The Wreck of USS St. Lo - Victim of the Divine Wind

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Skynea History

Skynea History

Күн бұрын

While sometimes a bit overshadowed by the Taffy losses, USS St. Lo is an important ship in her own right. Not for any great successes, no, but for being the first major warship lost to a dedicated Kamikaze attack. She was the first victim of what would become one of the most devastating Japanese tactics.
Over one hundred men lost their lives that day. And USS St. Lo slipped beneath the waves, lost until RV Petrel found her in 2019.
At that point, her well-preserved wreck became one of the most extensively covered of all the wrecks Petrel ever surveyed.

Пікірлер: 93
@spoton906
@spoton906 6 ай бұрын
my father was a gunner on that ship . thank you for this post .my dad was a survivor of the St Lo he pasted away in July of 2023 may he r.i.p.
@toemblem
@toemblem 3 ай бұрын
My grandfather was on the Gambier Bay when it went down. He passed away in 1971.
@robertyoung3992
@robertyoung3992 17 сағат бұрын
passed
@GuentherVanRaven
@GuentherVanRaven 11 ай бұрын
So this ship sunk in WW2 and is today in such remarkable condition. Crazy!
@jordanblackburn1155
@jordanblackburn1155 11 ай бұрын
My grandfather served aboard the U.S.S. Dennis (DE-405). They picked up over 450 men from the St. Lo after she was hit.
@iDuckman
@iDuckman 11 ай бұрын
I knew a sailor on a jeep nearby when she sank. He said that she sank immediately, like a submarine in a full speed dive. Nose down engines driving.
@markmclaughlin2690
@markmclaughlin2690 11 ай бұрын
My Father Kenneth McLaughlin WT/3 served on USS Gambier Bay, he crossed the bar in 1969 when I was 3. My hope is that one day they find Gambier Bay.
@toemblem
@toemblem 3 ай бұрын
My grandfather, Olav H. Emblem M 1/c, also served on the Gambier Bay. I believe his job was refueling, repairing and rearming airplanes. You can see a picture of him on the Gambier Bay website with a group and the caption says "gas gang". He crossed the bar in 1971, two years before I was born.
@matthewmarsh1072
@matthewmarsh1072 15 күн бұрын
Likely not I'm afraid. USS Samuel B Roberts went down in 6800m in that same battle (deepest wreck ever found), USS Gambier Bay could be even deeper.
@meatpopsicle1567
@meatpopsicle1567 11 ай бұрын
Former Navy here, with some unsolicited advice regarding nomenclatures. Although I served decades after the sinking of the St. Lo, the names of various ship parts has not changed in all that time. For instance, hatches. Hatches are openings in decks and in overheads (ceilings, for the uninitiated). The openings on bulkheads (walls) are still called doors. This is a common mistake a lot of folks make. The "cargo net" is actually safety netting. It is in place to help prevent man overboard events. Modern carriers still utilize safety netting around the flight deck. Propellors on U.S. Navy ships are referred to as screws. Propellors are on small water craft, such as whale boats, etc. Hope this helps.
@Lockbar
@Lockbar 11 ай бұрын
Well done and informative. The helmet blew me away. Don't see many personal items like that in deep wrecks. The leather jacket on the Bismarck wreck is another exception.
@lLoveCarolCleavland
@lLoveCarolCleavland 11 ай бұрын
Seeing personal items or signs like captain's cabin makes it, well, more personal. It's crazy how something the size of a behemoth doesn't effect one so starkly, but something so small as helmet or shaving kit brings it home and can hit you deep down.
@captainAlex258
@captainAlex258 11 ай бұрын
that ship should be remembered and explored more
@HM2SGT
@HM2SGT 11 ай бұрын
*I believe I'm going to have to watch **_Men Of Honor_** now...* *Rear Admiral French: You swam out of the Saint Lo at Leyte Gulf. You held your breath for four minutes.* *Master Chief Billy Sunday: Five, sir.*
@jd-ku3iw
@jd-ku3iw 11 ай бұрын
May her crew Rest in Peace.
