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History Has Basically Forgotten These American Military Defeats
TopTenz ^ | DECEMBER 29, 2019 | LARRY HOLZWARTH

Posted on 12/31/2019 12:28:21 PM PST by artichokegrower

Americans have never accepted defeat easily. Not in sports, not in politics, not in warfare. Defeats in battle have only been sustained, in the American psyche, when the enemy has resorted to treachery, or the soldiers defending a given position were overcome by overwhelming odds, despite heroic and inspiring resistance.

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TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: america; bloggers; blogpimp; clickbait; history; warfare
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To: Pollster1

Left out Obama’s 2009-17 presidency.


21 posted on 12/31/2019 1:10:01 PM PST by VanShuyten ("...that all the donkeys were dead. I know nothing as to the fate of the less valuable animals.")
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To: Mariner
Left Pearl Harbor off the list too.

Savo Island was a bad defeat, but the Japanese withdrew, forfeiting an opportunity to destroy American transports supplying the new landings at Guadalcanal.

Tassafaronga was another defeat, but again the Japanese withdrew without unloading supplies badly needed by their starving army on Guadalcanal.

As to the Civil War battles, it depends on which Americans you're cheering for as to whether it was a victory or defeat. Several other battles had a much bigger effect on the outcome of the War.

22 posted on 12/31/2019 1:18:35 PM PST by colorado tanker
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To: Responsibility2nd

It’s ok. The discussion is probably beyond the comprehension level for you two anyway. I and others find history fascinating and to be learned from.


23 posted on 12/31/2019 1:20:09 PM PST by artichokegrower
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To: yarddog

He didn’t know.

Everyone suspected they would attack but they thought Wake Island, Philippines etc.

That would have been enough to get us into the war. FDR would never have known the extent of an attack on Pearl Harbor and the result of such an attack could have rendered PH useless.

If the Japanese had bombed destroyed the oil depots, the submarine pens and repair yards PH is a waste land. We’d be trying to fight in the Pacific using San Francisco as our forward base.


24 posted on 12/31/2019 1:20:27 PM PST by warsaw44
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To: yarddog

All the aircraft carriers were east of the island....the obsolite battleships were tightly packed together...

Sorry, but he knew....


25 posted on 12/31/2019 1:21:46 PM PST by stockpirate (Anyone who believes Epstein killed himself is a fool)
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To: blueunicorn6

Little Big Horn
Vietnam
Current war in ME going on for 16 years and 3 presidents.


26 posted on 12/31/2019 1:21:53 PM PST by DownInFlames (Galsd)
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To: DownInFlames

You are wrong and what’s more, gullible


27 posted on 12/31/2019 1:23:19 PM PST by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Progressives are existential American enemies)
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To: artichokegrower

Site sucks. Unreadable! Here is the whole thing. They shouldn’t have popovers over popovers over text blockers. Sucks to be them.

Oh, spoiler alert, I guess. Oh, well.

*************

History Has Basically Forgotten These American Military Defeats

Americans have never accepted defeat easily. Not in sports, not in politics, not in warfare. Defeats in battle have only been sustained, in the American psyche, when the enemy has resorted to treachery, or the soldiers defending a given position were overcome by overwhelming odds, despite heroic and inspiring resistance. The Pearl Harbor debacle is an example of the former; the fall of the Alamo of the latter. On a level field, with the odds even, Americans have always prevailed, or so it is widely believed.

Defeats in battle are forgotten, ignored by the history books, or explained in the manner described. MacArthur is forgiven the loss of the Philippines in early World War II, the worst defeat ever suffered by the United States Army. Pearl Harbor is blamed on Japanese perfidy, though there was ample warning that an attack was forthcoming and the harbor defenses and fleet were still unprepared. At both, as in most American military defeats, soldiers and sailors fought bravely, despite the miscalculations of their leaders. They did as well in these 10 all but forgotten military disasters of American history.

