Mission to Rabaul - Nonstop action in the South West Pacific 1943

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 11. 2012
  • This is one of the all time classic documentaries from World War 2 -- an action packed epic! Rabaul, a large natural harbor on the eastern end of the huge Island of New Britain was an essential strategic linchpin for the Japanese from which they could project their forces throughout the region. They poured tens of thousands of troops, hundreds of airplanes, and thousands of tons of supplies and material into this base to make it a mighty fortress. The Allies' brilliant solution to the Rabaul conundrum was to isolate it, slowly starve it, and bypass it -- rather than assault it directly.
    This dramatic, high impact documentary film shows some of the most memorable, exciting, and extensive footage of 5th Air Force B-25G bombers conducting tree top level attacks with machine guns and delayed action bombs to come out of World War 2 .The first step in the reduction of Rabaul was the seizure of a string of Japanese bases along the Northeast coast of New Guinea.
    The film focuses on the decisive and revolutionary impact of the air component in the strategy, including high & low level attacks, parachute drops, and resupply, accompanied by a magnificent musical score drawn from Holst's "The Planets." You're literally sitting in the cockpit or in the tail gunners seat watching amazing low level attack runs. You'll also see P-38s, A-20s, B-25s and B-24 cooperating with US Australian and New Zealand Forces securing forward air bases to strike against Rabaul and for the invasion of New Britain. "Mission to Rabaul" shows how each piece of this classic strategy culminated inevitably in the first escorted, massed bomber strike on Rabaul on 12th October, 1943 an essential goal in the reduction of Japanese defenses.
    I digitally restored the audio & video.
    Zeno, Zeno's Warbird Video Drive-In zenoswarbirdvideos.com See this film and more full screen on our "Rabaul Campaign" DVD bitly.com/WjYE40 Visit our aviation DVD store at www.zenosflightshop.com for the World's largest selection of World War 2 & vintage jet aircraft aviation videos.
    We have 100s of films in our library. We have licensed footage to major TV networks and cable channels. For more info see / zenoswarbirds
    Zeno

Komentáře • 575

  • @jack60091
    @jack60091 Před 10 lety +289

    My father was at Pearl Harbor during the Japanese attack. His ship was the U.S.S. Solace and the only hospital ship in the Pacific until 1944. He mentioned this attack. He died this year at 94. The war in the Pacific was brutal with no holds bared. Rest in Peace Dad I miss you.

    • @estebahnrandolph8724
      @estebahnrandolph8724 Před 4 lety +8

      My dad was in Pearl Harbor also . Ran out to man a small 30 cal machine gun only to get blasted out in the harbor and he said if it wasn't for another sailor who saw him fly off the dock into the bay I et would not be here watching CZcams ! Here come the Chinese .

    • @MrMenefrego1
      @MrMenefrego1 Před 3 lety +15

      @@estebahnrandolph8724 God Bless your father and all of *The Greatest Generation!* My father also fought in WWII, he was well decorated for combat in N. Africa, then it was up to the Italian boot to fight the Wehrmacht and Italian Fascists who were still loyal to Mussolini. While his unit was fighting up in the mountains, in conjunction with an elite Italian Bersaglieri unit, an Italian Brixia 45-mm mortar shell exploded prematurely in the tube and he was wounded then sent back to the States for an operation. (BTW., My father said: "Anyone who thinks that Italian soldiers are cowardly or that they are not good or brave soldiers haven't fought with or against them!" Further, he stated: "One evening, as dusk was setting in and his unit along with the other U.S. units were calling it a night, I overheard the Bersaglieri unit commander with which we were fighting (against an entrenched German position) giving orders to his men to circumvent the German position and give it one last try." (they had been attacking the position for most of the day without much success) My father just let the Italians go about their business and hit the sack. He continued: "Within thirty minutes or so all hell broke out and German troops were flying out of their position, literally on fire! The Bersaglieri unit had jury-rigged an old CV flamethrower and snuck around their position. Then, as darkness fell they opened the valve and furiously burned the German unit out!" Pop said: "Much to the amusement of the Italian troops, most of the American troops were vomiting from the smell of burning German flesh!" (I guess that smell didn't bother the Italians?!) After he recovered, it was off to the Pacific Theater to fight in 'The Island Hopping Campaign' where he was decorated again, and again... I still have his medals in a case above my fireplace. (along with several other decorations, he also earned several Purple Heart awards; actually, it was several in one with the addition of oak leaf clusters to indicate the additional Purple Hearts which he had earned) He just passed away in 2015 at 97, Pop had just bought his last car. Pop just hated 'foreign jobs', especially "Jap cars" as he called them. But, living in Florida, there was no shortage of good ole MASSIVE ALL-American 'Luxo-Boats' and he found a beautiful '78 Lincoln Town Car with 43-K on the OD! Too bad he never really got to enjoy it. God Bless you, Pop. (BTW., what does "Here come the Chinese" mean?).

    • @georgiobenelli4854
      @georgiobenelli4854 Před 3 lety +17

      My father was USMC in the pacific 1942 - 46

    • @MrMenefrego1
      @MrMenefrego1 Před 3 lety +5

      @@georgiobenelli4854 God Bless!

    • @robertsettle2590
      @robertsettle2590 Před 3 lety +6

      @@MrMenefrego1 out of curiosity, just what outfits were your Pop's in while he was fighting in Italy and in the Pacific during the island hopping campaign. He really was quite the hero.

  • @jakemuehlschlegel
    @jakemuehlschlegel Před 2 lety +38

    My Great Uncle Eldon was a waist gunner on a B-24 Liberator (heavy) named “Pistol Packin’ Mama” a part of the 90th Bombardment Group 321st Squadron. I just found this video, and it incredibly depicts his whole time in New Guinea. He flew his last mission on October 12, 1943. They were on their way back from Rabaul and were shot down with three engines out, strafed by a Japanese Zero all the way down to the sea as they tried to make a water ditch. That was the eye witness account written by the friend of my great uncle’s plane’s pilot (1st Lt. Hampton Rich) who watched them go down from his Liberator’s cockpit. His crew was was declared MIA and KIA. The crew was posthumously awarded the Air Medal and Purple Heart. Their group was awarded a Distinguished Unit Citation for their efforts over Rabaul.
    Thank you for uploading this video. Absolutely incredible. I keep rewatching to see if I can see him or his Liberator’s nose art to show up in it.

    • @michaelcarpenter3546
      @michaelcarpenter3546 Před rokem +5

      I'd recommend to you the book Under the Southern Cross by Thomas McKelvey Cleaver. This incident is specifically mentioned.

    • @BearfootBob
      @BearfootBob Před rokem +4

      RIP , Brave lads. Hey man you should image search "B-24 Pistol packin mama", a lot of images come up. It was a popular warbird name on Bombers, but I feel hopeful some of those images are your Uncle's plane, and hopefully some of the flight crew posings with the planes are of him and his Crew. Peace, Respect.

