- Joined
- Oct 11, 2010
- Messages
- 12,704
- Reaction score
- 7,454
- Age
- 61
At dawn on December 7, 1941, more than half of the United States Pacific Fleet, approximately 150 vessels and service craft, lay at anchor or alongside piers in Pearl Harbor. All but one of the Pacific fleet's battleships were in port that morning, most of them moored to quays flanking Ford Island. By 10:00 a.m., the tranquil Sunday calm had been shattered. Twenty-one vessels lay sunk or damaged, the fighting backbone of the fleet apparently broken. Smoke from burning planes and hangars filled the sky, while oil from sinking ships clogged the harbor. Death was everywhere.
Honolulu civilians watch what they think is a military practice on December 7, 1941, not realizing at first that this was an actual attack.
The loss of life that day wasn't restricted only to military personnel, or even to Pearl Harbor. Civilians of very different backgrounds, ages, and locations on the island of Oahu also took a heavy toll.
This private car, a victim of a strafing japanese plane.
Many civilians worked on the military bases and were present during the attack. Seven civilians were wounded and one killed during a mistaken Japanese attack on the sugar mill at Waipahu. A similar attack at the sugar mill near MCAS Ewa killed two and wounded seven, while another at Wahiawa wounded nine and killed two. One of the Japanese aircraft crashed into a house at Wahiawa.
Several civilian aircraft were in the air over Oahu on Sunday morning. At 7:51 a.m., two Shokaku fighters on their way to NAS Kaneohe fired upon a civilian trainer over the northeastern coastal town of Lai'e. At 7:54 a.m., fighters escorting dive-bombers from Shokaku attacked two civilian Piper Cub trainers. Two of the occupants of the Pipers were missing and one died after landing.
Civilian casualties lie in a makeshift first-aid center.
Perhaps the most tragic civilian casualties come from those killed by "friendly fire." Many of the 5-inch anti-aircraft rounds fired at the Japanese aircraft did not detonate properly and landed in civilian areas around Pearl Harbor and Honolulu, exploding on contact with the ground.
Strafed Fire House on Hickam Air Field with two fire trucks outside and debris from the attack.
In total, 49 civilians were killed and 35 wounded during the attack on Oahu.
Then the Territorial Governor Joseph Poindexter agreed to place the island under martial law. During the next nearly three years constitutional rights in the territory were suspended and only reinstated after numerous court challenges. Hawai‘i citizens were subjected to strict curfews – stricter still for those of japanese ancestry – as the United States military took over all territorial government functions.
Waikīkī Beach was lined with barbed wire and the Royal Hawaiian Hotel was taken over by the US Navy for military R & R (rest and recreation) for the entire war.
Many civilians standing in a gas rationing line, 17 Dec 1941 .
Recopilatión from:
nps.gov
bishopmuseum.org
west-point.org
Honolulu civilians watch what they think is a military practice on December 7, 1941, not realizing at first that this was an actual attack.
The loss of life that day wasn't restricted only to military personnel, or even to Pearl Harbor. Civilians of very different backgrounds, ages, and locations on the island of Oahu also took a heavy toll.
This private car, a victim of a strafing japanese plane.
Many civilians worked on the military bases and were present during the attack. Seven civilians were wounded and one killed during a mistaken Japanese attack on the sugar mill at Waipahu. A similar attack at the sugar mill near MCAS Ewa killed two and wounded seven, while another at Wahiawa wounded nine and killed two. One of the Japanese aircraft crashed into a house at Wahiawa.
Several civilian aircraft were in the air over Oahu on Sunday morning. At 7:51 a.m., two Shokaku fighters on their way to NAS Kaneohe fired upon a civilian trainer over the northeastern coastal town of Lai'e. At 7:54 a.m., fighters escorting dive-bombers from Shokaku attacked two civilian Piper Cub trainers. Two of the occupants of the Pipers were missing and one died after landing.
Civilian casualties lie in a makeshift first-aid center.
Perhaps the most tragic civilian casualties come from those killed by "friendly fire." Many of the 5-inch anti-aircraft rounds fired at the Japanese aircraft did not detonate properly and landed in civilian areas around Pearl Harbor and Honolulu, exploding on contact with the ground.
Strafed Fire House on Hickam Air Field with two fire trucks outside and debris from the attack.
In total, 49 civilians were killed and 35 wounded during the attack on Oahu.
Then the Territorial Governor Joseph Poindexter agreed to place the island under martial law. During the next nearly three years constitutional rights in the territory were suspended and only reinstated after numerous court challenges. Hawai‘i citizens were subjected to strict curfews – stricter still for those of japanese ancestry – as the United States military took over all territorial government functions.
Waikīkī Beach was lined with barbed wire and the Royal Hawaiian Hotel was taken over by the US Navy for military R & R (rest and recreation) for the entire war.
Many civilians standing in a gas rationing line, 17 Dec 1941 .
Recopilatión from:
nps.gov
bishopmuseum.org
west-point.org