@hattrick8684
@hattrick8684 11 ай бұрын
I really like this video series. It’s a good way to actually understand what these men went through. You hear “ship lost” “ship foundered” sunk etc etc. but it’s hard to actually imagine the punishment needed to force it below the waves.
@aghostofrazgriz5137
@aghostofrazgriz5137 10 ай бұрын
My Uncle, Freddy Heinrich, was aboard the St. Lo. Ive looked for info on her for years, and all i find is the same stuff. Thanks for shedding light on this Boat i have, and only will ever see in Paintings. This was surreal...
@kevinc.3579
@kevinc.3579 11 ай бұрын
This whole wreck series is fantastic. I haven’t seen a cumulative presentation like this anywhere else on the Internet. Great job.
@aldenconsolver3428
@aldenconsolver3428 11 ай бұрын
Very interesting. I would appreciate even more if you could add in a few minutes showing where the ship was hit, extent of fires and flooding and other information on the loss of the ship. I must admit I am sort of a damage control fan. These little escort carriers were tougher ships than one would think they would be, but St Lo went down really fast for these ships leaving me wondering why the excellent US damage control was not even able to slow the sinking. Still thank you for your tours and keep up the good work.
@elennapointer701
@elennapointer701 11 ай бұрын
The thing about the rust patterns is that they are a reliable indicator of fire damage in a sunken ship. The paint was rust-proof and meant to protect the ship from the effects of seawater, as far as it could do. On warships that received heavy damage before sinking - the Bismarck and HMAS Sydney spring immediately to mind - the parts that are more heavily rusted are those that were heavily burned before sinking, with the fire consuming the paint that was meant to protect the metal. Thus, when you see a sunken warship that's heavily rusted in some places, but less so in others, that's generally an indicator of which parts of the ship became an inferno before it sank.
@lLoveCarolCleavland
@lLoveCarolCleavland 11 ай бұрын
Seeing these ships down there is in a way like looking at a sunken city. When you think about all the city-like, aspects it becomes more real. You had a hospital, a police force, an equivalent to a fire station as well as a post office and a jail. Kind of a market place or grocery store (galley), and even an airport. You had plumbers, electricians, surgeons and janitors. Of course, there was even a kind of self-government. Anyway, when I look at the empty decks it's like looking at empty streets to which I can't stop myself from picturing the hustle and bustle that once was a long time ago.
@thatwormhole1760
@thatwormhole1760 11 ай бұрын
I want you to make a video on the time USS Enterprise and USS Saratoga worked together.
@jmantime
@jmantime 11 ай бұрын
I really hope they find the wreck of IKN Shinano the largest warship sunk in WWII, I imagine her wreck being in good condition.
@twrecks4598
@twrecks4598 11 ай бұрын
I think a lot of the warped plates/decks/items are from the hydrodynamic forces created during the decent. While the ship may have sunk slowly, after it is fully submerged she will pick up speed. Titanic is thought to have hit the ocean floor at around 30mph and the "poop deck" was folded over onto itself from the hydrodynamic force. The rust corrosion will be more prevalent in areas where the paint was burned off by fire, explaining why there is rust in more areas than other. This wreck in many ways resembles the Titanic wreck in its depth and forces affecting it during its fast decent.
@paulamos8970
@paulamos8970 10 ай бұрын
Very enlightening, don't worry about running a bit longer than you thought, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
@alexh3153
@alexh3153 11 ай бұрын
looks like there is a whole section of shaft missing not just the propeller, looks like the flange where the sections are bolted together, the propeller doesnt usually bolt on like that, usually a single large nut on a tapered shaft that is then welded over
@sterlinghunter9651
@sterlinghunter9651 11 ай бұрын
Great video. ....(my hypothesis) Since she sank slowly, she probably would have filled completely with water. That so, there was probably no buoyancy at all to slow the decent down. The sheered guns from the mounts, the peeled metal, broken hull, and her being buried down by the bow so deep in the mud, would suggest she must have been screaming to the bottom. Wonder if any engineers or math brainiacs want to calculate how fast that might have been going when she hit bottom. Still with some places devastated and other not so.... More mystery of the Sea!
