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-   -   Look! Me island! (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=137107)

DavyJonesFootlocker 05-21-08 07:36 AM

Look! Me island!
 
Ah, I found Trinidad on the map in SH4. Thinking about creating a mission off the coast. Better get me history book out.

Raptor1 05-21-08 09:19 AM

Nothing happened in Trinidad during WWII...

mcf1 05-21-08 09:35 AM

Found a history book about it.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History...dad_and_Tobago

peabody 05-21-08 09:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raptor1
Nothing happened in Trinidad during WWII...

Nuttin happin dere now either.:rotfl::rotfl:

Peabody

Raptor1 05-21-08 09:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by peabody
Quote:

Originally Posted by Raptor1
Nothing happened in Trinidad during WWII...

Nuttin happin dere now either.:rotfl::rotfl:

Peabody

Shh, Don't tell everyone...

DavyJonesFootlocker 05-21-08 10:57 AM

You are so incorrect! The Royal Navy tangled with a couple of uboats and a u-boat ace was held captive here. They would've fed him to the sharks but sharks find europeans bland-tasting. We need salt!:rotfl::rotfl::rotfl::rotfl::rotfl:
Yeah Mon!

Read dis, nah mon: http://uboat.net/allies/merchants/1594.html

akdavis 05-21-08 12:01 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raptor1
Nothing happened in Trinidad during WWII...

So very wrong.

Quote:

Most South American oil originated in two places: the rich fields under the shallow Lake Maracaibo, Venezuela, adn the British West Indies island of Trinidad...

...Most of the Trinidad oil ws refined on that island. Strategically located close off the northeast coast of Venezuela, Trinidad was also a port of call for ships southbound to Latin American and African ports and for a fleet of shallow-draft ships that carried bauxite (the base mineral for aluminum) north from British Guiana and Dutch Guiana (Surinam) to Trinidad, where the bauxite was transferred to larger ships...

...Of the two U-boats at Trinidad, the enw U-161, commanded by the twenty-eight-year-old Albrecht Achilles making his first patrol as skipper, had the first successes. Cruising bravely into the shallow, confined Gulf of Paria, separating Trinidad from mainland Venezuela, Achilles approached Trinidad's well-lighted principal city, Port of Spain, as though U-161 were a cruise ship. Lying on the surface off Port of Spain just before midnight on February 18 in thirty-six feet of water, Achilles fired a bow salvo at two ships. Two of the four torpedoes failed or missed, but the other two hit a 7,000 ton British tanker and a 7,500 ton American freighter. Both ships settled to the shallow bottom, but both were later salvaged and returned to service.

Fully alive to the strategic importance of Trinidad, both as a source of oil and as a way station for shipping, Admiral Hoover was in the process of creating a powerful ASW base on the island, comparable to that on Iceland. But the work had only just begun and Achilles caught the Allied forces by surprise. Thus he was able to make the long run through shallow waters to open seas on the surface without countermeasures. Although the results were in now way comparable, his bold penetration of the Gulf of Paria was to be compared to Prien's feat at Scapa Flow.[emphasis added]
-Clay Blair, Hitler's U-boat War: The Hunters, 1939-1942

Raptor1 05-21-08 12:11 PM

Well, I never heard of THAT...

DavyJonesFootlocker 05-21-08 12:11 PM

Thank you kind sir. Mr. Peabody and company will now walk the plank. Ignorance is no excuse!:yep::arrgh!:

Raptor1 05-21-08 12:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DavyJonesFootlocker
Thank you kind sir. Mr. Peabody and company will now walk the plank. Ignorance is no excuse!:yep::arrgh!:

You'll never take me alive!

DavyJonesFootlocker 05-21-08 01:07 PM

Oh, yeah!? Just you wait. Bwahahaaaa!

Anyway I'm learning some stuff about the u-boat war here at home. Geez, those Germans were far away from home. But I bet they prefer it there than freezing their butts off in some icy sea. There once was a story of a British Army Corporal who had to be dragged away kicking and screaming when the war ended. He was to be shipped off back home but he wanted to stay and finish his sun tan.:lol: As for modern day Germans- well they're taking over our sister isle of Tobago. We gotta stop them!:rotfl:

peabody 05-21-08 02:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DavyJonesFootlocker
Thank you kind sir. Mr. Peabody and company will now walk the plank. Ignorance is no excuse!:yep::arrgh!:

I'm not smart enough to claim ignorance.:smug:

Peabody

GerritJ9 05-22-08 10:26 AM

A lot happened in Trinidad when I lived there :)

Raptor1 05-22-08 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GerritJ9
A lot happened in Trinidad when I lived there :)

You're old enough to have been there at the 18th century?

akdavis 05-22-08 01:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raptor1
Quote:

Originally Posted by GerritJ9
A lot happened in Trinidad when I lived there :)

You're old enough to have been there at the 18th century?

I know you jest, but you do realize that Trinidad is not uninhabited desert isle, don't you?


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