About Me

Pearl City, HI, United States
Husband, father, grandfather, friend...a few of the roles acquired in 69 years of living. I keep an upbeat attitude, loving humor and the singular freedom of a perfect laugh. I don't let curmudgeons ruin my day; that only gives them power over me. Having experienced death once, I no longer fear it, although I am still frightened by the process of dying. I love to write because it allows me the freedom to vent those complex feelings that bounce restlessly off the walls of my mind; and express the beauty that can only be found within the human heart.

Friday, December 13, 2024

A Day of Infamy; A Day of Grace

 

Sunrise, Pearl Harbor
December 7th, 2024

Copyright © 2024
By Ralph F. Couey
Images and written content

The sun rose, spreading its light into the clear sky, a moment of indescribable peace and tranquility. Across the harbor, the water lay almost glassy. It was eerily similar to another morning 83 years earlier, that Day of Infamy; December 7th, 1941.

That day, however, the calm was suddenly broken by the roar of aircraft and the shocking explosions that heralded the beginning of a new war.

This day, however, the peaceful calm remained intact. On the north side of Ford Island the destroyer USS Carl Levin and the submarine USS Hawai'i moved through the water with reverent dignity. The drawbridge connecting the island to Honolulu had been pulled aside, and the two vessels made their way through, passing alongside the grave of a ship that has always been the symbol of that attack. As they came abeam of the USS Arizona Memorial, a whistle sounded across the water and the white-clad sailors manning the rails came to attention. This has always been the tradition. When any Navy ship passes the graceful white memorial, they render honors in respect partly for the old battleship, but just as much for the 1,177 men who remain entombed within the ship.  




At the appointed moment, 7:55 AM, or 07:55 in Navy speak, there was a sudden roar from the south. A formation of four F-22 Raptor fighters from the Hawai'i Air National Guard swept in low. Just as they reached the memorial, one aircraft went vertical, knifing into the brilliantly blue sky accompanied by the roar of afterburners. It was the traditional "missing man formation," the moving salute to the fallen. Across the harbor, at the Arizona Memorial Visitors Center, a 103-year-old Pearl Harbor survivor rose from his wheelchair to render a salute.

Aboard the battleship USS Missouri, just a few hundred yards from Arizona's bow, staff members stood at attention, our throats tight with emotion. We work here every day, but the sense of history and honor that fills this harbor is always present in our hearts. We all clearly understand that the freedoms we cherish are largely due to those who fought and died for them.


This ceremony occurs every year, and it never feels old or routine. It means so much to us because Arizona was where World War II began for America, and Missouri was where it ended 1,365 days later.

Around 0758, the first Japanese bomb fell on Ford Island.   A couple of minutes later, three air-launched torpedoes slammed into USS Oklahoma’s port side. She immediately flooded and began rolling over.  Abandon Ship was ordered before 08:00.  Oklahoma would be struck by two more torpedoes, sealing her fate. Hundreds of men would be trapped inside. 

USS West Virginia, moored outboard of USS Tennessee, was struck by an estimated 7 torpedoes.  She listed 28 degrees, but prompt action by damage control teams corrected the list to 16 degrees.  She settled nearly upright on the harbor bottom.

USS Arizona was hit around 08:10, an armor-piercing bomb penetrated the main deck and exploded in a space where black powder was being temporarily stored outside of the magazines.  The resulting explosion lifted the battleship out of the water and tore her apart, igniting a fire that took two days to extinguish.  Her losses were over half of those from the entire attack, 1,175 men.

USS Nevada was executing morning colors, accompanied by the ship’s band.  The National Anthem was being played when two strafing Japanese planes swept past, firing at the assembled sailors, but only succeeding in tearing the flag.  In a magnificent display of courage, nobody broke ranks, and the band finished the Anthem.  Nevada then went to work, shot down several planes, and was the only battleship that morning to slip her moorings and head for sea.  She was hit by one torpedo, but prompt counterflooding kept her upright.  The sight of this gallant ship steaming along with the tattered flag at her tail was an inspiration to all who witnessed her sortie.  But the Japanese attackers, seeing her moving, dropped a cluster of bombs on her forecastle (the area of the bow forward of the gun turrets) causing severe damage and forcing a decision to beach the ship rather than risk her sinking in the channel.

In less than 30 minutes, the Japanese accomplished their primary mission, the destruction of the Battle Line of the Pacific Fleet.  A lot of other damage was recorded, and 2,390 Americans lost their lives.  Half the combat aircraft stationed on O’ahu were destroyed as well as severe damage to airfields and related facilities.  But there was some good news.

The aircraft carriers, Enterprise, Lexington, and Saratoga were all at sea during the attack.  Their destruction would have severely crippled the United States.  For over a year, they were the sole source of offensive capability.  All the dry docks were intact, which enabled damaged ships to be quickly repaired.  The fuel tanks scattered around the harbor, containing 4.5 million barrels of oil were completely spared.  That loss would have forced all surviving ships back to the West Coast. 

Later historical analysis would show that the reaction of the American sailors, soldiers, and airmen was swift.  Men, mostly young, who had never been in battle took immediate action to get anti-aircraft guns in action, in many cases hacking open ammunition lockers.  Below decks, men struggled to control the damage.  Many formed passing lines to move ammunition from below decks up to the guns.  The stories of heroism and gallantry were numerous.  16 men would receive the Medal of Honor, 10 posthumously. 

It was, as President Roosevelt later described it, a day of infamy.

There is so much to contemplate—not just the death and destruction of that day, but everything that occurred during the war, including the horrifying atrocities committed against the innocent. Worldwide, approximately 69 million people perished, 50 million of whom were civilians. The world was torn apart in unimaginable violence as opposing forces clashed across the globe.

As painful as that was, one blessing emerged. Humanity, capable of such violence, also demonstrated the wisdom to end it. General Douglas MacArthur summed it up best:

"Today the guns are silent. A great tragedy has ended, and a great victory has been won. Death no longer rains from the skies; the seas bear only commerce. Men everywhere walk upright in the sunlight. And the entire world lies quietly at peace."

It is essential for us today to remember December 7th, 1941.  In a space of minutes, America moved from peace to global war, fought simultaneously in the Pacific and Europe.  But most remarkably, a nation with deep political divisions, immediately linked arms, stood shoulder to shoulder with a heartfelt unity that would propel America through three-and-a half years of war.  We learned a lot that day, and in the days that followed about ourselves and our nation. 

 Hopefully, these are lessons that will never be forgotten.



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