OT - WWII quiz

World in Flames is the computer version of Australian Design Group classic board game. World In Flames is a highly detailed game covering the both Europe and Pacific Theaters of Operations during World War II. If you want grand strategy this game is for you.

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micheljq
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RE: Next quiz

Post by micheljq »

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

What aircraft type did the shooting?

Yamamoto was leaving Rabaul and i guess he was shot down by a P38 lightning.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: micheljq

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

What aircraft type did the shooting?

Yamamoto was leaving Rabaul and i guess he was shot down by a P38 lightning.
Warspite1

Mmm, sorry but I can't give you leaving Rabaul I'm afraid michelq. You are correct though re the P-38 being responsible [:)]
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RE: Next quiz

Post by terje439 »

ORIGINAL: warspite1
Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

The Solomons
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("She is to be torpedoed!")
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: terje439

ORIGINAL: warspite1
Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

The Solomons
Warspite1

Looking for something a little more exact Terje439, but you are in the right part of the world.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by micheljq »

ORIGINAL: warspite1

ORIGINAL: terje439

ORIGINAL: warspite1
Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

The Solomons
Warspite1

Looking for something a little more exact Terje439, but you are in the right part of the world.

Over New-Guinea?
Michel Desjardins,
"Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious" - Oscar Wilde
"History is a set of lies agreed upon" - Napoleon Bonaparte after the battle of Waterloo, june 18th, 1815
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

Terje was closer
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RE: Next quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: warspite1

Who shot down Isoroku Yamamoto?

Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

What aircraft type did the shooting?

When was it?
It was Lamphier (or his wingman I'm not really sure without googling it), onboard a P-38G, and Yamamoto was on an inspection tour, flown in a G4M1 Betty from Rabaul to the Salomon, and when he was shot down by the long ranged P-38 mission, he was about to land on the southern tip of Bougainville Island, I'm not sure if it is Buna.
The story don't tell if he died on the crash or under the Lightnings' gunfire, but on that 18 april 1943 the fortune definitely stopped smiling to the Japanese.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Froonp
ORIGINAL: warspite1

Who shot down Isoroku Yamamoto?

Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

What aircraft type did the shooting?

When was it?
It was Lamphier (or his wingman I'm not really sure without googling it), onboard a P-38G, and Yamamoto was on an inspection tour, flown in a G4M1 Betty from Rabaul to the Salomon, and when he was shot down by the long ranged P-38 mission, he was about to land on the southern tip of Bougainville Island, I'm not sure if it is Buna.
The story don't tell if he died on the crash or under the Lightnings' gunfire, but on that 18 april 1943 the fortune definitely stopped smiling to the Japanese.
Warspite1

1. Correct it was Captain Thomas Lamphier
2. The plane was on its way from Rabaul to Ballale Island, in the Solomons. It was over Bougainville when intercepted by the US aircraft. The plane crashed in the jungle near Buin, Bougainville.
3. It was a Lightning P-38G
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RE: Next quiz

Post by Froonp »

ORIGINAL: warspite1

ORIGINAL: Froonp
ORIGINAL: warspite1

Who shot down Isoroku Yamamoto?

Where was his plane knocked out of the sky?

What aircraft type did the shooting?

When was it?
It was Lamphier (or his wingman I'm not really sure without googling it), onboard a P-38G, and Yamamoto was on an inspection tour, flown in a G4M1 Betty from Rabaul to the Salomon, and when he was shot down by the long ranged P-38 mission, he was about to land on the southern tip of Bougainville Island, I'm not sure if it is Buna.
The story don't tell if he died on the crash or under the Lightnings' gunfire, but on that 18 april 1943 the fortune definitely stopped smiling to the Japanese.
Warspite1

1. Correct it was Captain Thomas Lamphier
2. The plane was on its way from Rabaul to Ballale Island, in the Solomons. It was over Bougainville when intercepted by the US aircraft. The plane crashed in the jungle near Buin, Bougainville.
3. It was a Lightning P-38G
There is a controversy as to be sure it was Lamphier, because I think there were 2 Betty in the Japanese flight, and it's not sure inside which one Yamamoto was, and not sure Lamphier downed both.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: Froonp