@davhot4107
@davhot4107 11 ай бұрын
I don't know the american protocol for ship evacuation in case of a devastating/cripling damage and the danger of beeing captured. But most of the crews in the world are order to leave the hatches, valves and doors complely open in order to the water to enter as fast as possible in order to sank the ship fast and not to get captured by the enemy forces. So yeah, it's possible it was a deliberate attempt to sank it quick.
@taras3702
@taras3702 11 ай бұрын
I seriously doubt the descent was slow. Ships fall very rapidly once they go under. This one likely hit the sea floor at well over 30, even 40 mph, consequently it reached the bottom in five to ten minutes. Lighter debris would take longer, with the lightest debris taking hours to sink to the seabed.
@robertsalanon2909
@robertsalanon2909 10 ай бұрын
Épave bien conservée , dégâts énormes , des écritures et peintures très visibles !! Hommage aux disparus ...Merci ...
@Straswa
@Straswa 11 ай бұрын
Great vid Skynea, wow what devastating damage. RIP to the lives lost aboard the USS St. Lo. o7
@arlosanchez550
@arlosanchez550 10 ай бұрын
I wish that they would do some of the Japanese warships.
@alephalon7849
@alephalon7849 11 ай бұрын
Great video! For a ship that was considered cheap and despite the violence of her loss, St. Lo hasn't torn herself into multiple pieces during her descent to the bottom of the sea, such as what happened to Juneau. Admittedly, every incident of a ship sinking has unique circumstances, but St. Lo's relative intactness (torn-off flight deck aside) feels like an interesting outcome for me.
@robertyoung3992
@robertyoung3992 10 ай бұрын
The Juneau was caused by twin torpedo strikes in the same location ad subsequent explosion
@jima1878
@jima1878 11 ай бұрын
Another great video -- well-done! As a side note, the "cargo netting" you mentioned is likely the personnel safety net which are around decks used for flight operations, since regular stanchion-type railing cannot be used there.
@ThomasDrehfal
@ThomasDrehfal 11 ай бұрын
Great report and analysis.
@chrisjeffries2322
@chrisjeffries2322 11 ай бұрын
Excellent, thank you for sharing.
@brianomalley7501
@brianomalley7501 11 ай бұрын
You have a gift my friend I want to take you for sharing it with us can't say enough simply awesome the way you present it you make it very easy to understand what happened and accurate information easy and enjoyable to listen to thanks
@SuperchargedSupercharged
@SuperchargedSupercharged 11 ай бұрын
Love the longer videos.
@Backwardlooking
@Backwardlooking 11 ай бұрын
My father’s generation. Absolutely terrible.
@rq83
@rq83 11 ай бұрын
You create excellent work, thank you so much and please keep up the great work you do.
@DardanellesBy108
@DardanellesBy108 11 ай бұрын
This wreck series has been surprisingly very interesting. Thanks for all the work!
@timchad277
@timchad277 10 ай бұрын
Love your shipwreck vids ,great job.
@beanssomers7930
@beanssomers7930 11 ай бұрын
Those pictures of the bow show areas where the Bosn has been over the side slinging grey primer/paint near and around the anchor.
@toemblem
@toemblem 3 ай бұрын
Incredible! I can't beleive this ship looks so good after all of this time. I am hoping to see the USS Gambier Bay someday.
@bruinflight1
@bruinflight1 10 ай бұрын
These scenes are so evocative.
@woodrowwheeless2509
@woodrowwheeless2509 3 ай бұрын
USS St Lo has the distinction of being the first US Navy ship sunk by a Mkamikaze. MY dad, Aviation Macinist Mate, Thad Wheeless was aboard. The ship was on stand down when she was attacked. I have done some research and even have the name of the Kamikaze pilot. Dad was awarded the Bronze star for keeping some his mates afloat.