    • @nickdarbenzio1681
      @nickdarbenzio1681 Před rokem +2

      My grandfather was in jolly rodgers bomb group. Waist gunner. 58 missions. Air medal. Plane named “cookie”.

  • @gac914
    @gac914 Před 3 lety +29

    I can't help thinking that my Dad might have been in one of those B-25's. I wish I could verify with him, but he passed in April of 1983. His birthday was October 13th, the day after this mission to Rabaul took place. I remember him telling me he spent his 19th birthday, (1943) in the plane strafe-bombing in New Guinea. He was a waist gunner. He flew both in the 5th, and later the 13th Army Air Force. He was wounded twice, once when his "flak curtain" failed and he got hit in the chest with Japanese metal, and the second time when they were coming in for a landing and the landing gear folded up, and he was knocked unconscious with a skull fracture. Watching these films of the 25's doing that low-level flying is harrowing to view. So were my Dad's many stories. There was a lot of "unspoken PTSD" back then, but I know he, (as well as millions of others,) suffered from it, but they sucked it up and fought for and saved our liberty. Many today would do well by remembering that!! RIP, Dad, I'm so proud of you and all your fellow fighters!!!

    • @davidhoffman6980
      @davidhoffman6980 Před 3 lety +1

      Did he continue flying after his skull fracture, or was he discharged?

    • @gac914
      @gac914 Před 3 lety +5

      @@davidhoffman6980 Nope, he spent some time in the "hospital" (field,) and after they patched him up, he returned to service. At the time of the war when it happened, they needed all able "hands on deck," so both for his flak wounds and the landing gear mishap/injury, he returned to service. -- (Not so) fun fact -- he, along with a great number of his fellow Air Force group, were kept in that area for almost a year and a half AFTER the war with Japan ended. He didn't return home until sometime in later 1946.

    • @secretsquirrel6308
      @secretsquirrel6308 Před 2 lety +2

      You can get his service records. You'll need at minimum his SS# and his full name. Knowing his military ID # would help but is not strictly necessary.

    • @gac914
      @gac914 Před 2 lety +1

      @@secretsquirrel6308 What site would that be to get the records from? I have his social, and I think I have his military I.D./ "dogtag #"

    • @flexinclouds
      @flexinclouds Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah that low level bombing had me thinking they were crash landing. But it makes you proud and grateful knowing you have family that fought for our freedom in ww2. My great grandfather enlisted when the US joined the war, and ended up being shot by a german sniper after VE day, i believe he was 19 (thankfully he knocked up great grams before being shipped off. She's now 96) And his father fought and lived through both world wars.

  • @jasonfromedmond
    @jasonfromedmond Před 11 lety +66

    I want to thank you for digitally restoring and posting this video - my Grandfather served with the 49th Fighter Group, 8th squadron from 1942-45, and took part in these air campaigns - Wewak, in particular. He took a lot of pictures while he served in the SW Pacific, and a lot of the restored footage in this documentary looks like it could have been from some of the air fields he served on during the war.
    Thanks again for posting this!

  • @normfreilinger5655
    @normfreilinger5655 Před 3 lety +26

    My dad was stationed on Shemya island west of Dutch Harbor 800 miles . At first He was assigned to infantry but his bad eyesight had him transferred him to Artillery for his great math skills . But but still , he had bad eyesight.
    Then transferred to supply . Found out he could type 60 words a minute so assigned to quarter-master . Spent 2 years on that island. Spent two years tracking supplies . He is my hero !

    • @axiomist4488
      @axiomist4488 Před 2 lety +1

      That's a great story .

    • @tinkhamm7251
      @tinkhamm7251 Před rokem +1

      I faked it being 70% deaf in the navy, I was found out in a individual hearing test. In the group test just raise left or right hand along with everyone else🤣my 3 years was less than memorial, but the Pacific 🥰

  • @echohunter4199
    @echohunter4199 Před 10 měsíci +2

    As a retired Army Infantryman I weep at what our nation has become. Had these great men and women that fought in WWII known this is what would be done with their sacrifice, they would have stayed home and lived their lives knowing they were the last free Americans.

  • @BUIKPAN
    @BUIKPAN Před 7 lety +31

    My uncle flew 66 missions 33 in B25 and 30 in A20 Havoc in New Guinea and I have some photo copies of his flight records showing his attacks at Rabaul, Dobodura. Handwriting is brief but many comments on HITS, villages, barges, "bomb and strafe, got 8 trucks, strafe planes on ground on Sep 04, 1943, "Bob Miller Lost" on Oct 11-Dobo Rapopo Karaina island. His first flight in the A20, had to turn back due to turret failure on Oct 30, 1943.

  • @jgonzalez101
    @jgonzalez101 Před rokem +10

    Thank you for posting such a detailed and informative Documentary. So much went into the different aspects of planning and implementing these bombings Raids. May our brave courageous men and women of WWII always be remembered! ❤️🙏🇺🇸

  • @roberttrout3588
    @roberttrout3588 Před 3 lety +4

    My uncle Lee flew one of those Mitchells, he wrote about it in his memoirs. Thank you for sharing this video🙏👍 my heroes have always been my father and uncles. Happy Father’s Day 🇺🇸🙏 Rest In Peace

  • @resolvedwhite1743
    @resolvedwhite1743 Před 11 lety +80

    My father was a nose gunner on the B-17, later he became a United pilot and retired as captain on the DC-8. IN GOD WE TRUST

    • @uradragon7823
      @uradragon7823 Před 3 lety +4

      Mine was a belly gunner. My mother to be was a child in Bergen Norway while her husband to be dropped bombs on Europe. A wonder I am here.

    • @matthewcullen1298
      @matthewcullen1298 Před 3 lety +2

      @@uradragon7823 that's an amazing set of circumstances. I'm glad they both survived. Must have been bloody awful for both of them.i truly respect all that have served but wish theydidnt have to

    • @martintaper7997
      @martintaper7997 Před 2 lety

      My great uncle was a spitfire pilot and the first to shoot down Japanese aircraft in the war. (your god let them down).

  • @geraldwalker2612
    @geraldwalker2612 Před 2 lety +14

    My uncle who I am named with my middle name for flu as a radio gunner in a Mitchell on the reball raids themselves. Unbelievable to work with just fly in and build an air strip. He's definitely were the days before the smart bomb a lot of jungle got rearranged with 93 tons of explosives coming down. God bless the memory of all those who served.

  • @chuckfinley6156
    @chuckfinley6156 Před 3 lety +41

    and don't forget the guys who kept stuff flying. old stuff, not much in spares, these personnel were incredibly important. working under brutal conditions and sometimes under fire, they turned in a lot of hours.

