Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

US Navy Pacific Fleet 1941

View through CrossRef
The first book to examine the battleship-led 1941 Pacific Fleet as it was intended to fight. Packed with illustrations, this study explains how the US Navy saw the approaching war unfolding. When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, the Pacific Fleet was the most powerful in the US Navy. It was still dominated by battleships, but since the late 1930s had been developing naval aviation and integrating them with its battleship-led doctrine. This book is the first to examine the Pacific Fleet as it was intended to fight, and how it had been training and preparing in the months leading up to December 7, 1941. Naval historian Mark Lardas explains how, contrary to modern assumptions, it was not wedded to the battleship, but was hedging its bets, building up both its carrier and battleship strength. Most crucially, it had also been building and honing a massive fleet train, enabling the Pacific Fleet to operate easily thousands of miles from home. It was this foundation that enabled the Pacific Fleet to adapt so rapidly to the new world of carrier-led naval warfare, and first check and then defeat the IJN. With artwork, photos and diagrams, this is a portrait of 1941 in the Pacific Fleet, the last time and place when battleship doctrine held sway. Pearl Harbor would shatter this, and herald the start of the carrier era. The blow fell heavily on the US Pacific Fleet, but it and its successors would emerge more powerful than ever.
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Title: US Navy Pacific Fleet 1941
Description:
The first book to examine the battleship-led 1941 Pacific Fleet as it was intended to fight.
Packed with illustrations, this study explains how the US Navy saw the approaching war unfolding.
When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, the Pacific Fleet was the most powerful in the US Navy.
It was still dominated by battleships, but since the late 1930s had been developing naval aviation and integrating them with its battleship-led doctrine.
This book is the first to examine the Pacific Fleet as it was intended to fight, and how it had been training and preparing in the months leading up to December 7, 1941.
Naval historian Mark Lardas explains how, contrary to modern assumptions, it was not wedded to the battleship, but was hedging its bets, building up both its carrier and battleship strength.
Most crucially, it had also been building and honing a massive fleet train, enabling the Pacific Fleet to operate easily thousands of miles from home.
It was this foundation that enabled the Pacific Fleet to adapt so rapidly to the new world of carrier-led naval warfare, and first check and then defeat the IJN.
With artwork, photos and diagrams, this is a portrait of 1941 in the Pacific Fleet, the last time and place when battleship doctrine held sway.
Pearl Harbor would shatter this, and herald the start of the carrier era.
The blow fell heavily on the US Pacific Fleet, but it and its successors would emerge more powerful than ever.

Related Results

Royal Navy Grand Fleet 1914–18
Royal Navy Grand Fleet 1914–18
World War Iwas Britain’slast moment as the world’s naval superpower, anditsGrand Fleet wasthenthe most powerfuleverseen. Fully illustrated, this explores its fighting power. A...
The Founding of Russia's Navy
The Founding of Russia's Navy
The reign of Peter the Great (1682-1725), long regarded as the turning point in the Europeanization of Russia, witnessed the establishment of Russia's first modern navy, the Azov S...
Minority Rights in the Pacific Region
Minority Rights in the Pacific Region
The book examines the extent to which States in the Pacific region have put in place legislative and administrative measures designed to promote and protect the rights of minoritie...
WARSHIPS IN THE KOMANDORSKI ISLANDS 1943
WARSHIPS IN THE KOMANDORSKI ISLANDS 1943
With ship profiles and original artwork, this study explores the warships that fought World War II's last pure surface battle, the battle itself, and why the outnumbered US Navy pr...
Memoir of the Life of Admiral Sir Edward Codrington
Memoir of the Life of Admiral Sir Edward Codrington
Edward Codrington (1770–1851) joined the navy at the age of thirteen. Having narrowly avoided freezing to death in Nova Scotia three years later, he went on to serve during some of...
1 An Overview of Indigenous Peoples and Minority Rights in the Pacific
1 An Overview of Indigenous Peoples and Minority Rights in the Pacific
This chapter begins with a historical overview of the Pacific Islands. It then discusses Pacific and international law and minority rights in the Pacific....
Major Authors: Albert Wendt, Sia Figiel, Epeli Hau‘ofa
Major Authors: Albert Wendt, Sia Figiel, Epeli Hau‘ofa
This chapter discusses the work of three Indigenous Pacific novelists: Albert Wendt, Sia Figiel, and Epeli Hauʻofa. Wendt, Figiel, and Hauʻofa all come from the anglophone south-we...
The Spanish Pacific, 1521-1815
The Spanish Pacific, 1521-1815
The Spanish Pacific designates the space Spain colonized or aspired to rule in Asia between 1521 -- with the arrival of Ferdinand Magellan -- and 1815 -- the end of the Manila-Acap...

Back to Top