my two cents... After thirty years of historical reading, war gaming and working as a chief engineer on a real weapon system used by the US Navy, I offer my sage wisdom, and free advice (remember, you get what you pay for and everyone is entitled to my opinions). My view of significance in history is based on... what if the outcome of the battle had been different? Would anything have ultimately changed? From that persepective, I believe that only two BATTLES really matter in American history: the battle of Salamis and the Battle of the Virginia Capes. Other than these two actions, Naval BATTLES have had limited inluence on historical outcomes. Without Themosticles's victory at Salamis, we'd all be making our morning prayers facing Mecca. The seed of western culture, the European tradition and the concept of democracy would have been crushed. By medieval times, the European, and middle eastern economies were as dependent on German silver and the Hanseatic ports as control of the Med. Control of the Med was about profitability, not survival. The Spanish Armada had already failed in its mission with its inability to offload troops from the Netherlands. Our protestant English heritage would remain protestant. If Trafalgar had been a draw or a French victory, England would still never have been invaded, and Napolean would still have met his demise in a land campaign, in Russia. The American super frigates created a great naval tradition and had great psychological impact, but ultimately were effectively neutralized and militarily insignificant in the outcome of the War of 1812. If the Monitor and Virginia hadn't have slugged it out, some other ironclads would have. Regardless, no major strategic or political issue was or would have been resolved. Both sides had ironclads. Tsushima was a symbolic victory, but ultimately did not change the political map. Forty years later, the Russians still had a significant hand in the western Pacific. If the Japanese had been victorious at Midway or Leyte Gulf, the Americans would still have triumphed in the late 1940's after Hitler had been crushed (remember, the Battle of the Bulge had more American causualties than the entire Pacific theater). The atomic bomb was the ultimate discriminator against the kamikaze, not naval power. The victory off Yorktown was a bruising POLITICAL defeat to the British ruling class, helping the cause of American Independence. But even its true significance, like Salamis, was deciding the ultimate outcome of a land campaign. Now, Naval CAMPAIGNS are a different story. The cummulative effect of privateers in the War of 1812, the Union blockade of the Confederacy, U-boat wars in the Atlantic and the Pacific carrier campaign are examples that had incredible significance in that they not only affected political outcomes, but influenced naval doctrine for decades. That is a different discussion... |