    • @BearfootBob
      @BearfootBob Před rokem +1

      there are some endearing (and amusing) accounts of one of the Mechanics of the 312 Bomb Group in Joseph Rutter's "Wreaking Havoc: A Year in an A-20". He'd nearly botched one of his first landing approaches in the Squadron, and the Mechanics looked after those planes like their babies.... : )

    • @maureenorourke3292
      @maureenorourke3292 Před rokem +1

      I believe it. I watch youtube re-runs of Twelve O'Clock High about B17s
      base in England during WWII. Everyday the Colonel asks how many made it back...we need ( ) for
      tomorrow and the aircraft mechanics worked all night repairing to have as many planes go up each day. Horrific statistics on so many not making it back from Germany. Those kids went
      straight to heaven.

  • @stuart.8273
    @stuart.8273 Před 11 lety +24

    Thanks for making this old Documentary available on the web. For a number of reasons.This classic historical film will assist my kids and I to know about what the Pacific War was like for their Aussie grandfather, (my Dad). I flew over some of this area in a commercial jet a year or so ago, also lived on one of the islands for a few days, I can identify - in a small way- with the ruggedness of PNG. Some of WW2's bloodiest battles for future freedom were fought in the Pacific. "Lest We Forget"

  • @edgaraquino2324
    @edgaraquino2324 Před 2 lety +11

    Many thanks for keeping history alive in this manner...it's one thing to read about these actions, but to actually see them is so interesting and such a treat...plus it is sobering to see the conditions our men lived, worked and fought under...also, you are doing a service to all of us who are into military flight and aircraft, especially families who have had relatives serving in this theater, who have been able to spot them, or at the very least find solace in watching; knowing they were there...Thanks again!

  • @michaelholden5131
    @michaelholden5131 Před rokem +1

    My Dad crewed both A-20's and B-25's in the New Guinea campaigns; many missions many medals to include DFC as well as metal without ribbons. Several aircraft shot out from underneath them. Went on to make a career out of the Air Force and was medically retired after 28years. These men were rugged and operated their equipment at the very edge of safety and at great personal risks. Very few aircrew were taken prisoner if shot down by the Japanese; it was a campaign without quarter for the most part. My Father would only speak about this campaign when directly asked and only to tell of humorous events. The Greatest Generation is an appt moniker for these real heroes. I am very proud to have know a soldier who lived and fought this great struggle.

  • @oakvue45
    @oakvue45 Před 11 lety +7

    My dad was with the 317th troop transport. He earned a bronze star flying into Wau, New Guinea. The 317th was in action from Port Moresby through to Japan. Dad made it home, went to college and taught high school. He died in 1997...RIP...

  • @panuelmanuke3629
    @panuelmanuke3629 Před 10 lety +54

    I am Maureen Dapal from Rabaul on New Britain Island PNG. My father lived during the war - he was actually 3 years old when the war arrived. He stayed in a dug out hole in the ground and survived only on coconuts. He told me that eventhough a large amount of bombs was dropped on the island not plenty people were killed - and few received injuries minor and serious injuries.

    • @AlbertLuppo
      @AlbertLuppo Před 9 lety +19

      If not for the native population fighting alongside the allied forces, the war would have been longer.

    • @mark-wn5ek
      @mark-wn5ek Před 4 lety +8

      @Craig Wooldridge You're right Craig....as usual. I'm sure they had granola bars and gummy bears and Red Bull to fortify them just like you do.

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 Před 4 lety +4

      Panuel Manuke nice!

    • @wrightflyer7855
      @wrightflyer7855 Před 4 lety +4

      @Craig Wooldridge Audrey Hepburn lived on raw turnips for awhile during the German occupation of Belgium.

    • @XxBloggs
      @XxBloggs Před 3 lety +5

      Hey I’ve been to Rabaul, the old Rabaul before the volcano erupted. Great place. I loved the lifestyle and the friendliness of the people I met.

  • @philipcallicoat3147
    @philipcallicoat3147 Před rokem +4

    "I fear we. have we have awakenened. . a sleeping giant '". (Admiral Yamamoto, after the attack on Pearl Harbor )

  • @briandavies8725
    @briandavies8725 Před 10 lety +33

    I lived in PNG in the mid 60's and from 1970 thru to 1981 in Lae, Port Moresby, Rabaul, Madang Wewak, and have seen most of the smaller areas mentioned in the ops. I have the utmost admiration for all armed services who endured the enemy, malaria,and every other disease that were thrown at them, I am proud to have known many older civilian Australians who served as Coast Watchers, and to have enjoyed the warmth & friendship of the native population who had so many atrocities done to them by the Japanese. It's a pity the country today seems more of a hell hole than what it was during WW 2.

    • @pauliec17
      @pauliec17 Před 4 lety +4

      We were there in the '60s & '70s. Awesome back then. I wouldn't go to PNG now if you paid me. They hate white people.

    • @johnsolok2435
      @johnsolok2435 Před 3 lety +2

      Shame on you for saying a hell hole.

    • @tinkhamm7251
      @tinkhamm7251 Před rokem

      Yes

    • @briandavies1809
      @briandavies1809 Před rokem

      Rioting, corrupt leaders, thousands of people living without good schools, medical facilities & the list goes on. And now a Chinese port being built under the guise of a fishing port which will be large enough to be used for military use. Thousands of Americans, Australians, & New Zealanders are buried in this wonderful country, for what?
      So that greedy leaders can invite another enemy into the country only this time with a check book, not bullets.

  • @usethenoodle
    @usethenoodle Před 3 lety +19

    I've been out to Rabaul a couple times on SCUBA trips. Great history there. Some of the Japanese equipment and guns are still there. There is an underground hospital complex that is just vast. I went in Yamato's underground headquarters. Japanese supply barges in hidden tunnels and the like. I love it out there. Such rich WW-2 history. There is also a great WW-2 museum over by Kokapo. Lots of cool things on display there.

    • @olentangy74
      @olentangy74 Před 3 lety +1

      Are you Australian?

    • @usethenoodle
      @usethenoodle Před 3 lety +4

      @@olentangy74 No. I’m in the USA. BUT, When Rabaul fell to the Japanese, it was garrisoned by Australian troops. Read Darkest Hour, the epic story of Lark Force, the forgotten garrison January 1942. Super good read on the Japanese conquest of Rabaul, and New Britain Island after Pearl Harbor.

    • @olentangy74
      @olentangy74 Před 3 lety +2

      The reason why I asked if you were Australian is because Rabaul is so remote from the USA, and relatively close to Australia.
      I too am a scuba diver, and an avid WW2 history buff. Rabaul has long been a place I would like to visit, but getting there is another thing. Did you go with a tour group?

