Royal Marine Reacts To White Feather - The Deadliest Sniper in US History

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OriginalHuman

OriginalHuman

Ай бұрын

Original Video (White Feather - The Deadliest Sniper in US History)
• The Terrifying Sniper ...
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Пікірлер: 381
@rustyfan89
@rustyfan89 Ай бұрын
When I was stationed at camp lejuene I had the pleasure of meeting Carlos hathcock awesome dude
@uurkisme
@uurkisme Ай бұрын
Awe shit I hope you're getting your water lawsuit money 😂
@OcculiMortis
@OcculiMortis Ай бұрын
I read his book in the 90’s when I was in the Marines. You should read it. There is a mission he went on to kill a Vietnamese bigwig. Absolute crazy mission and story. He got in, did the deed, and got out. And not one Vietnamese soldier saw him. Crawling across the open ground which took him days, he came face to face with a poisonous snake and stared it down, it slithered away. Vietnamese soldiers walked right by him as he was on the ground, and never realized he was there.
@HornoDevilDawg
@HornoDevilDawg Ай бұрын
I read the same book. I served in 1/1 during the 80's, the exact mission you're referencing had me on the edge of my seat while I read that chapter.
@robdog7516
@robdog7516 Ай бұрын
Great book and amazing man.
@raymurray3401
@raymurray3401 Ай бұрын
If memory serves that specific mission was one of if not the only mission where he didn’t wear his namesake white feather.
@Bayouman1966
@Bayouman1966 Ай бұрын
I read that book in the late 80's. I also liked the story where he pinned down a platoon of North Vietnamese for most of the day. He had shot several & they jumped into a large ditch or ravine, & every time one stuck his head up or tried to exit, he shot them. He would shoot then move to another position, so they did not know exactly where he was. They were stuck there until it got dark & Hathcock left the area. Good book did not want to put the book down.
@OcculiMortis
@OcculiMortis Ай бұрын
@@HornoDevilDawg absolutely agree with you.
@tpiper1976
@tpiper1976 Ай бұрын
They never mentioned how he took days to creep into position and took out a high ranking NVA officer and escaped to tell about it. That was taken from his book.
@jonbutcher9805
@jonbutcher9805 12 күн бұрын
When you factor in the tropical Asian bug's he endured while getting in position mskes it more impressive.
@EzraCannon-xp9is
@EzraCannon-xp9is Ай бұрын
Fact: The whole reason why Hathcock wore a white feather on his hat was to be recognized.... it was intentional on his part. Hathcock was taunting his enemies, much like Doc Holiday in the movie Tombstone, saying: "I'm your huckleberry" and "You're a daisy if you do"
@gordonduke8812
@gordonduke8812 Ай бұрын
Hathcock once said (paraphrasing, of course) that the only faces that ever haunted his dreams were the ones that got away. He said he just knew they went onto to kill some of his fellow Marines.
@davidyoung745
@davidyoung745 Ай бұрын
While he was no sniper, my father was an extremely good shot who also learned to shoot out of necessity. Dad was born in 1913 and grew up in the Great Depression. Just like Hathcock, my Dad hunted (and fished) to feed the family. He was the oldest of 6 children and Grandma said that if not for the meat and fish Dad brought home there wouldn’t have been meat on the table. When he was drafted in 1941 other soldiers noticed right away that he was an excellent shot and many asked him for help in getting their own skills up to scratch. When I was a boy and he was teaching me to shoot, Dad used to put an empty .22 cal ammo box on a stick and spin it by just shooting the corners. I had a friend who met Carlos Hathcock in real life. He said you could feel his eyes on you if he looked at you across a crowded room.
@deltaecho4508
@deltaecho4508 Ай бұрын
The movie "Saving private Ryan" has a nod to Carlos Hathcock, where a German sniper gets shot through the scope
@timmooney7528
@timmooney7528 4 күн бұрын
So does the movie Sniper with Tom Berringer
@patrickwood9724
@patrickwood9724 Ай бұрын
“I think that says more about his wife and kids than it does about him!” 😂LOL PURE GOLD.
@goosejjs
@goosejjs Ай бұрын
Look up his Elephant Valley story... him and his spotter pinned down an entire NVA battalion for a a few days if I remember correctly. When they finally ran low of ammo they called in an arty strike
@Rocco1332
@Rocco1332 Ай бұрын
Can't believe they don't mention the mission where he crawled over 1,500 yards through a field for four days and three nights without sleep, and with constant inch-by-inch crawling, to shoot a PAVN general.
