On the USS Indianapolis, a tragic incident happened on the sinking. Soldiers lost their lives in many ways. The torpedo, drowning, sharks, dehydration, starvation, and drinking saltwater. Only three hundred and seventeen men survived the catastrophe. Today I am writing an essay about Why they died and how they could have prevented it. On July 30, 1945, the Japanese hit the USS Indianapolis with torpedoes and there were about 1,196 on board of the ship. 880 men lost their lives due to sharks, torpedoes, drowning, or going down with the ship. Only 317 men escaped the ship, got some lifeboats and survived. The survivors had dealt with quite a few problems; sharks, dehydration, exposure to the sun, starvation, and having to drink salt water. All that were rescued were thinking of themselves as guilty, asking questions …show more content…
In contrast, there were an abundance of questions to prevent the sinking and the deaths of the soldiers. The only one to blame was Captain Mcvay for failing not to zigzag and take another route to Tinian. He wasn’t told because he wasn’t of sufficient rank. Sailors were asking why wasn’t there given an escort to the ship or thinking of taking the wrong route to their destination. One of the biggest errors or mistakes was sinking in the middle of the ocean. No help, no islands, no signs of land, just the treacherous sea. The incident led so many casualties and the survivors had a difficult time on the lifeboats. Having to ration the food , take shifts, and make messages to the world about the sinking. The USS Indianapolis had a large quantity of questions about how,when, where, and who. The 1,196 sailors on the ship could have survived if they could have did a perimeter check, an escort, or going zigzag like they told the captain. It was a big tragedy, but at least some of the sailors survived and made it out okay. Why they died would have many different answers from different
The USS Indianapolis was a heavy cruiser of the US Navy, named for the city of Indianapolis, Indiana. The sinking of this ship in 1945 led to the greatest single loss of life at sea. The ship was torpedoed by a Japanese submarine and sinks within minutes in shark-infested waters. The sinking of the USS Indianapolis shows the greatest loss of life at sea, what the survivors had to endure before saving and the prosecution of the captain of the USS. The ship was done with its first mission, delivering the world's first operational atomic bomb to the island of Tinian.
On the night of the evacuation there was a terrible storm. On the boat everyone was seasick, to go to the toilet was too dangerous in the rough conditions, people were sick where they were, the stench was terrible. When they arrived in Italy they were about 70 kilometres from the front line. They were then placed on a train, after travelling about 50 minutes the train stopped and they started going backwards. They ended up in a railway yard with nothing to eat or drink for two days, they were starving when they got on the boat and anything in their stomachs was evacuated due to sea sickness, they were barely alive, there were some deaths on the train.
They either got torpedoed or bombed, but in the end it killed many
In the book killing Kennedy it is the story of how John Fitzgerald Kennedy aka JFK started from the military and climbed the military ladder all the way to become the president of the United States of America and one of the best presidents of the nation at that. It starts about telling about how he cheated death in the tragedy of world war 2 and his submarine the PT-109 it tells how it was cut in half by a Japanese ship but JFK and his crew were still in a part where there was no water and JFK becoming the leader that he will later become as president instructed them all that they were going to swim to an island and so after many agonizing days of trying to find help JFK and his crew are saved and they survive the crash of PT-109. The first
Many of them knew that they wouldn't make it out, but they kept going. They risked their life just to try and save
Many sailors lost hope of being rescued and they just were not prepared. Therefore, more sailors died than survived. In the end, the sailors of the USS Indianapolis lost hope in being rescued. Some questioned whether or not anyone even got an SOS.
Whether it was hard or not to see, pain was felt during those difficult years of Andrew Jackson’s presidency. Multiple people played a part of why certain things may have happened, especially involving the pain of others. Although, there also were saviours who fought for justice. We as a class deeply went and searched back into history for multiple accounts and explanations of what happened in the years of Andrew Jackson’s presidency. What was the problem exactly?
Yesterday, February 3rd, 1917,The American cargo ship, Housatonic , a German U-boat sank. In response, President Wilson broke off diplomatic relations with Germany the same day. The attack on Housatonic is the first time in history that a submerged submarine had successfully sunk another ship. Aboard the Union vessel, two officers and three men were killed while the crew took to the boats or climbed into the rigging to await rescue. The reason as to what led to the sinking is unknown at this time.
Approximately three hundred men went down with the ship. Many people either drowned while in a lower part of the ship, or was pulled under with the pressure the ship caused when it sank. Everyone who was lucky, or unlucky, enough to make it out and away from the ship banned together to try and survive. “Water, water, everywhere, and all the boards did shrink; water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink.”
In total over 2,400 were dead, and over 1,000 were injured in the onslaught; the attack also saw the destruction of eight battleships, three light cruisers and destroyers, and four other naval vessels (Civil Rights, Japanese Americans). With the Japanese
Edmund Fitzgerald lost buoyancy and stability resulting from massive flooding because of the high waves and winds caused by the storm. 29 men were lost when the Fitzgerald went down. I think Edmund Fitzgerald sank because of the waves from the Three Sisters. Fitzgerald said he had two vents, a rail down and a list. Two large waves struck the decks of a ship and the third, larger wave sent her to the bottom of the
According to the eye witness, Robert Edlin, which joined the first wave of soldiers of the assault on Omaha Beach. The assault boat he was on hit a sandbar and the coxswain could not get in any further. They had to figure a way to get out of the boat. So before they all died they jumped off the sides of the boat. Edlin, even though it was June, said that the water was freezing.
In my book, A storm too soon,the rescue story of the crew of the Sean Seamour II, a 44 foot tall sailboat that got into a drowning hazard and sank during a storm 225 miles off of the coast of North Carolina. The hazard level of this storm was not known very well, while the crew didn 't even know what was going to happen. A very vicious and terrifying storm was headed right for them,but it was going to be worse than they thought. Soon, 80-foot waves started crashing into the area of where the boat was sailing, Captain JP Lutz, Ben Tye, and Rudy Snel were all prepared to access the lower deck of the boat where they would be safe.
Titanic Crossing Genre: Historic Fiction Barbara Williams Copyright: 1995 Pages: 163 Grade: 4-5 Summary: Barbara Williams, novel the Titanic Crossing depicts the story of main character, Albert and his family as they aboard the Titanic in April of 1912 in hopes of returning back to America. Although Alberts family, are not excited about the new adventure, Albert is excited about going back home and the opportunity to explore the enormous ship, the Titanic. The night of the sinking of the Titanic, Albert locates his sister Ginny onto one of the lifeboats that are for women and children. When loading on the lifeboat, Albert is shocked to be informed by the crewmen that his age of thirteen qualifies him as a man, and he is forced to separate
Coleman Hardee February 16, 2018 US History Research Paper 1st Period The Titanic The RMS Titanic was a luxury steamship sailing from Southampton to France and Ireland then on to New York. The ship could occupy 2,435 passengers and about 900 crew members, which is a total of 3,300 people on board.