10. The invasion of Canada during the Revolutionary War

The 1775 American invasion of Canada was a two-pronged attack on the British citadel of Quebec. One branch was launched from Fort Ticonderoga, captured Montreal, and descended the St. Lawrence River to Quebec. Led by Brigadier General Richard Montgomery, troops from New England and New York accomplished their mission and prepared to attack the city. They were joined with a band of American troops commanded by Benedict Arnold. His men followed a route up the Kennebec River through the Maine wilderness, across swampy terrain all but impassable, wearing inadequate clothing and with little food.

But they made it, and on New Years Eve 1775, the combined American commands launched an assault on Quebec. It was bloodily repulsed by the British and Canadians. Montgomery was killed, Arnold was severely wounded, and more than half of his command was taken prisoner. The following spring the British drove the remnants of the American army out of Canada. It was the first defeat of the Americans during the Revolutionary War, and it secured Canada as a base of operations for the British for the rest of the conflict. Nearly as disheartening as the military defeat was the Americans learning Canada had little interest in joining the 13 American colonies in rebellion against Great Britain.

9. The Battle of Camden during the Revolutionary War

When General Horatio Gates was assigned to command the southern branch of the Continental Army, he arrived as the strutting, self-appointed “Hero of Saratoga.” In fact, that battle had been won for him through the exertions of Benedict Arnold, John Stark, Daniel Morgan, and other leaders. Gates, however, believed he should be in command of all the Continental Army, rather than the Virginian to whom Congress had given command, George Washington. In South Carolina, at Camden, despite having numerical superiority of nearly 2:1, Gates mishandled his troops. The 4,000-man American army was routed by 2,100 British, suffering 1,900 killed, wounded, and captured.

Gates wasn’t one of them. He was mounted that day on a horse well known locally for its speed and endurance. Gates made use of both attributes. As his command was pursued and harassed by British cavalry, the Hero of Saratoga rode north, finally coming to a stop in Charlotte, North Carolina that evening, safe from pursuit, and over 60 miles from the battlefield. Three days later he was 180 miles from the scene of his defeat when he reported the disaster to Congress, rather than to Washington. A politically connected officer, he managed to avoid formal inquiries into his conduct and defeat, though he never again held a field command. Washington dispatched Nathaniel Greene to rebuild the southern army and continue the revolution in that theater.

8. The Battle of the Wabash, the worst defeat ever suffered at the hands of Native Americans

Most consider Custer’s debacle at Little Big Horn to be the worst defeat ever inflicted by American Indians on the United States Army. It wasn’t even close. In 1791, approximately 1,000 American troops faced a more or less equally sized force of Native Americans along the Wabash River. The Indians were from several tribes, including Shawnee, Delaware, Miami, and others. They were led by Little Turtle, Blue Jacket, and Buckongahelas. The Americans were led by General Arthur St. Clair, who led his force from Fort Washington on the Ohio River (Cincinnati) to confront the natives on the Wabash, near present day Fort Recovery, Ohio.

The Native Americans attacked on the morning of November 4, 1791, as St. Clair’s men were at breakfast. To say that the defeat was total is an understatement. Of St. Clair’s 1,000-man force, 933 were casualties, with over 630 of those killed. There were also casualties among the women and children accompanying the troops. The Indians suffered 21 dead, and an estimated 40 wounded. St. Clair escaped the battle unscathed, though he was in the thick of the fighting, with three horses shot from under him. The battle featured the highest casualty rate ever suffered by the United States Army, and it was the worst defeat inflicted on the US Army by American Indians in the nation’s history.

7. The Surrender of Detroit in 1812

During the days leading up to America’s declaration of war on Great Britain in 1812, the frontier post of Fort Detroit was reinforced. Eventually General William Hull, the governor of the Michigan Territory, commanded a force of just under 2,200 men, about three quarters of them militia. He also had 30 guns to defend Fort Detroit, though his supplies of food were limited. The only item he had in large supply was whiskey. When a smaller British force arrived to besiege the city, supported by a large force of Indians, it threatened Hull’s supply lines. Early bombardments by the British in late July unnerved the American general.