@doobiedave9686
@doobiedave9686 Ай бұрын
That's my favorite Carlos Hathcock story and I think a NVA patrol almost stepped on him on that mission.
@uurkisme
@uurkisme Ай бұрын
With a 50 cal machine gun rigged up with a scope, no less.
@LawrenceKennard
@LawrenceKennard Ай бұрын
That amazed me as well
@edwardcalvet
@edwardcalvet Ай бұрын
In 66 my parents paid $17k for a large house in great Long Island neighborhood and a Corvette was $4k.i hope that puts it into some perspective.
@hobblobber3914
@hobblobber3914 Ай бұрын
That 30k would go so much further in Nam as well.
@johnathancoker8671
@johnathancoker8671 Ай бұрын
can we all take a moment to appreciate the severety of that scenario. every sniper the NVA/VC had was actively HUNTING this man. think about that, dozens of proffessional killers, practiced in hunting humans all hunting you and any 1 moment could be ur last cause u never know if somewhere in the dense jungle a thousands meters from u is a sniper about to put a bullet in you. they killed a guy right outside his barracks! you could be takin a dump at the latrine and bam. everything goes black and ur corpse falls into the latrine. thats the reality this guy lived in. and he was fearless about it... the size of this mans bollocks. he wore a bright white feather to dare the enemy to spot him. im shocked they didnt find him by following the drag marks where he draggin his titanic testies on the ground.
@TruthIsTheNewHate84
@TruthIsTheNewHate84 Ай бұрын
Yep and people tend to underestimate the skills of the enemy's soldiers. When you realize that those enemy soldiers were also very very skilled it's even more amazing that he managed to evade them.
@tereseduffy6591
@tereseduffy6591 Ай бұрын
I had the privilege of meeting Carlos Hathcock at a gun show in Hampton, Virginia. I want to say it was around 1996. He was doing a book signing and even though I had already purchased his book I bought another one to get his signature. By that time MS pretty much had him wheelchair bound but his mind was sharp as a tack.
@txmaddog7917
@txmaddog7917 Ай бұрын
Marine Sniper: 93 Confirmed Kills is his book, very good read. I wish they had mentioned the mission to take out a high ranking NVA General where he spent 3 days crawling into range. Another was the Elephant Valley mission where he and his spotter tied up an entire NVA company for 2-3 days. Both of those are in his book.
@1lthrnk
@1lthrnk Ай бұрын
That shot on Cobra has been done in many movies. It wasn’t that he wanted to be away from his wife but he wanted to help and bring home his brother. After head trauma the Marine Corps let me go. When my MRI came back I was trying to complete a unit transfer with the army. My MRI showed I had multiple sclerosis. They have a few snipers who have mad longer shots but that was with modern scopes and it was in double and triple canopy jungle, the longer shot have been mad in the desert
@Usmc86
@Usmc86 Ай бұрын
His unofficial numbers are more than likely accurate because he once pinned down an entire nva battalion by himself dude did alot of deployments to Vietnam so its quite possible
@jacquelinejohnson9447
@jacquelinejohnson9447 Ай бұрын
You should check out Sayma Heyha, Finnish, WWII. I believe he has the highest kill count ever, and he never used a scope. Also, he hit incredible distances accurately without a scope. Amazing person and very humble. A Finnish Narional hero.❤ I mispelled his name. It's Simo Hayha. There's dots above the a's in the last name. 😊
@bitbrace
@bitbrace Ай бұрын
Anyone who is interested in snipers knows his name, He was definitely a G too.
@OldGoat-cw8he
@OldGoat-cw8he Ай бұрын
The White Death!
@shawnsparkman7916
@shawnsparkman7916 Ай бұрын
Carlos did an interview, its here on KZfaq. Broken into 3 parts.
@jamesrussell7760
@jamesrussell7760 15 күн бұрын
I did a little research into the deadliest snipers in history: Simo Häyhä of Finnland,was arguably the most prolific sniper of all time, earning the nickname “White Death” with up to 505 kills in the Finnish-Russian Winter War of 1939. Lyudmila Pavlichenko was a Soviet sniper in the Red Army during World War II. She is credited with killing 309 enemy combatants. Vasily Zaytsev was a Soviet sniper during World War II. He is credited with 242 kills (including 11 German snipers). Chris Kyle was a US Navy SEAL sniper. During 4 tours of duty in the Iraq War, Kyle is credited with 160 confirmed kills during his military career. Charles Mawhinney was a United States Marine who holds the Corps' record for the most confirmed sniper kills, having recorded 103 confirmed kills and 216 probable kills in 16 months during the Vietnam War. Carlos Hathcock, nicknamed "White Feather", was a United States Marine with a service record of 93 confirmed kills during the Vietnam War. His unconfirmed kills number between 300 and 400.