    • @usethenoodle
      @usethenoodle Před 3 lety +5

      @@olentangy74 no. I went there to catch a Peter Hughes dive boat. I have done 2 10 day dive trips with them. So, I flew to Honolulu, then to Melbourne, to Port Morsby overnight at Airways Hotel and on to Rabaul. I’ve also visited New Ireland. My 1st trip was from Kimbe to Rabaul. My second trip was from Rabaul around the South side of New Britain to roughly Gasmata and back. At the Japanese airfield at Gasmata there was the remains of a G3M “Nell”, a Dinah and a Zeke. And at the far end, a G4M Betty. Not sure if they are still there or if they were disposed of, moved or what ever. Charter flights still land there out of Rabaul on the original Japanese strip. There is a small pillbox on the beach.
      It should be just a hop for you compared to me since you are already in Australia. The diving was very good. But be sure to go stay on Peleliu in Palau. Really good diving and relic hunting on the battlefield. Read; With the old breed at Peleliu and Okinawa by Dr Eugene Sledge before you go there. It’s the best WW2 Pacific Battlefield I’ve seen and that is easily accessible. You would fly into Koror and then take a skiff ride out to Peleliu. Godwin Sato used to run a really nice shore based dive and lodging operation off of the island. Not sure if he still does. Palau is wonderful.

    • @usethenoodle
      @usethenoodle Před 3 lety +3

      @@olentangy74 I guess I should also say, my father fought out there. He was a young Captain and company commander of an Army Combat Engineer company. He fought through the New Guinea campaigns, Lae, Finchoffen, Hollandia. Then made the landings at Leyte and Luzon. Then went in to Japan as part of the occupation forces. He loved Australia and talked highly of the ruff and tough Australian soldiers he fought along with. He said the Australian troops were Great War fighters and tough as nails. All the Australians I’ve met in my pacific travels were the greatest most fun of all. Hard drinking and hard playing. I’m sure my father had it right. Anyway, I’m glad you asked. Great talking to you. Greetings from the USA!

  • @dannz2603
    @dannz2603 Před 8 lety +8

    My uncle who later died in top-dressing accident in 1959 flew a DC3 transport in the Pacific, all my Grandmother ever said was, "he said it was hot work with a lot of waiting around".
    I think that the allied supply chain was key to winning control of the area.

    • @danr5105
      @danr5105 Před 7 lety +3

      Supply chain had to be at the top but another item was medical. I have not read much about how far the Allies had to transport either moderately to severely wounded or personnel with severe dysentery or one of the "fever" diseases that plague the region. I have read that just about everybody got sick to one degree or another. Keeping people that already had knowledge of the area close to the action and not transporting them many miles for treatment had to pay off. I do wonder what it felt like when you finally realized just how far away from "the world" and real food, medical, safety you were. I also wonder just how sick you had to get before you were allowed to get on a flight out? I have not read much about how it went on Rabaul (a place that was bombed over and over but never occupied) when word came down that you as a Japanese soldier had to surrender, must have been pretty tense for all involved.

    • @elainecasis
      @elainecasis Před 7 lety +1

      O

    • @jonbocz
      @jonbocz Před 7 lety +2

      There are some real horror stories about the medical service. During World War II at the Battle of the Bulge men with 'shell shock' were drugged so they could be sent back to fight. John Masters, in The Road Past Mandalay tells of killing 23 of his own men too wounded to escape. Massive doses of morphine put them to sleep forever. War is a terrible thing but sometimes less bad than the alternative.

    • @rocknral
      @rocknral Před rokem

      Excuse my ignorance, but what is a top dressing accident?

    • @henrytownsend5759
      @henrytownsend5759 Před 2 měsíci

      @@rocknral spreading fertilizer over farm land was called "top dressing" so I guess it meant flying very low. Too low!!

  • @sockpuppetbitme
    @sockpuppetbitme Před 5 lety +18

    I stayed in Salamoa for a couple weeks. Beautiful place! Still had a rusty old anti-aircraft gun pointed at the sky.

  • @rotax636nut5
    @rotax636nut5 Před 2 lety +3

    Our Heroic Airforce at their work during WW2, God Bless all those aircrews for their courage and their sacrifice..

  • @patriciahutson
    @patriciahutson Před 2 lety +2

    My dad flew as an air gunner with RNZAF 43-45 in Sth Pacific . Never talked about it at all. Just said, “it needed doing!“

  • @bethcooper4200
    @bethcooper4200 Před 3 lety +13

    John Cooper here on wives computer. My dad, also John Cooper, was the top turret gunner on a B25 nicknamed the Jersey Bounce. He flew 45 missions from June of 1942 to December of 1943. His first kill was at Lae and he was on bombing missions to places like Lae, Wewak and Rabaul. My twin brother and kid sister never had to look for a hero because our Dad was our hero.

    • @bethcooper4200
      @bethcooper4200 Před 3 lety +2

      Addendum: My Dad, John Cooper, was also at the battle of the Bismarck Sea which really broke the backs of the Japanese.

  • @ZenosWarbirds
    @ZenosWarbirds  Před 11 lety +11

    Glad you lived to tell us about it!

  • @beebop9808
    @beebop9808 Před 2 lety +1

    The fun's about to begin he said. lol Gotta love old school narration!!
    God Bless America!!

  • @hansikatz
    @hansikatz Před 10 lety +17

    My Dad was there, a navigator/bombadier on B-25s - 345th BG, 500th BS. At 49:00 - 50:00 are planes of his outfit, identified by the white stripe around the fuselage just behind the wing. Maybe he was in one of those shown. After New Guinea he flew in campaigns in the Philippines and in Indo-China. The final strafer version of the B-25 was probably the heaviest armed US aircraft in WW2, with 18 machine guns. Some also were fitted with cannons. Sort of a spiritual forerunner of the A-10 of today.

    • @1racemate
      @1racemate Před 5 lety +3

      french 75 my uncle install them

    • @flexinclouds
      @flexinclouds Před 2 lety +1

      Actually a lot like a ac130 predecessor

    • @hansikatz
      @hansikatz Před 2 lety +1

      @@flexinclouds not really, AC-130 orbited around targets at a distance, B-25 attacked at low altitudes with full throttles. Most damage done to the enemy was from the multiple fixed guns in the nose firing forward.

  • @tubedriver009
    @tubedriver009 Před 6 lety +7

    Father in NZ Air Force flew close support bombing for Australian ground troops trying to take Rabaul from the Japanese (10,000 of them). Flew land-based Corsairs. Based in Green Island 300 miles to the East of Rabaul. Straffed this island repeatedly few months after this in '44.

  • @normangrochowski6972
    @normangrochowski6972 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent coverage of this theater. Even though some of the film footage was rough and jumpy it was comprehensive in documentation. I hadn't seen this film footage before. I am always impressed with the fortitude, bravery and dedication that young men as well as the older, had in those days. This was patriotism to the max. To them it was more than just waving a flag.
    Every school child should be taught the lessons of WW2 and the chaos that happened when small handfuls of thugs took over the leadership of their countries and led their people to destruction.

