgive and forget. I wonder if the Japanese could or would ever forgive themselves for bringing such bad Karma back to their homeland? I feel similar towards Nazis to this day. OFFENCE CREATES DEFENCE 🥺😩😠
@todiathink8864
@todiathink8864 2 года назад
We should ALWAYS hate the Nazis! NEVER FORGET!
@kathrynbillinghurst188
@kathrynbillinghurst188 2 года назад
@@todiathink8864 🌟
@rachaelsdaddontdrink
@rachaelsdaddontdrink 2 года назад
"Nimitz" is a nuclear powered super carrier class... The USN doesn't have any battleships...
@kathrynbillinghurst188
@kathrynbillinghurst188 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink Thank you Louis, I’m not sure why we weren’t taught this in high school! There’s a board game called BATTLESHIPS I think… see this is why the people of the world need education in so many ways. It’s easy to repeat history if we haven’t learned not to repeat. 🕊🕊🕊
@robertyoung3992
@robertyoung3992 2 года назад
Nimitz and she is the lead carrier in the Nimitz Class
@willford9205
@willford9205 2 года назад
THIS was a GREAT LEADER and A HELL OF A WARRIOR. He was a little short when addressing congress. THEY have LOTS of GREED and DAMN little common sense.
@banditeastlick2471
@banditeastlick2471 2 года назад
I found an old NAVY crying towel. It is very interesting. It has very funny cartoons and excuses to cry while on board their ships.
@rachaelsdaddontdrink
@rachaelsdaddontdrink 2 года назад
How raggedy is it? Are there teethmarks in it from the youngsters in the barrel?
@banditeastlick2471
@banditeastlick2471 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink apparently this man mailed it home because it was doused with cologne. It had some old boy scout things on it and some military bars and stuff like that. It also has a grease stain on it
@banditeastlick2471
@banditeastlick2471 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink also has a real old pin that says business is good
@banditeastlick2471
@banditeastlick2471 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink I'm thinking about looking for Don Shipley's address and mailing it to him
@banditeastlick2471
@banditeastlick2471 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink there's no tears and the ink is perfect still
@montanabulldog9687
@montanabulldog9687 2 года назад
Its FLEET Admiral . . . Lionheart, just a DETAIL.
@robertyoung3992
@robertyoung3992 2 года назад
Midway was in early June of 1942
@bigstyx
@bigstyx 2 года назад
McArthur was in it for his own fame and would have undermined anyone that got in his way.
@stevetadlock5223
@stevetadlock5223 2 года назад
No mention of the A bombs dropped!
@robertyoung3992
@robertyoung3992 2 года назад
Nimitz was Navy, it was the US Army Air Force that dropped the bombs
@jonlanier_
@jonlanier_ 2 года назад
To add to Robert Young... Nimitz was fighting with one hand behind his back. The goal was to hold Japan at bay for as long as possible, the European Theater was the most important to finish first. And thank God for the A bomb. If we didn't end that as quickly as we did ... the Soviet Union was going to want a piece of the Japanese pie. And we would have had two east and west type germanies to deal with for next 40 years instead of one.
@jonlanier_
@jonlanier_ 2 года назад
This is somewhat false. Nimitz actually was demoted to the submarine corp when he ran his destroyer aground and which was considered substandard performance of duty, including failure to demonstrate qualities of leadership required of an officer of his grade and failure to properly discharge the duties of an officer of his rank. I don't know why this fact is being hidden? To me, this just gives greater credence to the man's ability to overcome a failure and still rise in the ranks of his chosen profession. For if he did not run the destroyer to the ground... he may never have developed the understanding and skill needed to deploy the submarine fleet effectively.
@Russia-bullies
@Russia-bullies 2 года назад
Navies don’t & shouldn’t hold lines.Naval combat was never that 1 dimensional.
@michealfaulkner8870
@michealfaulkner8870 2 года назад
Nimitz was not happy with Bull, because he took his carriers off chasing the for the most part. Unless carriers. Bull, destroyed the Japanese carriers. But also almost lost the gulf and the marines and fleet. That's where the I wonder and yes the world wonders where you and your group is. BOTHERED Bull so badly that he cried. Needless to say he hailed a$#%. Back to cover the landing.