@joshuaugust
@joshuaugust Ай бұрын
Simo “the white death” is on probably on par with Carlos. Check that sniper out.
@charlesblood6061
@charlesblood6061 Ай бұрын
You should look up the time he held off an enemy platoon while waiting for extract on a helicopter crash
@jamesgodeaux5202
@jamesgodeaux5202 Ай бұрын
Wasn't that Ed Eaton
@charlesblood6061
@charlesblood6061 Ай бұрын
@@jamesgodeaux5202 I think you’re right on that it’s been awhile since I’ve looked in to Hathcock’s career. I do remember he faced an enemy platoon, but I think Eaton was the helicopter crash sniper
@maingate7672
@maingate7672 Ай бұрын
@@charlesblood6061: Yep, it was Eaton.
@m2hmghb
@m2hmghb Ай бұрын
Chuck Mawhinney actually had the most confirmed kills in Nam at 103. Mawhinney also had 216 probable kills. Hathcock had 93 confirmed and a further 300 plus probable.
@genroc2005
@genroc2005 Ай бұрын
He was treated at a field hospital in Nam In Japan, the hospital is top tier He was moved to Brooks for two reasons 1st to clear beds for new severe injuries 2nd Brooks, Ft. Sam Houston is the top tier for burns
@thomasbeesimer7008
@thomasbeesimer7008 Ай бұрын
He was full of heart!
@gruntengr4197
@gruntengr4197 11 күн бұрын
He wanted them to know ..... that's why he left the White Feather in his cover.
@cplhobs6045
@cplhobs6045 Ай бұрын
Got to read the book Marine Sniper: 93 Confirmed Kills by Charles Henderson it’s goes into detail about Carlos Hathcock and his experience in Vietnam. This book was probably the biggest influence on me joining the Marine Corps, when I read it as a kid.
@Cashcrop54
@Cashcrop54 Ай бұрын
Great video on Hathcock. I would not want to go thru sniper training. Having to lay in holes and hiding waiting for the target. A great book about Vietnam is "The 13th Valley" by John M Del Vecchio. It's a novel but is said to be really accurate. It spends much of the time in the jungle following an old vet (Egan) and a new guy (Cherry). You feel like you are there.
@dokb1942
@dokb1942 Ай бұрын
I would recommend reading his biography. The 300-400 might be slightly exaggerated but not by much. That video didn't touch on his crazier stuff like slow crawling behind enemy lines for 3 days to get to a spot to shoot an enemy General. In my opinion given the equipment he had and the time frame I would list him easily in the top 3 snipers of all time.
@mturker100
@mturker100 6 күн бұрын
Carlos was made of different stuff. He was a good ole country boy who pioneered a lot of the sniper programs taught today. And he had no fear.
@erichardy9788
@erichardy9788 Ай бұрын
$30,000 from 1965 would be equivalent to somewhere between $217,804 and $263,641 in today's money (2024) Carlos Hathcock (USA): Over 90 confirmed kills (many unconfirmed) - Vietnam. Simo Häyhä (Finland): Over 500 kills - Nicknamed "The White Death," he holds the record for documented sniper kills during the Winter War (1939-1940). Vasily Zaytsev (Soviet Union): 428+ kills - Famous for his role in the Battle of Stalingrad (WWII).
@MKitchen75
@MKitchen75 Ай бұрын
and Häyhä didnt use any scope..
@killingyouwithlogic5808
@killingyouwithlogic5808 Ай бұрын
a service record of 93 confirmed kills. so that is not accurate. Häyhä estimated in his private war memoir that he shot around 500 Soviet soldiers. Most of his kills were not Confirmed Not sure if you had it backward or just wrong but these are facts!
@jacquelinejohnson9447
@jacquelinejohnson9447 Ай бұрын
@@MKitchen75 he was an incredible marksman, hunter and person, imo. Truly a hero. He didn't let anything stop him and his actions saved Finland, mho.
@MKitchen75
@MKitchen75 Ай бұрын
thats why he is still a hero here and has my respect too.. i am a corporan at at army engineering.. and if war comes I will go asap@@jacquelinejohnson9447
@Cypherdiablo
@Cypherdiablo Ай бұрын
The White Death did those in 90 days, according to his squad records, averaging 10+ per day, with records in the 30's. The man didn't hunt people, he hunted platoons.