  • @rustyangel3631
    @rustyangel3631 Před 3 lety +9

    Wish my dad was alive to see this, he'd be telling some untold stories...sunsetters B-25 squadron

  • @axiomist4488
    @axiomist4488 Před 2 lety +2

    That was the most fun hour Ive spent in a long time ! I wish I could have watched this when I was 11 (in 1958) ; I would have been blabbing about it for weeks ! I love how they leveled those bastards time after time . A great film, professionally shot. Beautiful !

  • @jeremybear573
    @jeremybear573 Před 7 lety +4

    Amazing Film! Those low altitude parachute bombs were ruthless!

  • @pauliec17
    @pauliec17 Před 4 lety +6

    I lived at Wewak in the '60s. We used to use the bomb-holes as rubbish dumps. The place looked like the moon although all the craters still there (thousands) were either full of water or undergrowth. The jungle has reclaimed it all. Used to find unexploded munitions all the time. There was a permanent detachment of Army bomb disposal at Wewak back then. Used to hear explosions all the time.

  • @Phased_Array
    @Phased_Array Před 11 lety +5

    Wow some of the best strafing and combat footage I've ever seen from a WW2 video...

  • @antonyandrerenaissancearti977

    as an artist and veteran, the love and effort you put into the restoration of this film shows. people of tomorrow will be able to see that it takes to keep balance ken the world we live in.

  • @Ethercruiser1
    @Ethercruiser1 Před 10 lety +7

    Great collection of actual footage from the real events.

  • @johnmarlin7269
    @johnmarlin7269 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks for posting. The New Guinea theatre is an important part of WWII in the Pacific which is very much overlooked.

  • @bull1234
    @bull1234 Před 11 lety +30

    To the boy's who fought and died in unwanted wars.

    • @ross.venner
      @ross.venner Před 3 lety +4

      Unwanted wars, certainly. But the reluctance to fight such wars is the mark of a democracy. Sadly, that reluctance is often seen by tyrants as weakness and therefore opportunity.
      Si vis pacem parabellum. If you wish for peace, prepare for war.

  • @glutinousmaximus
    @glutinousmaximus Před 10 lety +4

    These clips are rare and awesome! Thanks so much for posting!

  • @jorgejnoguera1941
    @jorgejnoguera1941 Před 7 lety +7

    Every time I see how the Allies fought the Japanese in the Pacific I marvel at the ingenuity of the air services. In particular I am in awe of the B-25 gunships, especially the first generation of these birds of prey, which were hand produced in theater by AAF mechanics and engineers. 13 or more forward firing M2 .50 cal machine guns massed in the nose and sides, even examples with a 75mm howitzer in the nose. Plus up to 8 500 lb or 4 1,000 lb bombs or equivalent loads of parafrags and/or incendiaries. I have heard that the forward .50s alone in one bomber could melt a first line Japanese destroyer in one pass. Frightening.

    • @BearfootBob
      @BearfootBob Před rokem

      And they are just plain beautiful as well. I read that later on the A-20's, and presumably some B-25's were shipped in pieces, and assembled by our Aussie friends, and then flown over to Port Moresby.

  • @johnbrown2890
    @johnbrown2890 Před 6 lety +3

    Most of The Australians and new Zealanders were in engaged in battle with the Germans when the Japanese attacked pearl.its incredible how much these two nations contributed considering that I believe there combined populations were about 20 million.if I had to fight a war I would want the Australians and new Zealanders at my side and don't forget the south Africans contributed also.for that matter Canada contributed way beyond their populations share.

    • @bosunmate7301
      @bosunmate7301 Před 3 měsíci +1

      Australians made up about 60% of the ground forces under MacArthur South West Pacific Command by the end of the Pacific war Australia had the world's 4th largest airforce. However perhaps the biggest contribution was war materiel supplied by Australian industry. Douglas MacArthur in his biography Reminiscences claimed the South West Pacific war theater was self sufficient and also supplied war materiel to other theaters.
      The biggest battles included Finchhaffen, Rabual, Gona and Guadalcanal. Japan suffered its first land defeat at Milne Bay.

  • @deepbludude4697
    @deepbludude4697 Před 10 lety +24

    Great upload!, The logistics, manpower and sacrifice during WWII was staggering. Having spent the last 14 years in ME conflicts I often wonder if we could support the same level of effort on multiple fronts as effectively as that generation. Well done.

    • @reidspacer66
      @reidspacer66 Před 9 lety +4

      Of course not, way too many big ego's these days unfortunately. Amazing the things that were accomplished in such a short period of time during WW2. They were also able to adapt to many situations, thinking on their feet instead of asking permission for every little thing.

    • @Charles_CHARLIE.Shafer
      @Charles_CHARLIE.Shafer Před 5 lety +1

      The truth is that even though we have the best equipped military,
      any war would end in total cost of lives the likes of which has yet to be seen.
      'NUFF SAID 🇺🇸👍👍😎

  • @apxpandy4965
    @apxpandy4965 Před 10 lety +3

    Fantastic documentary - thanks!

  • @oldbaldfatman2766
    @oldbaldfatman2766 Před 7 lety +7

    Thanks for this and other videos. I've always wondered though if any of these films were shown at local theaters during the war. I build model aircraft and 20 years or so ago, got lucky at a local airport to see a B-25 in a hanger. Talked with the owner who told me it was a B-25 that had been used for courier/passenger service after the war during the Nuremberg war trials. He had painted it w/markings to show it as a Marine PBJ. Spent about 2 hours taking all the detail photos I wanted, including the interior. Went thru a small crawl way from the cockpit to the nose area and had to stick my arms out in front of me and kind of wiggle to get there, it was that tight. But the view from it was magnificent!

  • @wrightflyer7855
    @wrightflyer7855 Před 6 lety +1

    +ZenosWarbirds, thank you for these excellent videos. My late father spent 39 months in the Pacific, from New Caledonia to Bougainville to Guadalcanal. What an experience it must have been for him! He never talked about it much, but when pressed he always had a story. Thank you again. My father: U.S. Army (1939-1963). Myself: Army brat, then USAF (1968-1972).

  • @chipieal
    @chipieal Před 6 lety +3

    I looked at this with my husband and the man cutting down the tree at 5:05 looks so much like my father, it is uncanny. He was in the South Pacific for the duration of the war. His name was Paul Pokrajac. I can't verify it, as he died in 2001.

  • @aqueous67
    @aqueous67 Před 8 lety +4

    Yes, it one of the best!
    I love the attack of the B-25's
    All decked out with all those M2's. and parachute bombs!

  • @garymcaleer6112
    @garymcaleer6112 Před 3 lety

    Those boys packed a punch! Thanks, ZW!

  • @jonathantharp9425
    @jonathantharp9425 Před rokem

    My Dad was stationed in Australia and New Guinea. He was with the 475th Fighter Group, 432 Fighter Squadron. I sure miss him and the tales he told of that time.