@davedruid7427
@davedruid7427 11 ай бұрын
At 16:54, you are showing the Hull with a Big Dent in it. That is almost identical the Bow Dent that is on the RMS Titanic.
@luked7525
@luked7525 6 ай бұрын
The renaming of St. Lo from Midway was accompanied by the renaming of her sister ship CVE-57 from Coral Sea to Anzio. Anzio had much better luck than St. Lo, and survived to be broken up in 1960.
@JasonS76
@JasonS76 11 ай бұрын
You found it 👍👍👍
@Glenn-em3hv
@Glenn-em3hv 11 ай бұрын
I would never want to serve on a ship that has been renamed especially one that's been renamed twice!!! You would think that the higher ups would know better but I don't think they care!!!
@jeffblacky
@jeffblacky 11 ай бұрын
Do some dives on our former M113 APCs that became reefs
@colinbarnard6512
@colinbarnard6512 2 ай бұрын
Re: the gun with the helmet. A few thoughts: First, it's a sublime, beautiful, poingnant picture. Two, the site is a US Navy War Grave. Three: the Navy could send an ROV to clear the detritus, and then place a respectful barrier, and memorial plaque, so no more human refuse collect on the monument. Then the US Post Office can issue a stamp with that image (sans garbage) to bring the image, and its meaning, to wider public knowledge. Especially as we are soon going to experience World War 2 solely by the written record, the participants, as well as those on the homefront, will pass from life, along with their experiences and memories.
@DesGardius-me7gf
@DesGardius-me7gf 7 ай бұрын
“I’d never heard of a Kamikaze. I’d heard of bombers, and all those kinds of things. But somebody _purposely_ doing this!? It didn’t even occur to me.” -Orville Bethard, survivor from the St. Lo
@briankroenung7995
@briankroenung7995 11 ай бұрын
Hatches are horizontal. Doors are vertical.
@allangibson8494
@allangibson8494 11 ай бұрын
Hatches are waterproof - doors aren’t.
@brandonclark435
@brandonclark435 11 ай бұрын
Depends if the ship has a list.
@genEricSVG
@genEricSVG 11 ай бұрын
On a ship wouldn't anything that can be dogged or sealed up to be waterproof be considered a hatch ?
@trenttiedeman2630
@trenttiedeman2630 11 ай бұрын
What if it’s diagonal?
@stevehesson5968
@stevehesson5968 11 ай бұрын
@@allangibson8494. Except for Water Tight Doors. Yes, doors pass through bulkheads, hatches pass through decks and scuttles pass through hatches. 26 years USN, 6 ships. Third generation career Navy.
@pickeljarsforhillary102
@pickeljarsforhillary102 11 ай бұрын
Can you do a vid on deepest known wreck by nation?
@matthewmarsh1072
@matthewmarsh1072 15 күн бұрын
Not to sound grisly but that Helmet by the gun tub could be very likely where the body one of her 113 KIA came to rest. She went down in 30 mins, there was not enough time to recuperate the dead. I remember seeing a documentary of the documentary about RMS TITANIC and one of the most somber sights someone said was all the still intact shoes they found at the bottom of the ocean around the wreck. It became obvious those shoes once had bodies in them, some of the 1517 people lost that day.
@HighlanderNorth1
@HighlanderNorth1 11 ай бұрын
Hopefully you haven't contracted the most recent/84th variant of C19. It sounds as if you are fairly young, so if you have contracted it, you probably only have a 99.998% chance of remaining completely healthy..... Now, I'm no expert in percentages, but I'm _guessing_ that 99.998% means you'll probably still be doing naval videos well into the foreseeable future...... Good luck mate!😉
@ThePTBRULES
@ThePTBRULES 11 ай бұрын
Not the Chinese Flu!!!