@joethomson8622
@joethomson8622 Ай бұрын
He grew up in the great depression when bullets were expensive missing was expensive and you wouldn’t eat shooting rabbits with a 22 bolt action rifle he was deadly accurate without even having to aim which you’d have to be to get a rabbit by the time you got it up to your shoulder and lined up the rabbit was gone when he shot the sniper through the scope. He was actually in the prone position, crawling through the jungle the glimmer caught his side peripheral, and he just quickly swung the rifle around and away from his body and fired.
@tommurdock
@tommurdock Ай бұрын
Got say I had the privilege to meet Carlos in 1990 or 1991 at Naval Weapons station Virginia at our Marine Corps Ball. Had a picture with him which i I have lost. But it was a Honor to meet a legend. It was sad to see how his injuries and illness effected him. I true marine legend. Semper Fi Mr. Hathcock.
@mdp4440
@mdp4440 Ай бұрын
I've owned a few of those Mosin-Nagant 91-30 rifles, and none were super accurate. Maybe because they were old surplus rifles that you could pick up in the 90s for $49.95 every day of the week. My Springfield M1A National Match in .308 is a whole other story. What an amazing person.
@soloban81
@soloban81 13 күн бұрын
Pre WW-2 made 91/30s (ie 1920-1930s) were half-way decently made. If you smoothed out the trigger sear and spot on the firing pin release where it interfaced you could smoothen up the action. WWII era 91/30’s looked like they were machined by a drunk Russian 12 year old.
@JIMBEARRI
@JIMBEARRI Ай бұрын
A quick check says that $30,000 in 1970 is equal to $244,000 in 2024.
@michaelm1670
@michaelm1670 Ай бұрын
Dark docs is an awesome channel that has some crazy historical videos
@richardcormier4561
@richardcormier4561 Ай бұрын
Your right i myself was taught at the age of 5 years old and in return taught my children at 5 also I have been shooting for 55 years now my grandchildren are also in training ever since they turned 5 keeping the tradition going for generations to come
@skullrepublic9735
@skullrepublic9735 Ай бұрын
Carlos is a marine legend, many look up to him.
@bentleyrainwater7734
@bentleyrainwater7734 Ай бұрын
Marine Sniper : 93 confirmed kills is the book. As others have said you have to look into the elephant valley mission. On one ever talks about what I think was the most amazing thing he did was to use a Ma Due fitted with a scope to snipe. that was the weapon Carlos was using when he set the distance record, not his rifle.
@babyfry4775
@babyfry4775 Ай бұрын
I tend to believe Hathcock when he quotes 300-400. No one would know better than him. There was a sniper from Finland who was better in WWII I believe. Simo Hayha with over 500 kills. He was nicknamed White Death by his enemies. My brother was a sniper in the 82nd Airborne. He doesn’t talk much about it.
@eddawg79
@eddawg79 Ай бұрын
Hathcock was probably the most famous sniper from Vietnam but he was 3rd as far as confirmed kills in that conflict. Chris Kyle is credited with the most confirmed kills in US sniper history.
@FS2K4Pilot
@FS2K4Pilot Ай бұрын
Chuck Mawhinney also outscored Gunny Hathcock.
@uurkisme
@uurkisme Ай бұрын
Simo is the GOAT.
@heathfitzgerald363
@heathfitzgerald363 Ай бұрын
@@uurkismesimo wasn’t American
@uurkisme
@uurkisme Ай бұрын
@@heathfitzgerald363 no shit.
@Dietmilk
@Dietmilk 12 күн бұрын
They forgot a lot of good details like how he turned a browning machine gun into a sniper rifle and how he won several long range shooting competitions after he discharged
@markfischer7033
@markfischer7033 Ай бұрын
I read a book about him years ago. When it came to his shot that killed the Cobra. He said the only way he could have done that was the other sniper had him in the cross hairs and he just pulled the trigger first.
@lboiv001
@lboiv001 Ай бұрын
They left out the biggest story as mentioned down in other comments about the mission to take out an army General. I can't believe this story was not included.