Hull asked the British commander, General Isaac Brock, for three days to discuss surrender terms and prepare to abandon the post. Brock gave him three hours. Hull surrendered his entire command and the post, the American regulars taken as prisoners of war. The militia were paroled and sent home. Hull’s surrender of a large force to an enemy of inferior numbers was an astounding and humiliating defeat for American arms. Some said he was drunk at the time. He was court-martialed, convicted of cowardice (the presiding officer was Henry Dearborn, who had been taken prisoner during the invasion of Canada in 1775), and sentenced to death, though President James Madison commuted his sentence. His nephew, Isaac Hull, redeemed the family name with his victory in USS Constitution over HMS Guerriere later that summer.

6. The Bladensburg debacle led to the burning of Washington

In August 1814, an American force of regular troops, sailors, marines, and militia prepared to meet the invading British Army at Bladensburg, Maryland, about eight miles north of Washington DC. The American forces were commanded by Brigadier General William Winder, though President Madison was present near the battlefield and observed part of the fight. He wasn’t there long. The British force swept through the American Army, while the militia fled before the bayonets glittering in the hot August sun. Some American units, including naval gunners under Commodore Joshua Barney, stood their ground and inflicted heavy casualties on the British before being overrun.

The rout was so severe that it became known as the Bladensburg Races. President Madison and the rest of the American government abandoned Washington, which the British entered that night. The Capitol, White House, and other buildings of the government as well as private dwellings and some businesses were burned. August 24, 1814, was one of the most humiliating days in American military and civic history. It was also a day in which American blacks and whites served together in Joshua Barney’s naval unit; despite Madison’s concern that blacks would flee before the enemy, Barney’s men stood to their guns until captured or killed.

5. The Battle of Ball’s Bluff during the Civil War

In October 1861, the Union Army sent a reconnaissance force across the Potomac River to determine whether the Confederate Army was occupying Leesburg, Virginia. Three months earlier the Union had suffered a humiliating defeat at the Battle of Bull Run, and General George B. McClellan was in the process of rebuilding his forces in preparation for an attack in Virginia. A Union force under the command of General Pomeroy Stone was under the belief that an exposed Confederate encampment was ripe for attack near Ball’s Bluff, across the river from Union encampments on Harrison Island in the Potomac. Stone’s force moved into position to attack the camp on the evening of October 20.

In the morning they learned they had been misinformed. There was no Confederate camp. Instead, Stone’s force was exposed, and the absence of sufficient boats meant it could not be reinforced. What began as a skirmish with advanced Confederate units developed into a full-fledged engagement. Of the 1,700 men of Stone’s command engaged in the fighting, more than half became casualties before the remainder could be extracted to safety. A young Union Lieutenant who fought and was severely wounded that day was named Oliver Wendell Holmes. A sitting US Senator, Edward Baker, fought in the battle and was killed. The battle was a blow to Union morale, and Congress created the Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War, which existed for the remainder of the war.

4. The Battle of Drewry’s Bluff during the Civil War

The United States Navy held the advantages of superior firepower and experience over their Confederate counterparts during the Civil War. In 1862, with Union forces on the Peninsula below Richmond, Virginia, a flotilla of US Naval vessels was sent up the James River toward the Confederate Capital. Their mission was to probe the defenses of the city, and if possible, reduce them with naval bombardment. The Confederate ironclad Virginia had been scuttled, having failed to break the Union blockade, and because maneuvering the unwieldy vessel in the James River was virtually impossible. Five Union vessels proceeded upriver, including the ironclads USS Monitor, and USS Galena.

With the ironclads were USS Aroostock, and Port Royal, and an experimental revenue cutter, partially ironclad and partially submersible, Naugatuck. The Union ships penetrated to a bend in the James overlooked by Fort Darling atop Drewry’s Bluff. The fort had been armed with the heavy guns from the scuttled Virginia. Though those guns had failed to do much damage to Monitor during the famous engagement between the two ironclads, they did significant damage to Galena from their mounts on the fort. The Union ironclads were pounded by the fort’s guns, the wooden sided ships didn’t dare approach, and the entire flotilla was forced to withdraw, having done little damage and having failed to gain the information desired by McClellan. The engagement destroyed what little faith McClellan had in the Navy.

