What was the US response to the Battle of Midway?
The US victory turned the tide of the war in the Pacific to US favor
Who was famous in the Battle of Midway?
On the American side there were two Task Forces in the Battle, one being commanded by Raymond A. Spruance. Spruance was not a flier, and not a carrier man, but was recommended by Bull Halsey to be Halsey's replacement just before the Battle, when Halsey was hospitalized in Hawaii. So on practically no notice Spruance sailed from Pearl Harbor on the mission, and straight into the Battle, which he handled masterfully. Spruance and Halsey then alternated in command of the US fighting ships in the Pacific for the rest of the war - when Spruance was in command they were the Third Fleet, and when Halsey was in command they were the Fifth Fleet. One admiral would go out and complete an operation while the other with his staff was in Hawaii planning the next one. Spruance was in command again in the last great carrier battle in June of 1944, the Battle of the Philippine Sea, also sometimes called "The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot", which completely destroyed the last of Japan's sea-going air power. Spruance's biographer called him "The Quiet Warrior", which was an apt description, and he has never been given the adulation that was poured on Halsey. At the end of the war when a few officers of both the Army and Navy were made the first five star officers ever in American history, Halsey got five stars, but Spruance did not.
The overall US Naval Commander in the Pacific from just after Pearl Harbor through to the end was Chester Nimitz, who also got five stars. Nimitz was the one who made the decision to believe in what the intelligence people were telling him, and to stake all the slender resources remaining to the US Navy on the defense of Midway. Nimitz directed the Central Pacific, Northern Pacific and South Pacific efforts from Hawaii.
The other Task Force commander at Midway was Frank Jack Fletcher. Fletcher was senior to Spruance and was in overall command of the American ships in the Battle. Many of his papers were lost when his ship was sunk during the war, and he refused to be interviewed by the influential naval historian Samuel Elliot Morrison at the end of the war, so Morrison snubbed Fletcher in his writing on the Pacific War, and later historians have largely followed suit, so that you have to be pretty well informed on the Battle to even know that Fletcher was there, let alone in command in this smashing victory. Fletcher was in command in the North Pacific for the rest of the war, and, needless to say, like Spruance, never got five stars.
Maybe the most famous regular guy was Ensign George Gay, who got no grief over his name, because "Gay" was not coopted to be a synonym for homosexual until he was a pretty old fellow. But as a young Naval aviator Ensign Gay was the sole survivor of the attack of Torpedo Squadron Eight on the Japanese Fleet. There were three types of carrier planes - fighters, dive bombers, and torpedo bombers, with torpedo bombers being the biggest, with a three man crew - pilot, rear gunner and radio operator. They carried a torpedo, just like the ones launched by submarines, and had to fly in low and straight over the water and drop the torpedo within a mile of the enemy ship they were hoping the torpedo would hit, which made them large, slow targets. At the time of Midway the US had a new generation of dive bombers and fighters, but the new torpedo bombers were not yet with the fleet, meaning the old torpedo bombers were extremely slow targets. The plan had been for the dive bombers and torpedo bombers to hit at the same time, but the torpedo planes got there ahead and went on in. They were slaughtered, by both shipboard anti-aircraft fire and defending Japanese fighter planes. Few of them even managed to get close enough to release their torpedoes, and they scored no hits. But this was not in vain, as they drew all the umbrella of Japanese fighter planes after them, and when the dive bombers appeared overhead just as the last of Torpedo Squadron Eight was going down in flames, there was nothing to stop the dive bombers, who proceeded to sink three Japanese carriers in the next ten minutes. Ensign Gay had a ringside seat for this, floating in the middle of the Japanese Fleet in his life vest. He was rescued a day or two after the Battle by a flying boat, and lived to be an old man.
On the Japanese side, the most famous was Admiral Yamamoto, who would be dead within a year, shot down as a result of more code-breaking by American intelligence, and Admiral Nagumo, who up until Midway had led the Jap carriers whereever and whenever they wanted to go, until they had become overconfident.
How was the Battle of Midway a turning point in the European theater during World War II?
