The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7
December 1941

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The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941
Related Resources:
Ships Present at Pearl
Harbor, 0800 7 December 1941
Action Report for
Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet, including other commands, and ships at Pearl
Harbor
Additional Action
Reports concerning the Attack on Pearl Harbor
Where were the Carriers
on 7 December 1941?
Oral Histories of Pearl
Harbor Attack
Survivor
Reports-Pearl Harbor
U.S. Ships named for
Sailors to Commemorate their Actions during the Attack on Pearl Harbor
The U.S. Navy
in Hawaii, 1826-1945: An Administrative History
Pearl Harbor Navy Medical
Activities, 1941
Pearl Harbor Submarine
Base History, 1918-1945
Cryptologic
History relating to the Pearl Harbor Attack
Photographs relating to the Pearl Harbor Attack
Related Web Sites on the
Pearl Harbor Attack
Mess Attendent Second
Class Doris (Dorie) Miller, USN
U.S. Marines at Pearl
Harbor
Teacher
Lesson Plans
The road to
war between Japan and the United States began in the 1930s when differences over
China drove the two nations apart. In 1931 Japan conquered Manchuria, which
until then had been part of China. In 1937 Japan began a long and ultimately
unsuccessful campaign to conquer the rest of China. In 1940, the Japanese
government allied their country with Nazi Germany in the Axis Alliance, and, in
the following year, occupied all of Indochina.
The United States, which had important political and economic interests in East
Asia, was alarmed by these Japanese moves. The U.S. increased military and
financial aid to China, embarked on a program of strengthening its military
power in the Pacific, and cut off the shipment of oil and other raw materials to
Japan.
Because Japan was poor in natural resources, its government viewed these steps,
especially the embargo on oil as a threat to the nation's survival. Japan's
leaders responded by resolving to seize the resource-rich territories of
Southeast Asia, even though that move would certainly result in war with the
United States.
The problem with the plan was the danger posed by the U.S. Pacific Fleet based
at Pearl Harbor. Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, commander of the Japanese fleet,
devised a plan to immobilize the U.S. fleet at the outset of the war with a
surprise attack.
The key elements in Yamamoto's plans were meticulous preparation, the
achievement of surprise, and the use of aircraft carriers and naval aviation on
an unprecedented scale. In the spring of 1941, Japanese carrier pilots began
training in the special tactics called for by the Pearl Harbor attack plan.
In October 1941 the naval general staff gave final approval to Yamamoto's plan,
which called for the formation of an attack force commanded by Vice Admiral
Chuichi Nagumo. It centered around six heavy aircraft carriers accompanied by 24
supporting vessels. A separate group of submarines was to sink any American
warships which escaped the Japanese carrier force.
Nagumo's fleet assembled in the remote anchorage of Tankan Bay in the Kurile
Islands and departed in strictest secrecy for Hawaii on 26 November 1941. The
ships' route crossed the North Pacific and avoided normal shipping lanes. At
dawn 7 December 1941, the Japanese task force had approached undetected to a
point slightly more than 200 miles north of Oahu. At this time the U.S. carriers
were not at Pearl Harbor.
On 28 November, Admiral Kimmel sent USS Enterprise under Rear Admiral
Willliam Halsey to deliver Marine Corps fighter planes to Wake Island. On 4
December Enterprise delivered the aircraft and on December 7 the task
force was on its way back to Pearl Harbor. On 5 December, Admiral Kimmel sent
the USS Lexington with a task force under Rear Admiral Newton to deliver
25 scout bombers to Midway Island. The last Pacific carrier, USS Saratoga,
had left Pearl Harbor for upkeep and repairs on the West Coast.
At 6:00 a.m. on 7 December, the six Japanese carriers launched a first wave of
181 planes composed of torpedo bombers, dive bombers, horizontal bombers and
fighters. Even as they winged south, some elements of U.S. forces on Oahu
realized there was something different about this Sunday morning.
In the hours before dawn, U.S. Navy vessels spotted an unidentified submarine
periscope near the entrance to Pearl Harbor. It was attacked and reported sunk
by the destroyer USS Ward (DD-139) and a patrol plane. At 7:00 a.m., an
alert operator of an Army radar station at Opana spotted the approaching first
wave of the attack force. The officers to whom those reports were relayed did
not consider them significant enough to take action. The report of the submarine
sinking was handled routinely, and the radar sighting was passed off as an
approaching group of American planes due to arrive that morning.
