Britain's most spectacular sea fight in the Pacific was her participation in the "Battle of the Java Sea" in February 1942. A combined allied cruiser force consisting of the Dutch cruisers JAVA & DE RUYTER; British EXETER; American HOUSTON; and the Australian PERTH. This fleet, labeled the ABDA Striking Force (ABDA-American, British, Dutch, Australian) and their accompanying destroyers faced 13 destroyers and 4 cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN). In WWII's only decisive "cruiser" fleet action, all of the allied cruisers were sent to the bottom; with PERTH & HOUSTON going down while making for the Sunda Straits...and EXETER going down while trying for the Indian ocean. Most of the allied cruisers & destroyers had met their fate from "Long Lance" torpedoes cut loose from the cruisers, as unlike some navies, IJN cruisers came equipped with torpedoes. Java Sea was strictly a cruiser fight (with destroyers running about trying to pick-up survivors), no planes (save for some spotting planes) and no submarines (except for some possible reconnaissance subs). Britain's most famous sea fight in the Pacific was her participation in the evolution of naval warfare. On 10 December 1941, for the first time in the history of man, a modern steel battleship (along with an accompanying battlecruiser) manuevering at sea, with all weapons manned and trained for action, took on war planes at sea. This sea battle was strictly a fight between warships and airplanes. Victory went to airpower! Both battleship HMS Prince of Wales, and battlecruiser HMS Repulse still rest today on the bottom of the South China Sea. From 10 December 1941 onward...England & America excepted the fact that battleships NO LONGER ruled the seas; aircraft carriers did!
Charles Evans Hughes
Tsushima
great britain
Guadalcanal was primarily a series of naval battles lasting 6 months. Japan lost the battle for Guadalcanal.
Battle of Midway
Great Britain joined an aliance with Japan which gave the allied powers a lot of naval force! Great Britain was also allied with France and Russia. Great Britain joined an aliance with Japan which gave the allied powers a lot of naval force! Great Britain was also allied with France and Russia.
Submarines.
Charles Evans Hughes
Battle of Tsushima between Russia and Japan 1905.
Jay Worrall has written: 'Any approaching enemy' -- subject(s): British, Fiction, Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Navy, Naval History, Naval operations, Nile, Battle of the, Egypt, 1798, Officers, Second Coalition, War of the, 1798-1801, Ship captains 'Aboukir Bay' -- subject(s): British, Fiction, Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Navy, Naval History, Naval operations, Nile, Battle of the, Egypt, 1798, Officers, Second Coalition, War of the, 1798-1801, Ship captains
James Ralfe has written: 'The naval biography of Great Britain' -- subject(s): Biography, Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Navy, History, Naval History, Naval operations
The Battle of Midway.
battle of midway
No, Matthew Perry did not open the ports of Great Britain in the 1800s. He was an American naval officer who played a significant role in opening Japan to the West through the Treaty of Kanagawa in 1854. This event marked the end of Japan's isolationist policy, but it did not involve Great Britain.
Bruce Taylor has written: 'The battlecruiser HMS Hood' -- subject(s): Battle cruisers, Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Navy, Hood (Battle cruiser), Naval operations, World War, 1939-1945
Tsushima
F. W. Brooks has written: 'Masons' marks' -- subject- s -: Banker-marks 'The English naval forces, 1199-1272' -- subject- s -: Great Britain, Great Britain. Royal Navy, History, Naval History 'York and the Council of the North' -- subject- s -: Great Britain, Great Britain. Council of the North, Local government 'The battle of Stamford Bridge'