- By Star-Advertiser staff
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Nov. 30, 2016
From its captain on the bridge to three young sailors below deck, the USS West Virginia was engulfed in heroism and tragedy when six Japanese torpedoes crippled and sank the battleship, killing 106 of its men.
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- By Star-Advertiser staff
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Nov. 30, 2016
The attack on Pearl Harbor had barely begun when the battleship USS California was struck by two Japanese torpedoes. A later bomb blast further disabled the vessel, which started taking on water.
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The World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument, home of the USS Arizona Memorial, consistently has been a top tourism draw for Hawaii, but attendance has been declining over the past few years.
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Japan’s devastating attack on Pearl Harbor and Oahu aroused emotions in America as no other event in its history ever had, the authors of “At Dawn We Slept” wrote.
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The 1,760-pound Japanese armor-piercing bomb dropped from 10,000 feet onto the USS Arizona would wreck the ship, kill most of the crew and catapult the old battleship into the national consciousness.
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The anti-aircraft and target training ship USS Utah, berthed on the west side of Ford Island, was hit by two torpedoes and capsized, killing 64 of its crew.
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Pearl Harbor was full of death and destruction — that of more than 2,000 men and the oil, debris and twisted, blackened hulls of formerly formidable warships that the fallen sailors and Marines had served on.
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The end of the USS Arizona as a battleship came within the first 15 minutes of the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.
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“The head of my (transportation) section went on a sailing trip to Molokai on Friday while I served a double shift.”
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“I heard what sounded like muffled explosions from a considerable distance away.”
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“I was on the deck of the Arizona when we became aware of the attack.”
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In the 1930s and preceding the attack on Pearl Harbor, Imperial Japan had a big problem: It was dependent on American oil to fuel its expansionist aspirations.
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Oahu was an impregnable fortress. Japan wouldn’t dare attack the United States, a first-rate nation, and its Pacific Fleet in Hawaii. Possibly elsewhere, such asin the Philippines, but certainly not Hawaii.
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At about 7:46 a.m. Dec. 7, 1941 — several minutes before they hit Pearl Harbor — Japanese fighters were poised to attack Naval Air Station Kaneohe and its 33 PBY Catalina reconnaissance flying boats.
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Within about five minutes of the Pearl Harbor attack, Navy ships began putting up a tremendous anti-aircraft barrage, according to the U.S. Army Center of Military History.
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- By Star-Advertiser staff
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Nov. 30, 2016
Stuck in dry dock beyond its scheduled Dec. 6 departure date, the USS Pennsylvania was reported to be one of the first ships to return fire on Japanese raiders.
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The bravest of the brave are awarded the Medal of Honor, the highest military decoration by the U.S. government. It is bestowed by the U.S. Congress to members of the armed forces who distinguish themselves through “conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his or her life above and beyond the call of duty” while engaged in an action against an enemy of the United States.
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