What You Need to Know: After years of analysis, Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen's team discovered the wreck of the Japanese battleship Musashi in 2015, 3,280 feet deep in the Philippine Sibuyan Sea.
sinking battleship Musashi, putting heavy cruiser Myoko out of action and damaging several others. (Halsey’s carrier Princeton was fatally wounded by a land-based Japanese Judy, the only one of ...
The USS Texas is still without a permanent home, following a breakdown in negotiations this week between the Battleship Foundation and Port of Galveston parties. After considering a motion last ...
Leyte Gulf. 1944-10-25. In the battle for Leyte Gulf the large Japanese battleship Yamato was heavily damaged by bombs from carrier planes of the US Third Fleet, under Admiral Halsey. Your generous ...
Neither did Japan abandon the battleship. Again, the design concept emphasised range. After the expiry of the naval limitation treaties, the Japanese Navy built the two largest battleships in history, ...
Right now, the ship doesn't have a permanent home for the future. Battleship Texas released a statement that said, "We are surprised and disappointed by the Wharves board's decision to terminate ...
Battleship Texas, one of the last remaining vessels to survive both World War I and II, will not be docked at the Port of Galveston's Pier 19, the port's governing body decided Tuesday. The ...
GALVESTON, Texas (KTRK) -- A plan involving a new permanent home for the Battleship Texas appears to be in a battle of its own. The Galveston Wharves Board voted Tuesday to terminate negotiations ...
Effectively, the board's decision leaves the historic dreadnought—one of only a handful to have served in both world wars, and reportedly the world's largest battleship still afloat—stranded ...
GALVESTON — After 12 months of back and forth and citing irreconcilable differences, the Wharves Board of Trustees on Tuesday voted to sink a deal to berth the Battleship Texas at the Port of ...
Want to relive that Japanese holiday, or get your eye in before you head overseas? You're in luck, because Melbourne is full of top-tier Japanese restaurants. Whether you’re craving sushi, ramen, ...