@davidtroxell837
@davidtroxell837 Күн бұрын
yeah, they should make a movie, you did
@adriancooper8820
@adriancooper8820 Ай бұрын
the book is called marine sniper its very good i picked up a copy back in 92 from orlando airport once i started to read it i couldnt put it down
@realfeeltalktv6207
@realfeeltalktv6207 Ай бұрын
The book is called Marine Sniper. We used to talk about it when i served in the 90s
@danc.3899
@danc.3899 27 күн бұрын
I met Gunny Hatchcock (and Gunner Henderson) at my Marine Corps League in NY in the late 80's. Being in a USMC Reserve Scout/Sniper (STA) platoon at the time, it was awestruck. He signed his book, "93 Confirmed Kills" and a few of us talked (listened) the night away (he only drank ginger ale). He was in NY for a shark fishing trip we had planned for him. 93 "confirmed" kills, but untold amount of actual kills. Marine Chuck Mawhinney actually had 103 confirmed kills in Vietnam. In Army doctrine at the time, 'snipers' were often used more like a Designated Marksman, operating closer to the front line and had more targets/kills. Marine snipers often worked alone (2-man teams) and called in artillery, only shooting when appropriate. There's a great YT video of SeAL sniper Chris Kyle on Conan O'Brian. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/f8-Gd9d_z7W2ko0.html (2:25 mark) When asked about his 160 confirmed kills and being the best US sniper of all-time, he said Carlos Hatchcock was, citing the Gunny Hathcock didn't have nearly the targets of opportunity in Vietnam that he did in Iraq. THESE people should be our millionaires, before entertainers get their money. /rant
@lobokurg2786
@lobokurg2786 Ай бұрын
Hey bud, do an episode on your full kit in the royal marines. I'm interested to know what you guys do differently across the pond, and what personal items you found were good to bring along.
@cavscout62
@cavscout62 Ай бұрын
That’s why he did it, the feather. It was his way of wagging his finger at the enemy. Like most of us Southerners Carlos grew up hunting and fishing, learning to stalk game and move silently in the woods. Apache was known for skinning her victims alive within hearing and view of G.I.’s. Hathcock said he really enjoyed killing her.
@johnzubil2875
@johnzubil2875 Ай бұрын
Wow, this guy insinuating that everyone that fought in the Vietnam War was doing drugs is a slap in the face of all Vietnam Veterans. Apparently, he doesn't know anything about the Vietnam War, only what Hollywood showed him. Typical snarky Britt.
@royhorn2782
@royhorn2782 Ай бұрын
You need to see the actual Carlos Hathcock interviews, if you really want to see and understand what he thought. He seemed like someone who understood exactly why he was there and he also seemed to be quite ok with what he had done.
@Styledkillar
@Styledkillar 6 күн бұрын
Simo Häyhä is often considered the deadliest sniper in history, with 505 confirmed kills during the 105-day Winter War. Thats more 4 KIA per day
@cecilhiggins9907
@cecilhiggins9907 Ай бұрын
I’m watching this while hunting turkeys here in Missouri. Hunting for my own food is something I grew up doing. I’m a Marine as well. Not a white feather but deadly enough.
@uurkisme
@uurkisme Ай бұрын
His book was one of my favorites as a kid. I was obsessed with vietnam history back then. I think Simo has him beat as the GOAT though.
@thereallyst
@thereallyst Ай бұрын
-Chris Kyle I believe is still known as the deadliest sniper in US history... (165 confirmed kills and 95 unconfirmed) -Also, you should check out Nicholas Irving, a special operations sniper in the Army Ranger know as "The Reaper" (33 confirmed kills in less than 4 months. His rifle was named "Dirty Diana". Would have probably had triple digit kills if others could be confirmed)
@jasonlmeadows
@jasonlmeadows Ай бұрын
In terms of confirmed kills Sgt Hathcock's 93 is second in Corps history. Chuck Mawhinney, who passed in February of this year, had 103 confirmed. They were both passed by Navy SEAL Chris Kyle's 160. In this case however the confirmed number does not tell the entire story. Sgt Hathcock had such a total skill set (marksmanship, tracking, land navigation, stealth, concealment) to do what he did, when he did it, that it is hard to comprehend. Chris Kyle acknowledged that while his total is greater Hathcock was in his opinion a superior sniper. The 2,500 yard shot was not made with a 30-06 Winchester rifle. That is more than double its range. That shot was made using an M2 Browning 50 caliber machine gun.
@70centurian
@70centurian Ай бұрын
l met him in 94. "Calm, Normal" man. Talked about the Model 700 and Model 70. ( l was in the gun business then.) ( Not albout the war )
@russellw7785
@russellw7785 Ай бұрын
There's a movie called sniper, with Tom Beringer. Loosely follows this
@randyscj429
@randyscj429 Ай бұрын
Hello, no it doesn't mean more about his wife, Hathcock was keeping his "brothers in arms" from being wounded/killed! That's the mentality and job of a good sniper!!! Just say'n...🧐 If ya don't have that ya shouldn't be in that position!!! Be safe and take care, "God Bless", sincerely, Randy. 😇🙏👊 P.S.: Ya need to check out the personal interview by either a reporter or 20/20 or 60 Minutes...