The Japanese aircrews achieved complete surprise when they hit American ships
and military installations on Oahu shortly before 8:00 a.m. They attacked
military airfields at the same time they hit the fleet anchored in Pearl Harbor.
The Navy air bases at Ford Island and Kaneohe Bay, the Marine airfield at Ewa
and the Army Air Corps fields at Bellows, Wheeler and Hickam were all bombed and
strafed as other elements of the attacking force began their assaults on the
ships moored in Pearl Harbor. The purpose of the simultaneous attacks was to
destroy the American planes before they could rise to intercept the Japanese.
Of the more than 90 ships at anchor in Pearl Harbor, the primary targets were
the eight battleships anchored there. seven were moored on Battleship Row along
the southeast shore of Ford Island while the USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) lay
in drydock across the channel. Within the first minutes of the attack all the
battleships adjacent to Ford Island had taken bomb and or torpedo hits. The USS
West Virginia (BB-48) sank quickly.
The USS Oklahoma (BB-37) turned turtle and sank. At about 8:10 a.m., the
USS Arizona (BB-39) was mortally wounded by an armorpiercing bomb which
ignited the ship's forward ammunition magazine. The resulting explosion and fire
killed 1,177 crewmen, the greatest loss of life on any ship that day and about
half the total number of Americans killed. The USS California (BB-44),
USS Maryland (BB-46), USS Tennessee (BB-43) and USS Nevada
(BB-36) also suffered varying degrees of damage in the first half hour of the
raid.
There was a short lull in the fury of the attack at about 8:30 a.m. At that time
the USS Nevada (BB-36), despite her wounds, managed to get underway and
move down the channel toward the open sea. Before she could clear the harbor, a
second wave of 170 Japanese planes, launched 30 minutes after the first,
appeared over the harbor. They concentrated their attacks on the moving
battleship, hoping to sink her in the channel and block the narrow entrance to
Pearl Harbor. On orders from the harbor control tower, the USS Nevada
(BB-36) beached herself at Hospital Point and the channel remained clear.
When the attack ended shortly before 10:00 a.m., less than two hours after it
began, the American forces has paid a fearful price. Twenty-one ships of the
U.S. Pacific Fleet were sunk or damaged: the battleships USS Arizona
(BB-39), USS California (BB-44), USS Maryland (BB-46), USS
Nevada (BB-36), USS Oklahoma (BB-37), USS Pennsylvania
(BB-38), USS Tennessee (BB-43) and USS West Virginia (BB-48);
cruisers USS Helena (CL-50), USS Honolulu (CL-48) and USS
Raleigh (CL-7); the destroyers USS Cassin (DD-372), USS Downes
(DD-375), USS Helm (DD-388) and USS Shaw (DD-373); seaplane tender
USS Curtiss (AV-4); target ship (ex-battleship) USS Utah (AG-16);
repair ship USS Vestal (AR-4); minelayer USS Oglala (CM-4); tug
USS Sotoyomo (YT-9); and Floating Drydock Number 2. Aircraft
losses were 188 destroyed and 159 damaged, the majority hit before the had a
chance to take off. American dead numbered 2,403. That figure included 68
civilians, most of them killed by improperly fused anti-aircraft shells landing
in Honolulu. There were 1,178 military and civilian wounded.
Japanese losses were comparatively light. Twenty-nine planes, less than 10
percent of the attacking force, failed to return to their carriers.
The Japanese success was overwhelming, but it was not complete. They failed to
damage any American aircraft carriers, which by a stroke of luck, had been
absent from the harbor. They neglected to damage the shoreside facilities at the
Pearl Harbor Naval Base, which played an important role in the Allied victory in
World War II.
American technological skill raised and repaired all but three of the ships sunk
or damaged at Pearl Harbor (the USS Arizona (BB-39) considered too badly
damaged to be salvaged, the USS Oklahoma (BB-37) raised and considered
too old to be worth repairing, and the obsolete USS Utah (AG-16)
considered not worth the effort). Most importantly, the shock and anger caused
by the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor united a divided nation and was
translated into a wholehearted commitment to victory in World War II.
Source: Department of Defense. 50th Anniversary of World War II Commemorative
Committee. Pearl Harbor: 50th Anniversary Commemorative Chronicle, "A
Grateful Nation Remembers" 1941-1991. Washington: The Committee, 1991.
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Contributed,
YNCS Don Harribine, USN(ret)