3. The Battle of Tassafaronga during World War II

During the naval battles fought at night in the Solomon Islands in the Guadalcanal campaign, the Japanese had two significant advantages. They had flashless powder for their ship’s guns, and extremely long-range torpedoes. The United States had the advantage of radar on most capital ships. On the night of November 30, 1942 an American force of five heavy cruisers and six destroyers caught a Japanese flotilla of eight destroyers. The American force positioned itself between the Japanese and the open sea and opened fire, sinking one of the enemy destroyers. The American commander, Admiral Carleton Wright, believed his force was outside torpedo range.

It wasn’t, and the flashes of the cruiser’s guns revealed the position of the battle line. The Japanese launched a volley of Long Lance torpedoes. Four American cruisers were hit and one, Northampton, was sunk. Three others, Pensacola, New Orleans, and Minneapolis were heavily damaged, all of them out of action for many months. The remaining Japanese destroyers escaped. It was one of the worst defeats suffered by the US Navy in its history. Nonetheless, 12 days after the battle the Japanese decided to abandon Guadalcanal, no longer able to suffer the casualties sustained in resupplying the island.

2. The Battle of Kasserine Pass during World War II

After the American landings in North Africa during Operation Torch, units of the US Army crossed the Atlas Mountains and established positions near Faid in Tunisia. The Battle of Kasserine Pass began when French troops were attacked by the Germans and American armor moved to the support of their ally. The Germans retreated, luring the Americans to pursue, and German artillery decimated the Allied tanks. The Americans were forced to withdraw into the Atlas Mountains. German forces under Erwin Rommel attacked the American defensive positions, overrunning them and forcing them backwards.

Before Rommel’s attack was finally stopped, American forces and their allies were pushed back fifty miles, in the first major engagement between US forces and the German Army. They suffered heavy casualties, with 6,300 men killed, wounded, or missing. They also lost over 180 tanks, 200 guns, and 600 other vehicles. American commander Dwight D. Eisenhower relieved the scene commander, Major General Lloyd Fredendall. He was replaced with Major General George S. Patton. The defeat at what came to be known as the Battle of Kasserine Pass was the worst defeat suffered by the Americans in the European Theater of Operations in the Second World War.

1. The Battle of Savo Island during World War II

The first major naval battle of the Guadalcanal campaign served to give notice of the ferocity of the fighting at sea around the Solomon Islands. Six American heavy cruisers, supported by two light cruisers and fifteen destroyers, engaged an inferior Japanese force of five heavy cruisers, two light cruisers, and one destroyer. Fought on the night of August 9, 1942, the Americans engaged the Japanese as they were attempting to attack the landing force on the island of Guadalcanal, destroying the landing craft and bombarding the troops ashore. The inexperience of the Allied force in night fighting at sea was quickly revealed.

At the Battle of Savo island, 37 minutes of heavy firing led to the loss one Australian and three American heavy cruisers. The Japanese also damaged several other ships. Over 1,000 Allied sailors were killed during the battle. In return, the Allied damage inflicted on the Japanese was relatively light. Three of their cruisers were lightly damaged, though none put out of action, and 129 Japanese sailors were killed. The Battle of Savo Island was the first engagement in waters which would come to be known as Ironbottom Sound during the Guadalcanal Campaign. Before the war ended, fifty Japanese and Allied ships were sunk in those waters. Other than Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Savo Island was the worst defeat in the history of the United States Navy.


28 posted on 12/31/2019 1:25:45 PM PST by Larry Lucido
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To: Pollster1

Ball’s Bluff was a small skirmish compared to Fredericksburg, where the same damnfool tactics were scaled up about x30.


29 posted on 12/31/2019 1:26:37 PM PST by Eric Pode of Croydon (I'm an unreconstructed Free Trader and I do not give a damn.)
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To: yarddog

I believe FDR did know.
We had broke Jap code, I believe.