@Montweezy
@Montweezy Ай бұрын
Yes. I commented also about Hathcock's interview. It was a great watch.
@VadersRage
@VadersRage Ай бұрын
Author Stephen Hunter based his character, Bob Lee Swagger, on Carlos Hathcock. The book " Time To Hunt" is loosely based on the story in the above video. It's good readin' !
@MichaelScheele
@MichaelScheele Ай бұрын
@3:45, Carlos Hathcock used a Browning M2 .50 BMG heavy machine gun to make his (then) record sniper kill of 2,500 yards. He wouldn't have attempted such a shot with his Winchester Model 70 in .30-06 Springfield. The only way to shoot that far with a standard rifle cartridge would be with indirect fire. With direct fire, bullet drop at that range would be measured in hundreds of inches. Carlos Hathcock was credited with 93 confirmed kills. There are six other American snipers credited with a greater number of confirmed kills. The late Chris Kyle is #1 with 160 confirmed kills. So far, the sniper with the most confirmed kills in history is Simo Häyhä (aka White Death) of Finland. His tally was 505 with his rifle; he had several hundred more kills with a submachine gun. This all took place during a 100 day span during the Winter War between Finland and the Soviet Union.
@Montweezy
@Montweezy Ай бұрын
Yeah Nicholas Irving a US Army Ranger had 66 confirmed kills in a 3-4 month period as well.
@bradleydanek3958
@bradleydanek3958 Ай бұрын
the most impressive thing is that he used a ma deuce to snipe someone....
@killingyouwithlogic5808
@killingyouwithlogic5808 Ай бұрын
@@Montweezy Nicholas Irving is Full of SH-t. he has a lot of Military guys Angry he has made some real stupid claims Example a .50 Cal will not remove a limb just by going past the target and not directly hitting the target that's all lies and fan boy Crap. HE was a Great sniper but unfortunately his lack of reality after service is what he is forcing people to remember him for and a lot of his Stories are Lacking facts.
@nadjasunflower1387
@nadjasunflower1387 Ай бұрын
while all of that is true...what your not taking into account is there's also an " unconfirmed " kills list...and Gunny Hathcocks is 300 + no other American sniper even gets to 100 unconfirmed...(at least at the last time of my looking at the list a few years ago)
@killingyouwithlogic5808
@killingyouwithlogic5808 Ай бұрын
White Death Was Just Different dude took a shot to the face!
@thomaskay8480
@thomaskay8480 20 күн бұрын
93 confirmed kills. Also, they did make a movie about him.
@williamstewart9104
@williamstewart9104 Ай бұрын
On KZfaq, there is a old two part interview with the original Carlos Hathcock.
@d4d104
@d4d104 Ай бұрын
$30,000 in 1968 is equivalent in purchasing power to about $269,251.72 today
@Echo4Sierra4160
@Echo4Sierra4160 Ай бұрын
Carlos Hathcock got 93 confirmed kills. Hundreds unconfirmed.
@squeakyarcher2946
@squeakyarcher2946 Ай бұрын
There is a live interview with Mr Hathcock, worth watching.
@user-po3ev7is5w
@user-po3ev7is5w Ай бұрын
my first job was at 8. We lived adjacent to a cattle ranch. The rancher paid me $1 for each varmint I shot on his land. Coyotes, prairie dogs and other things. Used a .22 rifle.
@uglee4935
@uglee4935 Ай бұрын
Learning to hunt as a child in the US is just a common as going to school it's really a National Heritage
@joshusdean5821
@joshusdean5821 Ай бұрын
You should read One shot one kill, and 93 confirmed kills. They give a lot more details.
@scottstahlman2385
@scottstahlman2385 Ай бұрын
Check out Chuck Mawinny. Hathcock was there for 8 years. Chuck was there less than a year. I've got #32 of 103 rifles. He was over there for less than a year 103 confirmed and 265 probables. M40 is a remarkable rifle.
@pacmon5285
@pacmon5285 Ай бұрын
I made this comment on the previous video. The story of him shooting through the scope like that is unlikely. Mythbusters tested this and was unable to replicate it until they used an AP round. So, unless he was shooting AP, it probably didn't happen.
