Battle of the Coral Sea
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- The Royal United Services Institute of New South Wales - The Battle of the Coral Sea, May 1942
- Australian War Memorial - Battle of the Coral Sea
- Warfare History Network - The Battle of the Coral Sea
- History Learning Site - The Battle of Coral Sea
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Committee - The Battle of the Coral Sea
- HistoryNet - What If the Japanese Had Won the Battle of the Coral Sea?
- The National WWII Museum - The Battle of Coral Sea: A Retrospective
- Naval Historical Society of Australia - The Battle of the Coral Sea
- Royal Australian Navy - Battle of the Coral Sea
- Military History Encyclopedia on the Web - Battle of the Coral Sea
- Date:
- May 4, 1942 - May 8, 1942
- Location:
- Coral Sea
- Pacific Ocean
- Solomon Sea
- Participants:
- Japan
- United States
- Context:
- Pacific War
- World War II
- Key People:
- Chester W. Nimitz
Battle of the Coral Sea, (May 4–8, 1942) World War II naval and air engagement in which a U.S. fleet turned back a Japanese invasion force that had been heading for strategic Port Moresby in New Guinea.
By the end of April 1942 the Japanese were ready to seize control of the Coral Sea (between Australia and New Caledonia) by establishing air bases at Port Moresby in southeastern New Guinea and at Tulagi in the southern Solomons. But Allied intelligence learned of the Japanese plan to seize Port Moresby and alerted all available sea and air power. When the Japanese landed at Tulagi on May 3, carrier-based U.S. planes from a task force commanded by Rear Adm. Frank J. Fletcher struck the landing group, sinking one destroyer and some minesweepers and landing barges. Most of the naval units covering the main Japanese invasion force that left Rabaul, New Britain, for Port Moresby on May 4 took a circuitous route to the east, which invited a clash with Fletcher’s forces.
On May 5 and 6, 1942, opposing carrier groups sought each other, and in the morning of May 7 Japanese carrier-based planes sank a U.S. destroyer and an oiler. Fletcher’s planes sank the light carrier Shoho and a cruiser. The next day Japanese aircraft sank the U.S. carrier Lexington and damaged the carrier Yorktown, while U.S. planes so crippled the large Japanese carrier Shokaku that it had to retire from action. So many Japanese planes were lost that the Port Moresby invasion force, without adequate air cover and harassed by Allied land-based bombers, turned back to Rabaul. The four-day engagement was a strategic victory for the Allies. The battle, which U.S. Adm. Ernest J. King described as “the first major engagement in naval history in which surface ships did not exchange a single shot,” foreshadowed the kind of carrier warfare that marked later fighting in the Pacific War.