  • @LesPaulExpress
    @LesPaulExpress Před 10 lety +7

    LOVE IT! Smash and grab. Tree-hopping with B-25s is so cool.

  • @accousticdecay
    @accousticdecay Před 4 lety +4

    Excellent video. Never see this on TV.

  • @OdeeOz
    @OdeeOz Před 8 lety +3

    As part of the 475th FG, 431st FS, we reenacted this battle in a series of progressive scenarios throughout October, in iEN's Warbirds 2015. Man what a sight it was to see over 150 people in the air, battling it out old style.

  • @BJBFOREST
    @BJBFOREST Před 10 lety +10

    Met a lot of your vets from the 3rd BG (13th and 89th BS) 5th AF USAAC. I have a piece of metal from one of the A 20s that crash landed on Low Wooded Island near Cooktown Australia. The veterans that flew it,/worked on it also got pieces of that aircraft. Lest We Forget.

    • @BJBFOREST
      @BJBFOREST Před 10 lety +2

      ***** I'm a baby boomer Robin and my dad was your dad's generation. My dad was RAAF and I met some of your vets via the internet, and then attended some of 3rd Bomb Group reunions in Austin TX and the last one was in AK in' 09. The 5th AF operated in the South West Pacific. You should communicate with Gerry Kersey who has a site 3rd Attack Group, www.3rdattackgroup.org/ and I'm thinking you would learn a lot from that site and he would love to hear from you. cheers mate..Bruce

  • @Tom63038
    @Tom63038 Před 9 lety +28

    My father flew with the Marines out of Bouganville. I was hoping for some video from there. He flew F4Us from the same field (Torokino) as "Pappy" Boyington, and flew against Rabaul. Guess I'll keep looking.

    • @MrGaryGG48
      @MrGaryGG48 Před 2 lety +1

      @Ralpho The Great Thank you for the information Ralpho. My dad was in the Aleutian Islands, in Alaska throughout the war but I'm going to run a search for these documentaries for my own interest.

  • @donmiles109channel
    @donmiles109channel Před 3 lety +42

    My father is in this video.....his plane "The Jaded Saint"....

    • @penabranca3889
      @penabranca3889 Před 3 lety +1

      Saw it.

    • @georgeherod4252
      @georgeherod4252 Před 3 lety +1

      God bless you for your father's service

    • @johnp9402
      @johnp9402 Před 3 lety +1

      That's awesome!

    • @jimbo2900
      @jimbo2900 Před 3 lety +1

      @@johnp9402 My father flew on B-25 as well. Unfortunately for his military's records were destroyed in 1970 in St. Louis. From the photos, i believe he was in 345 bombardment.

    • @johnp9402
      @johnp9402 Před 3 lety

      @@jimbo2900 your father was a great man

  • @Berbs73
    @Berbs73 Před 6 lety +1

    The music with these docs always make me shake my head.

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Před 6 lety +3

      The music was chosen for a movie audience more than 70 years ago. They used to have opera in Marx Brothers comedies too. Tastes change.
      Zeno

  • @conanthedestroyer7123
    @conanthedestroyer7123 Před 5 lety +125

    I wish the history channel still only had history shows like this. They are now full of crap, just like MTV.

    • @Oscifer11
      @Oscifer11 Před 5 lety +12

      History is now racist!

    • @BrenttttttMCMXC
      @BrenttttttMCMXC Před 4 lety +2

      there was during 2000 but it was no longer aired as of these generation coz we want peace and forget past

    • @wpatrickw2012
      @wpatrickw2012 Před 4 lety +3

      Ironically, MTV does not even play music videos any more.

    • @paulmiraldi7145
      @paulmiraldi7145 Před 4 lety +3

      @@Oscifer11 amen sir...amen.....History channel is run by a bunch of bitches, who the fuck wants to see hours of ancient Aliens!!? HTF is that history

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Před 4 lety

      Behave, History was cak!

  • @mloaks
    @mloaks Před 10 lety +6

    love the Mars soundtrack!

  • @MakeMeThinkAgain
    @MakeMeThinkAgain Před 10 lety +38

    The adaptation of the B-25, usually a high altitude bomber, to low level strafing with 8 to 12 fixed .50 cal machine guns in th nose was one of the most brilliant theater adjustments of WW2.

    • @MakeMeThinkAgain
      @MakeMeThinkAgain Před 10 lety +4

      ***** Comparing it with the Mosquito is interesting. The Mosquito was an aircraft the RAF didn't want that turned out to be possibly the best bomber in their inventory. The USAAF never thought to use the B-25 in this way but it was never more successful. What I like about this video is that it shows the configuration created in the field rather than the later versions that were manufactured back in the U.S.

    • @MsLilyhorse
      @MsLilyhorse Před 9 lety +3

      Indubitably. And Kenney knew how to use the limited resources he had to the best advantage. And MacAurthur was smart enough to give the 5th air Force all the support he could.

    • @MsLilyhorse
      @MsLilyhorse Před 9 lety +10

      ***** Thanks for saying that. I am regularly stating online that we were lucky to have the Ozzies on our side. It bothers me when I read statements by present day Australians criticizing America, or Americans criticizing Australia. People forget that the Japanese were bombing Darwin, and had invasion plans ready. We stood together, with limited supplies and manpower, and beat a pretty salty Japanese Army/Navy. We still need each other, China has designs on recreating its Pacific Empire. G'Day!

    • @MsLilyhorse
      @MsLilyhorse Před 9 lety +3

      ***** Nothing like a hot twin engine plane. the B-26 was good too, if a bit tricky to fly. There is Tigercat in Arizona in excellent flying condition. you can see it on CZcams. My favorite of all was the De Havilland Hornet/Sea hornet. the Germans had some pretty hot ones toward the end of the war.

    • @ZenosWarbirds
      @ZenosWarbirds  Před 9 lety +12

      MsLilyhorse IMO the A-20 belongs high on any list of WW2 twin engined attack bombers. Unfortunately, its under appreciated and compared to other aircraft, virtually unknown to the general public, especially in the USA.. See my documentary on this channel: czcams.com/video/wQKaF13tbro/video.html

  • @slackdaddy1912
    @slackdaddy1912 Před rokem +1

    What people fail to realize during this glorious video, is those young men from both sides were trying to kill each other with real bullets!

  • @joelonzello4189
    @joelonzello4189 Před rokem

    One of my favorite aircraft ! Use to climb aboard the B-25 Camera Plane for Battle of Britain Movie back in the 70's when it was parked at Essex County Airport...

  • @offshoreboats
    @offshoreboats Před 11 lety +1

    Outstanding video. Nice to see the B-25Js

  • @weneedtermlimits
    @weneedtermlimits Před 9 lety +37

    Can you imagine what 125 Lightnings looked like attacking? Must have been incredible...