ORIGINAL: warspite1

ORIGINAL: Froonp


It was Lamphier (or his wingman I'm not really sure without googling it), onboard a P-38G, and Yamamoto was on an inspection tour, flown in a G4M1 Betty from Rabaul to the Salomon, and when he was shot down by the long ranged P-38 mission, he was about to land on the southern tip of Bougainville Island, I'm not sure if it is Buna.
The story don't tell if he died on the crash or under the Lightnings' gunfire, but on that 18 april 1943 the fortune definitely stopped smiling to the Japanese.
Warspite1

1. Correct it was Captain Thomas Lamphier
2. The plane was on its way from Rabaul to Ballale Island, in the Solomons. It was over Bougainville when intercepted by the US aircraft. The plane crashed in the jungle near Buin, Bougainville.
3. It was a Lightning P-38G
There is a controversy as to be sure it was Lamphier, because I think there were 2 Betty in the Japanese flight, and it's not sure inside which one Yamamoto was, and not sure Lamphier downed both.
Warspite1

The story I heard was that Lt Rex Barber shot down the other Betty that carried Ugaki (although the latter survived)
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RE: Next quiz

Post by Extraneous »

Thomas George Lanphier, Jr. (November 27, 1915 – November 26, 1987) was a Colonel and World War II fighter pilot who was first solely, then partially credited with shooting down the plane carrying Admiral Yamamoto, the commander in chief of the Japanese Imperial Navy.


[/align][/align]Captain Lanphier’s wingman Leutenant Rex T. Barber shared credit for shooting down Yamamoto.


It was only after Lanphier's death that an organized campaign began to nullify his half-credit for the victory and award full credit to his wingman.

[:D] So either answer is correct or wrong. [:D]


Immediately on landing (his plane was so short on fuel that one engine quit during landing rollout) Lanphier again put in a claim for shooting down the bomber, relating that when he turned to engage the escort Zeroes he shot the wing off one, flipped upside down as he circled back towards the bombers, and saw the lead bomber turning a circle below him. He stated he came out of his turn at a right angle to the circling bomber and fired, blowing off its right wing. He stated that he witnessed Barber shoot down another bomber which also crashed in the jungle. Holmes put in a claim for the Betty that crashed into the water, so it was assumed that three bombers had been downed. The fifteen surviving pilots were not debriefed after the mission because this formal interrogation did not exist in the procedures on Guadalcanal at that time, and thus it was never formally established that no one else witnessed Lanphier's claim.

The crash site and body of Admiral Yamamoto were found the next day in the jungle north of the coastal site of the former Australian patrol post and Catholic mission of Buin (which was re-established, after the war, several kilometres inland) by a Japanese search and rescue party, led by Army engineer Lieutenant Hamasuna. According to Hamasuna, Yamamoto had been thrown clear of the plane's wreckage, his white-gloved hand grasping the hilt of his katana, still upright in his seat under a tree. Hamasuna said Yamamoto was instantly recognizable, head dipped down as if deep in thought. A post-mortem of the body disclosed that Yamamoto received two wounds, one to the back of his left shoulder and one to his left lower jaw that exited above his right eye. Whether the admiral initially survived the crash has been a matter of controversy in Japan.

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RE: Next quiz

Post by Orm »

According to wiki (if you can trust wiki) Rex Barber is officially credited with the sole kill of Yamamoto.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_ ... ontroversy
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

and the age old problem rears its ugly head again..... Different sources different answers....ho hum.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by Extraneous »

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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

Following Yamamoto's death, who succeeded him as Commander of the Combined Fleet?
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

Where, and how, did Admiral Chuichi Nagumo (of Kido Butai fame) meet his end?
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

Who succeeded Hideki Tojo as Prime Minister of Japan?
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

What was the event that directly led to Hideki Tojo's resignation from the post of Prime Minister?
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RE: Next quiz

Post by ezzler »

Saipan was the resigning issue.
Nagumo might have been in line to take the fleet.  No idea if he ever did.
Don't know the rest.
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RE: Next quiz

Post by warspite1 »

ORIGINAL: ezz

Saipan was the resigning issue.
Nagumo might have been in line to take the fleet.  No idea if he ever did.
Don't know the rest.
Warspite1

The loss of Saipan in the Marianas was indeed the incident that led to Tojo's resignation (although given the way the war was going, this was simply the straw that broke the camel's back!!).

By the time Yamamoto was killed, Nagumo's star had well and truly ceased to rise and (as far as I understand it) he was never considered as a replacement for Yamamoto.
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