At 7:55 a.m. Hawaii time (12:55 p.m. EST) on December 7,
1941, Japanese fighter planes attacked the U.S. base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii,
launching one of the deadliest attacks in American history. The assault, which
lasted less than two hours, claimed the lives of more than 2,500 people,
wounded 1,000 more and damaged or destroyed 18 American ships and nearly 300
airplanes. Almost half of the casualties at Pearl Harbor occurred on the naval
battleship USS Arizona, which was hit four times by Japanese bombers.
USS Arizona |
1. Twenty-three sets of brothers died aboard the USS Arizona.
There were 37 confirmed pairs or trios of brothers assigned
to the USS Arizona on December 7, 1941. Of these 77 men, 62 were killed, and 23
sets of brothers died. Only one full set of brothers, Kenneth and Russell
Warriner, survived the attack; Kenneth was away at flight school in San Diego
on that day and Russell was badly wounded but recovered. Both members of the
ship’s only father-and-son pair, Thomas Augusta Free and his son William Thomas
Free, were killed in action.
Though family members often served on the same ship before
World War II, U.S. officials attempted to discourage the practice after Pearl
Harbor. However, no official regulations were established, and by the end of
the war hundreds of brothers had fought—and died¬—together. The five Sullivan
brothers of Waterloo, Iowa, for instance, jointly enlisted after learning that
a friend, Bill Ball, had died aboard the USS Arizona; Their only condition upon
enlistment was that they be assigned to the same ship. In November 1942, all
five siblings were killed in action when their light cruiser, the USS Juneau,
was sunk during the Battle of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.
2. The USS Arizona’s entire band was lost in the attack.
Members of U.S. Navy Band Unit (NBU) 22, all of whom were
killed in action aboard the USS Arizona during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
(Credit: Naval History and Heritage Command)
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Almost half of the casualties at Pearl Harbor occurred on
the naval battleship USS Arizona, which was hit four times by Japanese bombers
and eventually sank. Among the 1,177 crewmen killed were all 21 members of the
Arizona’s band, known as U.S. Navy Band Unit (NBU) 22. Most of its members were
up on deck preparing to play music for the daily flag raising ceremony when the
attack began. They instantly moved to man their battle positions beneath the
ship’s gun turret. At no other time in American history has an entire military
band died in action.
The night before the attack, NBU 22 had attended the latest
round of the annual “Battle of Music” competition between military bands from
U.S. ships based at Pearl Harbor. Contrary to some reports, NBU 22 did not perform,
having already qualified for the finals set to be held on December 20, 1941.
Following the assault, the unit was unanimously declared the winner of that
year’s contest, and the award was permanently renamed the USS Arizona Band
Trophy.
3. Fuel continues to leak from the USS Arizona’s wreckage.
On December 6, 1941, the USS Arizona took on a full load of
fuel—nearly 1.5 million gallons—in preparation for its scheduled trip to the
mainland later that month. The next day, much of it fed the explosion and
subsequent fires that destroyed the ship following its attack by Japanese
bombers. However, despite the raging fire and ravages of time, some 500,000
gallons are still slowly seeping out of the ship’s submerged wreckage: Nearly
70 years after its demise, the USS Arizona continues to spill up to 9 quarts of
oil into the harbor each day. In the mid-1990s, environmental concerns led the
National Park Service to commission a series of site studies to determine the
long-term effects of the oil leakage.
Aerial view of the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii. The ship’s wreckage has been leaking oil, visible in the upper left,
for nearly 70 years.
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Some scientists have warned of a possible “catastrophic”
eruption of oil from the wreckage, which they believe would cause extensive
damage to the Hawaiian shoreline and disrupt U.S. naval functions in the area.
The NPS and other governmental agencies continue to monitor the deterioration
of the wreck site but are reluctant to perform extensive repairs or
modifications due to the Arizona’s role as a “war grave.” In fact, the oil that
often coats the surface of the water surrounding the ship has added an emotional
gravity for many who visit the memorial and is sometimes referred to as the
“tears of the Arizona,” or “black tears.”
4. Some former crewmembers have chosen the USS Arizona as their final resting place.
The bonds between the crewmembers of the USS Arizona have
lasted far beyond the ship’s loss on December 7, 1941. Since 1982, the U.S.
Navy has allowed survivors of the USS Arizona to be interred in the ship’s
wreckage upon their deaths. Following a full military funeral at the Arizona
memorial, the cremated remains are placed in an urn and then deposited by
divers beneath one of the Arizona’s gun turrets. To date, more than 30 Arizona
crewmen who survived Pearl Harbor have chosen the ship as their final resting
place. Crewmembers who served on the ship prior to the attack may have their
ashes scattered above the wreck site, and those who served on other vessels
stationed at Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, may have their ashes scattered
above their former ships. As of November 2011, only 18 of the 355 crewmen who
survived the bombing of the USS Arizona are known to be alive.
5. A memorial was built at the USS Arizona site, thanks in part to Elvis Presley.
After the USS Arizona sank, its superstructure and main
armament were salvaged and reused to support the war effort, leaving its hull,
two gun turrets and the remains of more than 1,000 crewmen submerged in less
than 40 feet of water. In 1949 the Pacific War Memorial Commission was
established to create a permanent tribute to those who had lost their lives in
the attack on Pearl Harbor, but it wasn’t until 1958 that President Dwight D.
Eisenhower signed legislation to create a national memorial. The funds to build
it came from both the public sector and private donors, including one unlikely
source. In March 1961, entertainer Elvis Presley, who had recently finished a
two-year stint in the U.S. Army, performed a benefit concert at Pearl Harbor’s
Block Arena that raised over $50,000—more than 10 percent of the USS Arizona
Memorial’s final cost. The monument was officially dedicated on May 30, 1962,
and attracts more than 1 million visitors each year.
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