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Arleigh Burke sank more Japanese destroyers than any officer in the Pacific War. The Navy named 74 ships after him. Almost no one knows what he did.
He arrived in the Solomon Islands in October 1943 with a doctrine no one had approved. Eight weeks later, he had fought three major night engagements — and won all of them without losing a single American ship.
The Battle of Cape St. George is still taught at the Naval War College as a model of destroyer warfare. Zero American casualties. Three Japanese destroyers sunk in the dark, by radar, at ranges the official doctrine said were impossible.
This is also the story of what came after the war. The nuclear program he built against everyone's resistance. The political fights he chose to lose. The word on his headstone — just one word — that he specifically requested.
The Navy honored him completely. And in doing so, stopped telling the story of what he'd done.
#ww2 #arleighburke #navalwarfare #pacificwar #ww2documentary #destroyers #usnavy #worldwar2 #ww2history #militaryhistory
—
CHAPTERS
00:00 — Cold Open: Cape St. George, November 25th 1943 — The Night Attack
02:42 — Chapter 1: Boulder, Colorado 1901 — The Farmer's Son Who Went to Sea
06:49 — Chapter 2: Savo Island & Tassafaronga 1942 — Why the Navy Was Losing
11:21 — Chapter 3: The Heretic's Doctrine — Burke Rewrites the Rules
13:17 — Chapter 4: The Little Beavers — DesRon 23, October 1943
15:25 — Chapter 5: Empress Augusta Bay — First Test
19:57 — Chapter 6: Cape St. George — The Perfect Battle
25:03 — Chapter 7: The Impossible Jump — CNO, 1955
27:38 — Chapter 8: Polaris — Building the Nuclear Shield
35:05 — Chapter 9: The Slow Defeats — Cuba, McNamara, Retirement
38:08 — Chapter 10: The Ship — DDG-51, 1991
40:06 — Epilogue: Sailor
==========
THE WW2 GROGNARD COMPANION SERIES
Most histories tell you what happened.
This series explains why it happened.
These are long-form companion guides built from the same foundation as the channel — but taken further.
Doctrine. Intelligence. Decisions. Outcomes.
Each volume explores a different dimension of war — naval, land, and command — forming a complete understanding of the conflict.
https://theww2grognard.gumroad.com
==========
No ads. No sponsors. Just research and a lot of coffee (and beer): https://buymeacoffee.com/theww2grognard
—
IMAGE CREDITS
Historical photographs used in this documentary were sourced from the U.S. National Archives (NARA), the Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC) and Wikimedia Commons. All images are in the public domain. Archival footage sourced from the National Archives (NPC-1157, NPC-7931, NPC-10880) — public domain U.S. government works.
RESEARCH SOURCES
Primary:
E.B. Potter — Admiral Arleigh Burke (Naval Institute Press, 1990)
David Alan Rosenberg — Arleigh Burke: The Last CNO (U.S. Naval Institute, 1994)
U.S. Navy — Action Report: Battle of Cape St. George, November 25, 1943 (National Archives, RG 38)
Norman Friedman — The Fifty-Year War: Conflict and Strategy in the Cold War (Naval Institute Press, 2000)
Secondary:
Naval History and Heritage Command — Destroyer Squadron 23 records
Naval War College Review — Cape St. George as a case study in destroyer tactics
National WWII Museum — Pacific Theater Naval Operations
Wikipedia — Arleigh Burke, Battle of Cape St. George, USS Arleigh Burke (DDG-51), Polaris missile
Note: This documentary covers historical events from 1901 to 1996 and does not address current events.
MUSIC
Almost in F — Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: http://incompetech.com/
Piano No. 4 by Esther Abrami
Source: YouTube Audio Library
PRODUCTION TRANSPARENCY
Script & Research: Human-authored | Narration: AI-generated (ElevenLabs v3) | Narrator: Charles Mercer | Images: U.S. National Archives, NHHC, Wikimedia Commons — public domain
— Charles
By ROD INOJOSAArleigh Burke sank more Japanese destroyers than any officer in the Pacific War. The Navy named 74 ships after him. Almost no one knows what he did.