    • @richardjetsonjetson3524
      @richardjetsonjetson3524 Před 4 lety +3

      Oolool

    • @brodybehr
      @brodybehr Před 4 lety +4

      David Ross my great great uncle was in the 5th air force squadron and he flew a P38 Lightning!

    • @iananderson1848
      @iananderson1848 Před 3 lety +2

      Their nose cannons and or 50cal must have been awful to be at their business end. The concentrated firepower of its nose guns/cannons made the lightening from an engineering perspective incredibly destructive and accurate

  • @mrichar9
    @mrichar9 Před 3 lety +3

    Outstanding presentation!

  • @edquier40
    @edquier40 Před 3 lety +2

    I have this on VHS, just watched it a month back.

  • @bradstarkey4919
    @bradstarkey4919 Před 5 lety +7

    Salute to all who have gone before...Bless you and yours my uncle was their.

    • @ypopnun1003
      @ypopnun1003 Před 3 lety

      so was mine

    • @MrMenefrego1
      @MrMenefrego1 Před 3 lety +1

      @@ypopnun1003 They were both "their"? My father was there.

  • @CJP-oz6hr
    @CJP-oz6hr Před 6 lety +2

    Late comer to the comments here.... Amazing looking at the number of ridiculous comment here. Do people not understand that this was a U.S. propaganda type film made in the 40’s and not something Zenos created. My dad flew with the 499th as a navigator and ditched on his first mission bombing a harbor off the coast of China and was picked up by a sub the next day. What they and others did in the Pacific was nothing short of incredible. Disease alone was a major battle to deal with. These B-25’s carried gun cameras and some of the footage is incredible. This was some great footage that mirrors many stories my dad shared with me. Strangely, he seemed to share his stories more so with me as my other seven siblings.. especially before I deployed for OIF.

  • @Moo01100
    @Moo01100 Před 8 lety +1

    B-25 and A-20 can bomb where B-17 and B-24 cannot. Good twin engine tactical ground attack aircraft for such remote terrain as this. Shows how the cutting of supply lines wins battles. Good old film. Thanks for posting.

  • @kurtbjorn3841
    @kurtbjorn3841 Před 4 lety +5

    If I couldn't have been a fighter pilot, I'd have love to have flown one of those B-25 attack aircraft in the South Pacific.

    • @caitlinmachon4030
      @caitlinmachon4030 Před 3 lety +1

      The modification of B-25's to forward mounted .50 cal gun ships was the brain child of Paul I. "Pappy" Gunn. The para-frag bombs came from General George Kenney.

    • @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347
      @tyroniousyrownshoolacez2347 Před 3 lety +1

      @@caitlinmachon4030 I loved George Kenney in Cool Hand Luke when he played Peter Gunn on his guitar! Great memories, thanks!😊

  • @georgeherod4252
    @georgeherod4252 Před 3 lety +3

    Cruising in a B-25 Mitchell, 100 feet above the waves (an average school bus is 45 feet long) at a speed of 250 mph. These guys had some serious grit.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Před rokem

      A friend of mine who was a squadron commander in the South Pacific said he told the new guys there better be green streaks on the bottom the plane when they came back from Rabaul.

  • @JDrt-ee3bx
    @JDrt-ee3bx Před 9 lety +5

    Wow, the Pacific is an enormous location in the world(and fittingly the location of among the largest naval battles in the world). It's astounding to think of the Japanese and Allied navies moving and fighting around thousands of miles stretches of ocean and islands in World War 2. If the Eastern Front was the largest land conflict in history, the Pacific Front has to be the largest naval conflict in history.

    • @Tk3997
      @Tk3997 Před 5 lety +1

      Please, America destroyed Japan near enough singlehandedly, no other nation contributed to it's destruction in a meaningful way at the strategic level beside maybe Australia to a degree, but only during the very early phases of the battle in New Guinea. Other then that basically every action beside those of the US can be removed and the result doesn't really change at all.

    • @guyh9992
      @guyh9992 Před 5 lety +1

      Airpower was also important as we saw in the film. None of those naval battles would have been won without control of the air.

  • @pollydor07
    @pollydor07 Před 5 lety +1

    THANKS

  • @kabbey30
    @kabbey30 Před 2 lety

    This is one he'll of a documentary! In my top 5

  • @MonteOlsen
    @MonteOlsen Před 11 lety +6

    Zeno, once again, thanks for restoring and putting up these videos. A great group of men is represented here, and I hope their history is taught better in schools than it has been for at least a decade and probably more. Your work fills the gaps. Is there an equivalent site for our ground troops? Thanks again.

    • @bradstarkey4919
      @bradstarkey4919 Před 5 lety +2

      kids today have no idea unless they look in to it or had some ole vet teach them. school today teach's the truth only in part....

  • @christopherhughes3381
    @christopherhughes3381 Před 2 lety +1

    My dad Captain George Francis Blue was in the Air Force from 1942-1945 and was stationed in Africa before being sent to France. He helped planned bombing missions and supply drops.

  • @oscarharriet7030
    @oscarharriet7030 Před 3 lety +2

    My Dad, John Robinson, was a W/AG on 23 Sqn RAAF Liberators and spent his 20th birthday bombing ships in the harbour at Rabaul. On the way to the target there was usually a Zero just out of .50cal range holding formation on them. Over Rabaul the flak knew their exact altitude, speed, and direction and was ferocious, even at the very end. No shortage of shells or gun barrels. Made him quiet and thoughtful retelling the story.

  • @Johnnycdrums
    @Johnnycdrums Před 2 lety +5

    The Air Force did some things.
    Thank you , Army Air Corps, C-47’s.
    Aussies did some things too in the twin engine Beufighter.

  • @lulujrlaulom7905
    @lulujrlaulom7905 Před 2 lety

    B25s be getting some!!!! My Grandpa was there with B25s!!! Best combat footage ever!

  • @williammcdonaghiii5873
    @williammcdonaghiii5873 Před 3 lety +3

    My Grandfather was a Seabee served in this campaign.miss him alot.

    • @davidvines6498
      @davidvines6498 Před 2 lety +1

      My Dad was a Seabee too. I’ve watched a lot of films just to see if I could get a glimpse of him as he was one that never would talk about what went on over there.

  • @AUSSIEDAVEROCKS
    @AUSSIEDAVEROCKS Před 8 lety +48

    My Dad was stationed at a secret airbase in Australia during WWII. He started the war in the 10th Light Horse but had his knee cap shattered when another horse kicked the side of the horse he was riding. His medical status went from A1 to A3, and he was no longer eligible for overseas service, so he ended up as an army truck driver and helped with the loading of the bombers. He used to watch Japanese recon aircraft that were looking for the Bomber's air base fly right over the base at high altitudes and not even detect it because of heat distortions coming off the ironstone terrain. They allowed the Japanese planes to fly over unmolested because the Japanese would have spotted any fighters climbing to intercept them and reported the location of the base before escaping. The Japanese knew there was a large air base operating somewhere in the area but they never did discover it's exact location.

