• @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 1, 1945, marks the 80th anniversary of the beginning of the Battle of Okinawa. The contest over this island was one of the largest ground battles of the Pacific War, with hundreds of thousands of American troops involved. Widely considered the last stepping stone to the planned invasion of the Japanese home islands, the Japanese responded with a large number of kamikaze attacks and the doomed final voyage of the Yamato against one of the largest Allied fleets ever assembled. In the end, the heavily outnumbered Japanese lost, with both sides accruing nearly 200,000 casualties combined and over 100,000 dead (most of which Japanese).

    The battle would outlast the end of the war in Europe, leading some to call it the final major battle of the war.


  • April 5, 1945, saw the beginning of a fierce battle in an unexpected location: the Georgian uprising against the Germans on the Dutch island of Texel. Now how did the Georgians get there, and why did they rebel?

    The “Georgian Legion” in the German Army consisted of volunteers of Georgian origin, including many who had first fought in the Red Army and had been captured. They hoped that the German advance towards the Caucasus would eventually reach Georgia so that they could assist in liberating their homeland from the Soviets, but by 1945 that hope was of course long gone. The Germans didn’t quite trust them but welcomed the manpower, and as it happened to be, had assigned about 800 of them man a part of the Atlantikwall on the island of Texel.

    The Georgians were not in an enviable position at all. Germany was rapidly losing the war, and even when they were far away from the fighting in the east, the possibility of ending up in Soviet hands and being executed as traitors, seemed far from remote. So when they were summoned to fight the advancing Canadians in the east of the Netherlands, they rose in rebellion against their German overlords, hoping to capture the entire island of Texel and hold out until those very Canadians would arrive, thus being able to claim being on the Allied side. It was a desperate plan, but it was all they had.

    It ended very badly. They failed to capture the whole island, the Germans sent reinforcements, almost all Georgians were killed, and probably even more Germans, and also a substantial number of Dutch civilians. Curiously, the fighting went on even after the overall German capitulation, ending only on June 20.

    Some good information can be found here: https://www.landmarkscout.com/the-last-battle-of-ww2-in-europe-the-georgian-uprising-on-texel-the-netherlands/ even when the claim that this was the last WW2 battle in Europe is somewhat inaccurate.


  • @KaLeu

    Tragic.

    Reminds me of the Cossacks ending up in Italy for similar reasons and the Slovakians rebelling in 1945.

    Thanks for sharing!


  • @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 6, 1945, is the 80th anniversary of the beginning of Operation Grapeshot. The last major Allied offensive of the Italian campaign, it lasted until the end of the war on Europe. The battle was a follow-up to breaking of the Gothic Line several months before.

    Overall, the Italian campaign lasted almost 2 years and cost tens of thousands of Allied lives.


  • 80 Years Ago Today;
    Japanese Battleship Yamato is sunk by US Navy carrier aircraft North of Okinawa - April 7, 1945
    Yamato was hit by multiple bombs & torpedos from US Navy aircraft during Operation Kikusui I / Operation Ten-Go.
    As Yamato capsized one of the two bow magazines detonated in a tremendous explosion, an estimated 3,055 of her 3,332 crew perished.
    Operation Kikusui I was the last major Japanese naval operation in the Pacific during WW2.
    (Kikusui I refers to the naval aspect of Operation Ten-Go, which was the overall name for all Japanese kamikaze operations during the Okinawa campaign)
    The Naval Operation consisted of sending Yamato, the largest battleship in the world, and nine other Japanese warships for a suicide attack on Allied forces engaged in the Battle of Okinawa.
    Photographed from an aircraft from USS Yorktown CV-10
    US Navy photos

    yamato.jpg


  • Mushroom cloud from the Japanese Battleship Yamato after she exploded - April 7, 1945

    An escorting destroyer is on the left.

    Photographed from an aircraft from USS Yorktown CV-10

    US Navy photo NH 62582

    yamato1.jpg

  • 2024 '23 '22

    @SuperbattleshipYamato

    Beat me to it.


  • @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 16, 2025, marks the 80th anniversary of the beginning of the Battle of Berlin. The final nail in the coffin for Nazi Germany, this was probably the final major battle of the war in Europe.

  • 2024 '23 '22

    @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 22, 2025 is the 80th anniversary of the famous bunker scene:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t7PmzdINGZk

    In reality, when Hitler being informed that Felix Steiner wouldn’t be able to relieve the Soviet encirclement around Berlin, he simply declared that the war was lost. There was no rant.

    Oh, and I forgot from a few days ago:

    April 20, 2025 was the 80th anniversary of the last public appearance of Adolf Hitler, to award a few Hitler Youth. After this he would spend the rest of his life in a bunker.


  • @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 23, 2025 is the 80th anniversary of the Goring Telegram.

    Herman Goring, the commander of the German Luftwaffe throughout the war and Hitler’s likely successor, sent a telegram to Hitler following the Soviet encirclement of Berlin. In it, he asked for Hitler to transfer his power to him as Berlin and the Fuherbunker were cut off from the rest of Germany and thus Hitler could appear to be incapacitated. It was previously agreed upon that should the Fuher lost his freedom of action, his successor should take up the reins.

    One of Hitler’s major assistants, Martin Bormann, convinced him that Goring was actually attempting a coup. In response, Hitler forced Goring to resign and would later designate commander of the Kriegsmarine, Karl Donitz, as his heir.


  • @SuperbattleshipYamato

    April 25, 2025 is the 80th anniversary of Elbe Day, when American and Soviet troops met at the Elbe River in Germany, splitting what remained of Nazi Germany in 2. It was the first time that the Eastern and Western fronts connected on the ground.

    The day is also the 80th anniversary of the end of the East Prussian and Samland Offensives, where Soviets troops cleared their northern flank and captured East Prussia.

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