He arrived in the Solomon Islands in October 1943 with a doctrine no one had approved. Eight weeks later, he had fought three major night engagements — and won all of them without losing a single American ship.
The Battle of Cape St. George is still taught at the Naval War College as a model of destroyer warfare. Zero American casualties. Three Japanese destroyers sunk in the dark, by radar, at ranges the official doctrine said were impossible.
This is also the story of what came after the war. The nuclear program he built against everyone's resistance. The political fights he chose to lose. The word on his headstone — just one word — that he specifically requested.
The Navy honored him completely. And in doing so, stopped telling the story of what he'd done.
#ww2 #arleighburke #navalwarfare #pacificwar #ww2documentary #destroyers #usnavy #worldwar2 #ww2history #militaryhistory
—
CHAPTERS
00:00 — Cold Open: Cape St. George, November 25th 1943 — The Night Attack
02:42 — Chapter 1: Boulder, Colorado 1901 — The Farmer's Son Who Went to Sea
06:49 — Chapter 2: Savo Island & Tassafaronga 1942 — Why the Navy Was Losing
11:21 — Chapter 3: The Heretic's Doctrine — Burke Rewrites the Rules
13:17 — Chapter 4: The Little Beavers — DesRon 23, October 1943
15:25 — Chapter 5: Empress Augusta Bay — First Test
19:57 — Chapter 6: Cape St. George — The Perfect Battle
25:03 — Chapter 7: The Impossible Jump — CNO, 1955
27:38 — Chapter 8: Polaris — Building the Nuclear Shield
35:05 — Chapter 9: The Slow Defeats — Cuba, McNamara, Retirement
38:08 — Chapter 10: The Ship — DDG-51, 1991
40:06 — Epilogue: Sailor
==========
THE WW2 GROGNARD COMPANION SERIES
Most histories tell you what happened.
This series explains why it happened.
These are long-form companion guides built from the same foundation as the channel — but taken further.
Doctrine. Intelligence. Decisions. Outcomes.
Each volume explores a different dimension of war — naval, land, and command — forming a complete understanding of the conflict.
https://theww2grognard.gumroad.com
==========
No ads. No sponsors. Just research and a lot of coffee (and beer): https://buymeacoffee.com/theww2grognard
—
IMAGE CREDITS
Historical photographs used in this documentary were sourced from the U.S. National Archives (NARA), the Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC) and Wikimedia Commons. All images are in the public domain. Archival footage sourced from the National Archives (NPC-1157, NPC-7931, NPC-10880) — public domain U.S. government works.
RESEARCH SOURCES
Primary:
E.B. Potter — Admiral Arleigh Burke (Naval Institute Press, 1990)
David Alan Rosenberg — Arleigh Burke: The Last CNO (U.S. Naval Institute, 1994)
U.S. Navy — Action Report: Battle of Cape St. George, November 25, 1943 (National Archives, RG 38)
Norman Friedman — The Fifty-Year War: Conflict and Strategy in the Cold War (Naval Institute Press, 2000)
Secondary:
Naval History and Heritage Command — Destroyer Squadron 23 records
Naval War College Review — Cape St. George as a case study in destroyer tactics
National WWII Museum — Pacific Theater Naval Operations
Wikipedia — Arleigh Burke, Battle of Cape St. George, USS Arleigh Burke (DDG-51), Polaris missile
Note: This documentary covers historical events from 1901 to 1996 and does not address current events.
MUSIC
Almost in F — Tranquillity by Kevin MacLeod
Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Source: http://incompetech.com/
Piano No. 4 by Esther Abrami
Source: YouTube Audio Library
PRODUCTION TRANSPARENCY
Script & Research: Human-authored | Narration: AI-generated (ElevenLabs v3) | Narrator: Charles Mercer | Images: U.S. National Archives, NHHC, Wikimedia Commons — public domain
— Charles