@rachaelsdaddontdrink
@rachaelsdaddontdrink 2 года назад
Nimitz's preferred admiral was Raymond Spruance... Look him up...
@michealfaulkner8870
@michealfaulkner8870 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink yes I've read alot about him.
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
@@rachaelsdaddontdrink sailors liked to serve under halsey but officers preferred to serve under spruance.
@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486
@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 2 года назад
Nimitz stuck him with General MacArthur.
@michealfaulkner8870
@michealfaulkner8870 2 года назад
@@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 yes he did. Dug out Doug was a big pain for everyone. Many in Washington including Chief of staff Marshall thought and wanted him Relieved of duty some even wanted him court marshaled because of what happened in the Philippines. Washington couldn't get in touch with him until late the 7th and then his only reply was our tails are up. He knew of the attack on Pearl Harbor yet still 90%of his planes where destroyed on the ground. And hardly any of the Japanese landings were opposed. He wasn't ready for the invasion. He was told months before to expect a coming war. His ego and mouth finally caught up with him in Korea. Turman finally had enough of him. Just my opinion he was a much over rated General. Ike didn't think much of him either.
@joaobaptista9869
@joaobaptista9869 2 года назад
That's not by accident he was german
@joeswanson733
@joeswanson733 2 года назад
many white americans have german lineage.
@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486
@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 2 года назад
Texan too.
@thecommentary21
@thecommentary21 2 года назад
Does this include the fact that he conspired to ruin another mans career ? And ruined his life as a result? No? Figures.
@Mikey300
@Mikey300 2 года назад
If you’re talking about Charles Butler McVay III and USS Indianapolis, it was FADM Ernest King who overruled FADM Nimitz’ recommendation of the issuance of only a Letter of Reprimand to McVay (not a court-martial, as had been recommended by a Court of Inquiry investigating the loss of Indianapolis).
@thecommentary21
@thecommentary21 2 года назад
@@Mikey300 No not this one but a good point indeed. McVay was innocent yes. Husband E. Kimmel Was placed in command at pearl but it was supposed to be nimitz and court intrigue among nimitz and fellow brass played its part. Nimitz was able to defer the appointment with the approval of other brass in his circle. There has never been any proof Kimmel was negligent and a 1944 investigation for the most part exonerated him... Its fairly well known in circles that Kimmel was the planned fall guy. Kimmel was perfectly capable to command the pacific fleet. Even Bull Halsey had the utmost confidence in him. I dont know what happened behind closed doors in regard to McVay. But in regards to holding off the promotion to the pacific fleet nimitz new the commander of pearl would be sacked and disgraced. Nimitz new pearl would be attacked. A lot of the staff knew. This was simply the quickest way into the war.
@Mikey300
@Mikey300 2 года назад
I’d like to see evidence that “Nimitz knew Pearl would be attacked”, considering that neither Stark, Turner, Safford, or Layton were certain of this (they were focused on possible Japanese moves against the Philippines, the Dutch East Indies, or Burma/Thailand). FDR relieved ADM James O. Richardson as CinCUS for not conforming to the FDR/State Department fantasy that basing the Pacific Fleet at Pearl (instead of San Diego) would somehow deter Japan from aggressive military maneuvers beyond their existing engagement in China. The pettiness of FDR’s relief of Richardson for daring to disagree with a militarily unsound policy (forward-basing the Fleet without adequate provision for defensive reconnaissance) might have caused a lot of RADMs high on the seniority list to question whether they really wanted to put themselves into Richardson’s position. For a further reading of tea leaves, maybe the fact that Richardson and Nimitz were both Texans (born in Paris and Fredricksburg, respectively) may have made Nimitz reluctant to advance his career by stepping on the neck of a senior who was a fellow Texan. Kimmel didn’t see any reason that Richardson should have been relieved, Nimitz (Annapolis 1905) was junior to Kimmel (Annapolis 1904, born in Henderson KY); and Kimmel himself was junior to several other candidates to replace Richardson (Annapolis 1902).
@mikehaynes1769
@mikehaynes1769 2 года назад
Nobody is interested in your conspiracy theories, kook.
@thecommentary21
@thecommentary21 2 года назад
@@mikehaynes1769 No one is interested in your personal attacks to prove a case you cant prove or defend. Kook!
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