Midway was in the Pacific Theatre and made no dfference at all to the European Theatre.
Are there survivors of Battle of Midway island?
The Battle of Midway took place in 1942, now seventy years ago. Veterans of the battle are now in their eighties and nineties so some are still with us.
However, if you are asking in order to talk to one of the veterans about the battle or to simply honor them for their role in the battle, make it soon. We have a limited time to honor our heroes.
How did American Chester Nimitz learn of the Japanese plans at the Battle of Midway?
The US Naval Communications Service OP-20-02 Station "HYPO" signals intelligence unit in Honolulu, Hawaii intercepted and decoded Japanese JN-25 radio messages of their pending military plans.
What activities are considered appropriate to commemorate the Battle of Midway?
You could go to visit the USS Hornet off of Alameda, CA or throw a wreath into the Pacific ocean. There may be a museum for that battle.
What was the impact of the Battle of Midway in World War II?
It was the turning piont of World War 2 in the Pacific.
How many planes did the axis powers have in the Battle of Midway?
The japanese sought a major defeat of US forces at Midway with four front-line aircraft carriers, the Kaga--90 aircraft, Akagi--91 aircraft, Soryu--73 aircraft, Hiryu--73 aircraft, a total thus of some 327 aircraft carried by all four carriers. In addition to this number, most of their other fleet units carried one or more flaot planes.
All four carriers and their planes and pilots were lost
Volkhava
About 250 but nearly all destroyed
How did the Battle of Midway change the course of war?
Midway proved decisive to the naval war in the Central Pacific. US carrier forces sank four Japanese carriers, altering the balance of power for the remainder of the war.
Was the Japanese successful in catching the US fleet by surprise during the Battle of Midway?
The Japanese Lost 4 aircraft carriers, along with their pilots at the Battle of Midway. The USA lost one aircraft carrier. Midway is considered the beginning of the end of the war for Japan and the start of their road to defeat.
Why Japanese lose the Battle of Midway?
The Japanese lost the Battle of Midway because the Japanese planes were away or refueling when the American Planes found the Japanese carriers. The American planes scored direct hits on three Japanese carriers and sent them to the bottom of the Pacific.
The Japanese wer efocused on taking Midway Island as a base to attack Hawaii and the rest of the US. The Americans wanted to stop them. The American PBY Catalina search plane discovered the Japanese force and allowed the Americans to coordinate better, while the Japanese were attacking the unmovable island.
Another major reason the Americans won, was because of the efforts of the fire and repair teams of the USS Yorktown at the battle of the coral sea. She suffered a direct hit and was able to be repaired in the shirt time between the battles. the japanese were not expecting another carrier to be in the battle.
How many ships were lost during the Battle of Midway?
Japan lost four aircraft carriers, the USN, One, The Yorktown as I recall. It was the first major Naval battle fought entirely in the air!
What was the basic information about the Battle of Midway?
a message coded AF was intersepted by us code breakers and we trying to see were AF was. we sent a message that they would understand about midway needing a water purifier and they sent a message back about AF needing a water purifier so we knew when & were they were going.
What happened to the Allies in the Battle of Midway?
The carriers of the US Pacific Fleet surprised the Japanese who had come to destroy it, sinking four Japanese fleet carriers at the loss of one of their own, completely turning the tables in the Pacific war at sea.
Why were the American victories in BAttle of the Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway important?
American Naval and Air forces participated in the Battle of the Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway. In both of the battles, the United States and Australian forces won over Japan (defeated Japan). With these two victories over Japan, the American Navy forces began to turn the tide in the war against Japan.
What did the us have to lose from the Battle of Midway?
The ability to strike back at Japanese forces and retake all the Pacific islands that Japan had invaded.
How did the US find out about the Battle of Midway?
A U. S. bomber spotted the Japanese fleet and radioed their position, until U. S. forces arrived.
What equipment did the us use during the Battle of Midway?
"They used airplanes, some guns, water, and rubber bands"
-MItch Reavis
I heart soccer BTW.