@FlatBroke612
@FlatBroke612 11 ай бұрын
sAfE aNd EfFeCtIvE
@BlindMansRevenge2002
@BlindMansRevenge2002 11 ай бұрын
Well, the divine wind managed to knock out one of the Cambier bay class escort carriers. Too bad for the Japanese or 49 others where that one came from
@roadweary5252
@roadweary5252 11 ай бұрын
Similar to the Titanic, buried up to her anchors
@taras3702
@taras3702 11 ай бұрын
She clearly plowed into the mud at high speed forward end down much like Titanic's bow section, and probably broke her keel when the aft portion came down into the bottom the same way Titanic's bow section did. Amazing St. Lo isn't covered in rusticles due to the fires that were raging aboard.
@kcstafford2784
@kcstafford2784 11 ай бұрын
Just a word for utube....thanks...
@gregwilliams386
@gregwilliams386 11 ай бұрын
Was this an organized Kamikaze attack or the Japanese habit of crashing a doomed aircraft into their target?
@TrickiVicBB71
@TrickiVicBB71 11 ай бұрын
First use of organized kamikaze
@fernandomarques5166
@fernandomarques5166 11 ай бұрын
While damaged japanese aircraft would do suicide attacks on USN vessels (a good example of this being the Battle of Santa Cruz, where four separate aircraft, 3 Vals and 1 Kate, purposely crashed into USS Hornet and a Destroyer after being damaged by AAA and CAP), Leyte Gulf was the first time japanese aircraft took off with the express purpose of crashing into USN vessels.
@davidmurphy8190
@davidmurphy8190 10 ай бұрын
Remember Colin Kelly and his B-17 of WWII fame when he tried to fly his stricken bomber into the IJN HARUNA (IIRC). The attempt was witnessed by Japanese pilots, including Saburo Sakai.
@Ka9radio_Mobile9
@Ka9radio_Mobile9 11 ай бұрын
🤩
@eclipser2004
@eclipser2004 2 ай бұрын
The old saying was CVE (escort carrier) Combustible, vulnerable and explosive
@ronbork684
@ronbork684 11 ай бұрын
My Uncle George's Destroyer the U.S.S. Helm took a Kamikaze off Okinawa, but not a lot of damage. If I'm not mistaken, those young Japanese pilots were told that their sacrifice in behalf of the Emperor would gain their "immortal souls" an eternity in that special shrine in Tokyo, where the souls of all Japanese heroes resided. Seems a similar religious teaching motivated our Viking ancestors to fight to the death, but instead of a shrine, entrance into Valhalla, where they could feast, fight, and make love, till the Twilight of The Gods. Interesting that one never finds the words immortal and soul together in the Bible, but then again the clergy did not find the resurrection teaching as profitable as selling indulgences and praying to get souls out of purgatory. John 5:28,29 Acts 20:17,29,30
@dodic8574
@dodic8574 3 ай бұрын
How is it that you did not mention that behind and to the left of the helmet, a clear human indentation of sort is visible, with something that to me looks like last decomposing peaces of bones exactly following shape of human skeleton?!
@olegadodasguerras3795
@olegadodasguerras3795 11 ай бұрын
Skynea New vídeo ? Its a good night 😊
@jackburkhart873
@jackburkhart873 3 ай бұрын
Family friend and neighbor was a survivor. I kick myself for not talking to him more!
@nicholasmelby5361
@nicholasmelby5361 11 ай бұрын
Could that section of the flight deck that is resting near the ship have been blown off as a result of the ships hull compressing when it hit the bottom causing a hydrodynamic surge?
@Jaysqualityparts
@Jaysqualityparts 10 ай бұрын
Shows how good American steal was back then. No chinesium there.
@jacktorrance2633
@jacktorrance2633 10 ай бұрын
Other countries tried to steel it!
@Jaysqualityparts
@Jaysqualityparts 10 ай бұрын
@@jacktorrance2633 pre-nuclear metal proves what we have done to the atmosphere like a bunch of idiots.
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