Posted on 10/19/2017 3:10:31 PM PDT by fugazi
1781: British Gen. Charles Cornwallis formally surrenders 7,087 officers and men, 900 seamen, 144 cannons, 15 galleys, a frigate, and 30 transport ships to an American and French force at Yorktown, Va., effectively ending the American Revolution.
1944: Two Interstate TDR assault drones are launched against Japanese gun emplacements on Ballale Island - one drone missing its target and another delivering two of its four 100-lb. bombs on the target. The TDR was a two-engine, unmanned airplane remotely controlled by a Grumman TBF "Avenger" via a television camera feed.
1950: Troopers with the 5th Cavalry Regiment enter Pyongyang, capturing the North Korean capitol. The following day, the 187th Regimental Combat Team will conduct two parachute drops north of the capitol to cut off retreating North Korean forces. The Communists will recapture Pyongyang on Dec. 5, after China joins the war.
1965: Two regiments of North Vietnamese soldiers begin a week-long siege on the Special Forces camp at Plei Me in South Vietnam's central highlands. The outnumbered defenders repelled repeated attacks and eventually drove off the NVA forces. Following the battle, Gen. William Westmoreland ordered the 1st Cavalry Division (Airmobile) to find and defeat the forces that attacked Plei Me, resulting in the bloody Battle of Ia Drang.
1987: Following an Iranian missile attack on a merchant vessel, U.S. warships attack and destroy two Iranian oil platforms being used by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps to attack shipping in the Persian Gulf.
2001: 200 Army Rangers parachute into
(Excerpt) Read more at victoryinstitute.net ...
Gen. Washington’s diary entry for Oct 19, 1781:
19th. In the Morning early I had them copied and sent word to Lord Cornwallis that I expected to have them signed at 11 Oclock and that the Garrison would March out at two Oclockboth of which were accordingly done.1 Two redoubts on the Enemys left being possessed (the one by a detachment of French Grenadiers, & the other by American Infantry) with orders to prevent all intercourse between the army & Country and the Townwhile Officers in the several departments were employed in taking acct. of the public Stores &ca.
A German remote controlled drone sank a U.S. troop ship in the Mediterranean during WWII. We kept the results secret until the end of the war, maybe even longer.
Also, the US would take worn out B-24s, fit them with remote control flying equipment, fill them with explosives, and have a crew of two pilots fly them near the target, engage the r/c from a shadowing aircraft, and bail out.
The flying bomb would then be flown into a hardened target.
The battle of Cedar Creek on this date is not an event in American Military History?
The battle of Cedar Creek, on this date, is not an event in American Military History?
It is indeed and was my first thought as well seeing this list. good list though.
The Germans used this type of weapon first.
The battle of Cedar Creek, on this date, is not an event in American Military History?
It is also odd that “spread spectrum” radio transmission was invented in WWII by the beautiful movie actress Heady Lamar. She was secretly an electronics engineer. The Navy did not use her invention until long after the war.
Yorktown did not ‘effectively’ end the American Revolution. British troops did not evacuate several cities until 1783. Frontier forts, like Detroit, remained occupied until after ratification of the Constitution.
Are you sure it wasn’t Hedley Lamarr? They’re often mistaken for each other.
“engage the r/c from a shadowing aircraft, and bail out.”
Unless it blew up first. Which is why JFK was president instead of his brother.
Thanks
Wrote the post from the hospital, so I was lucky to have anything up today. Its hard to track down all the events and I definitely miss some here and there as well as botch details, of which the history buffs at FR have been helpful at catching. Cedar Creek will definitely make the list next year!
The remotely piloted project - I believe it was an OSS Operation - was fascinating. And yes, JFKs brother was among a handful of pilots that lost their lives on the secret project, whose target in that instance was the Nazi sub pens on the French coast that had cost a lot of American pilots lives without putting a dent in the target.
* Meant to say remotely piloted B-17 project *
Lightning? Static? Exposed wiring from the previous mission shorting? Poorly installed R/C? Smoking?
Oh, there are those who can spell. Thank you for the correction.
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