@txusmc69
@txusmc69 Ай бұрын
Mythbusters also said they won't say its "busted" bc there are too many factors. Like the age of the scope and the glass in it. Since Hathcock was not a bragger it's highly unlikely that he'd make up such a story by busting out the glass and bringing the scope in. A lot weirder things have happened in war.
@splatninja9447
@splatninja9447 Ай бұрын
Its approx 320k now. Also, if a tree saved my life by tripping me, id plant a whole orchard of whatever tree it was when i got home. Or maybe a kids book, the Tripping Tree.
@xr7speed
@xr7speed Ай бұрын
A true legendary American
@Misguidedchild0351
@Misguidedchild0351 Ай бұрын
He had 93 “confirmed” kills. But those numbers are much lower than what his units accounted for.
@George-ux6zz
@George-ux6zz Ай бұрын
That's crazy
@mdelashmitt5067
@mdelashmitt5067 Ай бұрын
in 1965 a new corvette was $2400 and an average house in 1969 was $10000
@whitefeatherairsoft8002
@whitefeatherairsoft8002 Ай бұрын
if you havent watched carlos hathcocks INTERVIEWS they are LEGENDARY. his EYES ARE SCARYY
@WilliamEades_Frostbite
@WilliamEades_Frostbite Ай бұрын
Vietnam was brutal both physically and mentally. Most don't know that it was never declared as a war, it was a "Police Action" so many things were never used so that it might have actually been won. Many of us who were there referred to it as the "South East Asian War Games" and even now, most of us suffer the aftereffects of having been participants.
@richardpickett3882
@richardpickett3882 Ай бұрын
Check out the winter soldier. He’s a Finnish sniper in WW2 and has an interesting story.
@gruntengr4197
@gruntengr4197 11 күн бұрын
In the jungle 100 confirmed.
@YurrNext
@YurrNext Ай бұрын
If you liked this you definitely need to react to Simo Hayha.🤘
@SirKnight1096
@SirKnight1096 Ай бұрын
Gunny Hathcock was an amazing man. We loved him and love him still. He would go through anything you threw at him for his country. He'd go through infinitely more hell for his Marine brothers and sisters. YES, Gunny got between 300 and 400 enemies. He and his spotter took out an entire NVA Company in one engagement. He tried to disassociate the enemy by calling them "Hamburgers" and "Hot Dogs". Every single engagement pained him.
@richardwoods9102
@richardwoods9102 24 күн бұрын
93 confirmed kills.... The book is Marine Sniper...
Ай бұрын
Not anymore, a Canadian sniper now has the longest kill of 3500 meters
@Finally_Retired_10-7
@Finally_Retired_10-7 Ай бұрын
One of the most deadly Snipers in History wasLyudmila Pavlichenko is considered the most successful female sniper in history, with 309 recorded kills during World War II. She was a Soviet sniper in the Red Army during the sieges of Odessa and Sevastopol, and was known as "Lady Death" by her enemies. Pavlichenko was born in 1916 in Belaya Tserkov, Ukraine, and died in Moscow in 1974. She was the only female sniper in the Red Army to receive the Hero of the Soviet Union award while still alive.  The National WWII Museum “Lady Death” of the Red Army: Lyudmila Pavlichenko | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans Mar 22, 2021  en.wikipedia.org Lyudmila Pavlichenko - Wikipedia Lyudmila Mikhailovna Pavlichenko was a Soviet sniper in the Red Army during World War II. She is credited with killing 309 enemy combatants. She served in the Red Army during the siege of Odessa and the siege of Sevastopol, during the early stages of the fighting on the Eastern Front. Her score of 309 kills likely ...  National Park Service "Lady Death" and The First Lady - National Park Service Feb 23, 2022 - Lyudmila Pavlichenko passed away in 1974. She was one of 2,000 female snipers in the Red Army and one of 500 who survived. She was also the only one of these women who received the Hero of the Soviet Union award, the highest award in the Soviet military, while she was still alive.  amazon.com.au Lady Death: The Memoirs of Stalin's Sniper : Pavlichenko, Lyudmila Lyudmila Pavlichenko was one of the top scoring snipers of World War II with 309 recorded kills. She died on October 10th 1974.  simple.wikipedia.org Lyudmila Pavlichenko - Simple English Wikipedia, the free ... Lyudimila Mykhailivna Pavlichenko (12 July 1916 - 10 October 1974 was a Soviet sniper. She shot German soldiers in World War 2. She was one of the top military snipers of all time, and is credited with 309 kills. She was the most successful female sniper in history.
