
The Battle of Midway was a decisive naval battle during World War II that occurred six months after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. The crew aboard Petrel has been surveying the area documenting more than 500 square nautical miles.
Akagi, as flagship of Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, was part of the six-carrier fleet that launched the planes that attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, leading to the United States’ formal entry into World War II.
Commissioned on March 25, 1927, Akagi was originally designed as a battle cruiser. She was converted into an aircraft carrier under the terms of the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty. Akagi underwent an expensive reconstruction in 1935 that gave her the full-length flight deck configuration that she would enter the Pacific War with.
Akagi was fatally attacked on June 4, 1942 during the historic Battle of Midway by American dive bombers, including a significant hit by American pilot Lieutenant Richard Best whose bomb landed at the aft edge of the middle elevator. Best's 1,000-pound bomb crashed through the flight deck and exploded in the upper hangar.
After valiant efforts to evacuate the remaining Japanese sailors, the Akagi was ordered scuttled by torpedoes fired by her own destroyers. She sank bow first. Of the crew members on board, 267 were killed as a result of the battle.
Four Japanese and three American aircraft carriers participated in the battle. The four Japanese fleet carriers, Kaga, Akagi, Soryu and Hiryu, part of the six-carrier force that had attacked Pearl Harbor six months earlier — were all sunk, as was the heavy Japanese cruiser Mikuma. The U.S. lost carrier Yorktown and destroyer Hammann.

Jacob White Eyes, Iron Tail and Buffalo Bill Cody at Caffè Greco in Rome during Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show tour in Europe back in 1890.

View of Rico, Colorado in 1898.

April 15, 1872, this bloody scrimmage was the result of a jurisdictional dispute between the U.S. government and the Cherokee court system.
Read about the Goingsnake Massacre or the Cherokee Courtroom Shootout –
https://www.legendsofamerica.com/cherokee-courtroom.../
[photo: Hildebrand Mill, Oklahoma where the trouble began]