30 posted on 12/31/2019 1:29:25 PM PST by southland ( I have faith in the creator Republicans freed the slaves. Heb 13:2)
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To: warsaw44

Agree that FDR did not know. He was a fanboy of the black-shoe navy from a very early age and it’s not conceivable that he would have let the BB’s sit there to be destroyed. Not only that but he was trying to find a way to get us into the war against Hitler first.


31 posted on 12/31/2019 1:29:52 PM PST by Eric Pode of Croydon (I'm an unreconstructed Free Trader and I do not give a damn.)
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To: artichokegrower
Today is the anniversary of the unsuccessful American attack at Quebec on December 31, 1775, which resulted in the death of one of the most promising American generals, Richard Montgomery. There is a plaque in Quebec showing the place where the attack occurred.

The British captured Detroit during the War of 1812. The American negotiators at Ghent foolishly let the British give it back to us in the peace treaty.

32 posted on 12/31/2019 1:31:19 PM PST by Verginius Rufus
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To: southland
We had broken their diplomatic code, but it took a long time to decrypt the final "this means war" message and the man who had it (LCdr Kramer) did not have the clout to immediately get through to the very few top brass and politicians who were authorized to read the intercepts.

And we actually decrypted the message faster than the Japanese embassy did, which is why they presented their declaration of war to Cordell Hull after the attack on Pearl rather than just a few minutes before as had been the plan.

The best description of this IMO is in the first chapter of The Codebreakers by David Kahn.

33 posted on 12/31/2019 1:36:30 PM PST by Eric Pode of Croydon (I'm an unreconstructed Free Trader and I do not give a damn.)
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To: artichokegrower

Failed to grab Canada twice. Three’s the charm.


34 posted on 12/31/2019 1:43:51 PM PST by fruser1
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To: colorado tanker

Gettysburg was the CSA defeat that sealed their fate.

Crushing rout.


35 posted on 12/31/2019 1:46:06 PM PST by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: yarddog; stockpirate

“At Dawn We Slept,” is a good book describing the pre-attack knowledge that Marshall and FDR were aware of.
They blamed it all on Kimmel and Short, the Navy and Army Commanders at Pearl.


36 posted on 12/31/2019 1:54:45 PM PST by BatGuano (Ya don't think I'd go into combat with loose change in my pocket, do Ya?)
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To: Pollster1

11. Battle of Lundy’s Lane War of 1812


37 posted on 12/31/2019 1:58:35 PM PST by Lion Den Dan
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To: Mariner

The South actually lost less men at Gettysburg than the North. There are various numbers, some saying different but the best sources say so.

After the first or second year the South was outnumbered in every way, often by huge numbers such as supplies. The only thing the South had an advantage was their gunpowder was better.


38 posted on 12/31/2019 2:04:44 PM PST by yarddog ( For I am persuaded.)
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To: bert

Nope. All that blood and treasure sprint on the last two.


39 posted on 12/31/2019 2:13:21 PM PST by DownInFlames (Galsd)
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To: artichokegrower

Pearl Harbor happened because the Navy was run by admirals who were picked more for their capacity for alcohol and their buddy connections than competence. They ignored basic Naval doctrine. They believed that Japanese pilots and planes, the best in the world at the time, were inferior. The carriers were at sea because Halsey followed doctrine and had his ships at sea. Kimmel didn’t. Thus he lined up his battleships for the Japanese, believing they were safe from torpedoes even though the Brits has used torpedoes in a similar harbor, Taranto. The Navy blew it. Totally.

That’s why we lost. Not some fictional theory about FDR. For all his faults FDR loved the Navy. I don’t think he’d have kept knowledge of the attack secret.

It was J Edgar Hoover who knew and kept it to himself. He even fired FBI agents who dared to bust Nazi spy rings.


40 posted on 12/31/2019 2:20:40 PM PST by Seruzawa (TANSTAAFL!)
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