    • @SamanthaAlbea
      @SamanthaAlbea Před 5 lety +2

      battle of corregidor

    • @pauliec17
      @pauliec17 Před 4 lety +2

      Would've been either Truscott or Corunna Downs. Both very secret bomber bases in Western Australia during WWII. Neither were ever found by the Japanese and they looked very hard.

    • @estebahnrandolph8724
      @estebahnrandolph8724 Před 4 lety +2

      My dad during the war volunterd for sneaking around on islands off a sub that later was sunk .

    • @markblix6880
      @markblix6880 Před 2 lety

      Very interesting

  • @richardzippler3330
    @richardzippler3330 Před rokem +1

    My dad was in this campaign I've seen him several times on film.

  • @garymcaleer6112
    @garymcaleer6112 Před 3 lety +1

    Excellent footage.

  • @machtschnell7452
    @machtschnell7452 Před 2 lety

    Fascinating. My dad was infantry in New Guinea

  • @garymcaleer6112
    @garymcaleer6112 Před 3 lety +1

    Followed by Holt's The Planets: simply superb sound for the images. Today's composers are dwarfs compared to those men. Sound effects never sell on CD.

  • @margaretchriskurtz3819

    this is my favorite time of the war and area. the southwest pacific was a slugfest. it was combined airpower that helped to get control. army air corp marine air and naval aviation units. my favorite aircraft were the strafing gunship b-25s and the f4u-1a corsair. these were epic battles fought in the backworld part of the planet. brave souls all who fought in this portion of hell.

  • @whitedomerobert
    @whitedomerobert Před 2 lety

    Thanks. We call ;( 6 or more Mitchell’s “ A mess of Mitchell’s”. From our perspective, Beautiful.

  • @nickjohnson811
    @nickjohnson811 Před 3 lety +2

    There's a great Japanese war movie called The Eternal Zero. It's about a Zero pilot who didn't believe in the war and just wanted to survive for his wife and child. It's different from all other war movies I've seen and it's very moving.

    • @Mdebacle
      @Mdebacle Před 3 lety +2

      Eastwood had a similar idea when he made Letters from Iwo Jima.

    • @neilreynolds3858
      @neilreynolds3858 Před rokem

      That was pretty much my aim too.

  • @TigerDominic-uh1dv
    @TigerDominic-uh1dv Před 10 měsíci +1

    Great Movie ❤ It Thanks.

  • @iwbthree
    @iwbthree Před 9 lety +16

    My father and uncles fought this war. It was true total war. Hundreds were killed every single day .

    • @Groovy_Bruce
      @Groovy_Bruce Před 3 lety

      Hundreds a day? 60 million people died in five years. A lot more than hundreds a day.

  • @davidstewart5694
    @davidstewart5694 Před rokem

    What has always amazed me is we could build airstrips etc out of jungle or total wasteland in 72 hours but it takes us 6 months or more to build 1 mile of interstate with top notch technology which they did not have in ww2.

  • @iboarshock7059
    @iboarshock7059 Před 10 lety +4

    Interesting in-house doc from the 5th AF. Obviously they wanted to make sure they weren't being forgotten way out in the SW Pacific, what with Europe, North Africa, and the Mediterranean getting most of the attention back home in 1943.
    The music, by the way, is various selections from Igor Stravinsky's Firebird Suite and Gustav Holst's The Planets, with a little tiny bit (I believe) of Ferde Grofé's Grand Canyon Suite during the pretend 'travelog' portion involving the 'family' on the airfield.

    • @paulrourke4785
      @paulrourke4785 Před 7 lety

      The 5Th will not be forgotten in Australia, I am part of the Aussie B24 Restoration Fund, that is re-building one of ours that served with them.

    • @dasher8
      @dasher8 Před 6 lety

      Yea. We could do without that stupid background music.

  • @58MrMike
    @58MrMike Před 2 lety +1

    My father was 5th Air Force and wad at New Guinea. He developed reconnaissance photographs

  • @markturner4219
    @markturner4219 Před 3 lety +10

    Some good footage. Interesting to see the parachute assault. Parachute assaults in the Pacific theatre sre rarely mentioned and even more rarely seen.

    • @6actual911
      @6actual911 Před 3 lety

      Did I miss something? Parachutes were attached the dropped bombs so that they would float down, thus giving the bombers time to get out of the way of their own bombs exploding

    • @markturner4219
      @markturner4219 Před 3 lety

      @@6actual911 read my post again. Did I mention bombs?

    • @joelonzello4189
      @joelonzello4189 Před rokem

      Friends Father participated in Parachute drops in the Pacific. Wish he had talked about it...

  • @c45acper41
    @c45acper41 Před 6 lety +1

    BTW Anyone interested in reading about the battle of Midway should read the book "Midway, the Battle That Doomed Japan, the Japanese Navy's Story" by Mitsuo Fuchida and Masatake Okumiya published the the United States Naval Institute back in the 1950's. Fuchida was the lead bombardier for the attack on Pearl Harbor. This book is THE authoritative book on the battle of Midway. It's probably out of print but should be find-able either on-line or 2nd hand book stores or even some libraries.

  • @aczjbr
    @aczjbr Před 10 lety +1

    historical film and very good

  • @bruceradford9031
    @bruceradford9031 Před 2 lety

    Gratitude

  • @Robbi496
    @Robbi496 Před 9 lety +4

    the story aside (Which is good) I love the fact that the music is from Stravinsky's "The Fire Bird"

    • @rodparsons521
      @rodparsons521 Před 7 lety +2

      Before that Elgar's "Enigma Variations".

    • @johnwalters1341
      @johnwalters1341 Před 5 lety +4

      @@rodparsons521 Not the Enigma Variations, rather Holst's The Planets, with a little snatch of Grofe's Grand Canyon Suite while surveying the wrecked Japanese planes.

    • @NesconProductions
      @NesconProductions Před 3 lety

      @@johnwalters1341 You are correct Rod. One of my favorites! Franklin Institute Planetarium in Philadelphia, P.A. was my introduction to it & has been in my collection for decades..

  • @kumaulmaba8058
    @kumaulmaba8058 Před 3 lety +1

    Well done

  • @xgi36
    @xgi36 Před 8 lety +19

    We will never again see men who will carry the burden of freedom like those who fought this war.

    • @TheDustysix
      @TheDustysix Před 8 lety +15

      +xgi36 I disagree. I see them all the time at the VA. Our Warriors of today are Magnificent.

    • @1951WINGNUT
      @1951WINGNUT Před 8 lety +5

      +TheDustysix Fucking A!!!!

    • @Ian-lx1iz
      @Ian-lx1iz Před 6 lety +2

      I woulda been there too. Really I would ...only I had bonespurs.