@skitzojones2870
@skitzojones2870 Ай бұрын
The book is called the Marine sniper 93 confirmer kills and they didn't even tell the best story about how him and his spotter held down an entire company for 6 days in elephant valley and the time he took down an NBA general by worm crawling across 1,000+ yards of open ground over 3 days you really need to read the book
@LutefiskSavage
@LutefiskSavage Ай бұрын
Mate you've got to look up the legendary sniper Simo Hayha of the Finnish army who genuinely was the most lethal sniper of history.... So far. that man single handedly eliminated an entire regiment in confirmed sniper kills besides his other more normal engagement kills. His Nickname given him by the Russian army was the White Death. Also consider this his kill count was performed during the length of the Winter War, not over the course of multiple years of engagement. Which to say the least is ____SIGNIFICANT____
@AhHereWeGo
@AhHereWeGo Ай бұрын
I’m surprised they didn’t go into him making the M2 into a sniper rifle
@jamessproles2228
@jamessproles2228 Ай бұрын
One of my favorite Hathcock missions, which the video didn't revisit-was hathcock belly crawl into the middle of a vietcong camp at night to "eliminate" a General and somehow, in the ensuing caos manage to get away. What a legend!
@bitbrace
@bitbrace Ай бұрын
Yes, what crawling 2 or 3 days in a open field literally in the enemies backyard, patrols nearly stepping on him repeatedly, gets his shot and bounces because the enemy instinctively ran to the wood line because who is crazy enough to slink across a open field 😂
@george217
@george217 Ай бұрын
You reacted to Simo Hayha, known as the White Death. IMO he was the best sniper of all time.
@northcountryarmsroom6017
@northcountryarmsroom6017 Ай бұрын
They missed a lot of information about gunny hathcock. Anyone interested in Learning more should watch the vid of the interview of Carlos hathcock
@Scott_Burton
@Scott_Burton Ай бұрын
$30,000 in 1960 would convert to about $316,500 in 2024. Basically 1 US Dollar from 1960 equates to 10.55 US dollars in 2024
@user-kq5ke5yb6k
@user-kq5ke5yb6k Ай бұрын
If you want to cross over your goal, NFL (brutal hits) or some OverSimplified videos could do the trick.
@john-wi5xx
@john-wi5xx Ай бұрын
The book is One shot one kill. It’s a good read.
@cloudstrife5209
@cloudstrife5209 Ай бұрын
I taught my son to shoot at a young age. He shot 40/40 for army qualification twice already. 😢😀
@austinrasmussen5743
@austinrasmussen5743 Ай бұрын
Check out the book one shot, one kill if you get the chance. Collection of sniper stories including several about Hathcock
@Dralor1
@Dralor1 Ай бұрын
I believe a Canadian currently holds the record for the longest shot
@beesnestna9544
@beesnestna9544 Ай бұрын
You should read the story where Carlos Hathcock crawled nearly 2 miles to take out a North Vietnamese General after being airdropped behind enemy lines. On several occasions, during his long, snail-paced crawl, he literally was within arm's reach of North Vietnamese patrols that walked right past him but never noticed he was there. He not only succeeded in taking out the general, he also escaped after firing the fatal shot. Carlos was not the type of guy who needed to embellish his exploits. More than likely, his number of kills is accurate. Peace 😉
@txusmc69
@txusmc69 Ай бұрын
He "only" crawled about 1,500yds bc he'd have never crawled 2 miles in 3 days moving inches at a time.
@beesnestna9544
@beesnestna9544 Ай бұрын
@@txusmc69 Sorry, the story was that he was airdropped 2 miles behind enemy lines and I was trying to type and think at the same time (walk and chew bubblegum) but yeah, crawling almost 1 mile is definitely not nearly as impressive. Have you ever tried it, BTW?🤭
@txusmc69
@txusmc69 Ай бұрын
@beesnestna9544 I have not had to crawl almost a mile. I have however humped a 240 well over 2 miles lol
@jeri3808
@jeri3808 25 күн бұрын
OH, you need to google the deadliest sniper of all time, Simo Hayha. In the 1939-40 war between Finland and the Soviet Union Simo racked up 505 confirmed kills.......without a scope!!!!😵😵😵😵😵
@colbunkmust
@colbunkmust Ай бұрын
Generally the most successful sniper in the world was Simo Häyhä, a Finnish sniper who achieved over 500 kills in less than 100 days service in the Winter War, before he was wounded by a Russian tank round. His weapon of choice was a Finnish Mosin Nagant rifle, using only iron sights as the cold weather often fogged up optic glass.
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