Pearl Harbor day

RBHarter

West Central AR
Why Pearl Harbor is important to me.
Before I start. God bless the souls,survivors,those that bore witness and all those that stand since and still for this land.

Dec 7
My 2nd Great grandmother's name was Nancy Allison , her aunt shared her name. The elder Nancy married William Mckinley in 1829 her son born in 1843 William Mckinley would become the 25th President of the US. He served in the Union Army for the duration of the Civil War w/the 23rd Ohio Infantry at 1 point w/Major Ruthaford Hays . Elected in 1896 was the CIC for the Spainish American war ''winning'' Guam,the Phillipenes and Puerto Rico. In 1898 he signed annexation papers for those and the Republic of Hawaii.

James Reed served as a CSA scout 1863-64. He married Orvillia Hoover and had 12 children together. James registered as a Cherokee Native American in 1873 . Leora James Reed the 8th or 9th child born April 28 1912 w/her twin sister Elnora. Their survival is wonder enough w/both parents being at least half bloods an a full blood mid-wife. Lee was my Grandmother . She lived a colorful life. She married an Army vet Joseph Hart in Chicago in 1927. They divorced in 39' after my Dads birth. She married again in 40 in Hawthorne Nv. Going to Oakland Ca not long after. She went to work as a welder, after getting a welders certification , in the Port Chicago shipyard until about June or July of 1941.

By know you're thinking AAAANNNNDDD??

Well, Virginia and William Wright were Nancy's great grandchildren and my grandfather and great aunt.

Leora was at least in the shipyard w/ships that were at Pearl 72yr ago.

William was in the USN 1937-39 then signed on w/Civil Service . He married Nora Louise ''Toppy'' Huges in the fall of 1940.
Virginia had gone to school and highered on to Pan Am in 1939 . In those days a flight attendant had to be at least an accredited nurse. She was based in 1940 Honolulu and flew the entire Pacific from LA to Seattle and west to Hong Kong.

William was given a list of assignment choices 1 of which was Public Works for Wheeler and Hickum Fields and the Naval Yard at Pearl Harbor. He left Nashville about the 10th of June 41' Toppy joined him in Pearl City in November.

William was out for the morning walk down to the beach ,about 12 blocks from their apt, he was an avid fisherman and was thinking a day on the beach for them and a few casts w/cut bait might produce some sunfish. He'd paused under a palm to put his shoes on and heard the familiar engine drone thinking ''the Air corps is out early especially on a Sunday''......... It was 5 days before he would know if his sister or wife had survived. During the next 3 days he would ride boats as a survivor recovery man...... mostly he just recovered the dead . On the 10th he was released to his shop to continue pulling new power lines in to pad up the spliced band-aided lines for the Navy Yard and the airfield .
Toppy awake to the 1st explosions and breaking glass. She pulled the bed up against the inside wall closet door. And padded the walls w/pillows and waited ..............11hr later the 1st patrol for survivors hammered the door and gave her directions....more directives to go to the highschool gym. She would spend 10 days there seeing William just twice. ''I was terrified,not knowing who or what was happening . All I could do was to go to an inside corner and pad myself all around as best as I could.''
Virginia would arrive some 22 hours later w/65 fully equipped USAA troops braced for having to possibly pontoon raft from Molokai to Pearl. When they arrived in the sea port ''airfield'' their sea plane was pressed into service and stripped from a luxury trans-Pacific aircraft to cargo/Medevac airplane . She was drafted into Hospital service for 21 days of 18hr days. Imagine the shift ,airsick and altitude sickness to meatball amputation assistant. I would be 16 days before she would stumble onto William and learn that he and Toppy had come out untouched by the attack.

Not 1 of them ever received formal recognition nor have they been eligible for any Pearl Harbor Survivor privileges.
It is also interesting to note the ''unintended'' consequences of 1 man signing a single document , and the potential for those to effect 1's own family for over a century.

William has been gone nearly 20 yrs 12/25/17-12/17/94
Virginia passed in 2008
Toppy lives in assisted living recently taking a 5 generation picture w/1 daughter,her only grandson,3 greats and GG grands.
Leora passed 12/14/2007 out living 3 husbands and 12 siblings including her twin sister by nearly 10yr and her ''baby'' brother by almost 5 yr.
Toppy passed away in November 2014 .

That's my story about today 12/7 has effected my life and who I am.
 

KHornet

Well-Known Member
To stand on the Arizona memorial, and see the oil slick coming up from the
gun turret, and to watch the relative of one down below throw a wreath of
flowers is very touching.

One of my former Squadron Commanders father died on that Dec day. He
grew up dirt poor in northern Ca. However because his father died on that
day in Pearl, both he and his twin brother received full college educations
thanks to Uncle Sam. A good officer, an enlisted mans officer, he always
remembered his beginnings and the fact that his father died to pay for
his education and commission.

Paul
 

Pistolero

Well-Known Member
The closest I came was living in Honolulu from about 52-54. We had neighbors with cannon holes
through the palms on their front lawn. We flew back to Cali in the Hawaii Mars, near the end of her
career with the USN, one of my earliest memories. About 10-15 years ago a old lady came to our EAA
chapter to talk about surviving the attack when she was a young girl. She had a hand full of
bullets which she recovered from their kitchen after it was strafed, with them in it. I was able to ID
them as 7.7 Jap machinegun bullets, much to her delight, after keeping them for many decades and
not being 100% certain that they were Japanese. They were nickel alloy jacketed, AFAIK the USA
had been done with .30 cal nickel bullets in the 20s. I have seen early war Jap 7.7 with nickel jacketed
spritzers like the ones she had, although the late war stuff I have seen is copper jacketed.

Not much at all, and certainly nothing compared to RBHarter's family connection. There were a lot of
people in Hawaii in the early 50s who had strong, clear memories of the attack, my mother said it was talked
about fairly frequently - everyone remembered where they were and what they did, she told me years
later.

Bill
 
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Chris

Well-Known Member
Dad was an officer in the Signal Corps at the time with orders to the Phillipines. He was to be on the (unknown at the time) last flight of B-17's to Pearl Harbor. He often mentioned the Divine Providence that his orders were suddenly changed hours before the flight left, otherwise he certainly would have been present during the attack.
 

Cherokee

Medina, Ohio
My connection is I was born 11:30 pm on 12/6/41. My wife and I visited the memorials and toured the port in 1963...very moving.
 

Cliff

Member
Thank you for your story RBHarter. Most of todays youth probably don't recognize the date, Dec. 7th. as anything but another day.
The aircraft pictured in my avatar, The Leading Lady, is the B17 that my father was shot down in on March 2 1945, on a bombing mission over Dresden Germany. He was the top turret gunner.
The crew survived, some, including my father, were injured, all were captured and spent the remainder of the war in various POW camps. Dad passed away in 1984
 

waco

Springfield, Oregon
My Grandfather was a Navy man and was at Pearl Harbor a day or so after the attack and was tasked with recovering bodies.
He later fought in Sipan and his ship was hit with a torpedo. The crew was able to plug the hole with mattresses and lived to fight another day.
He passed away earlier this year at 90 years young. RIP Hubert Ray Tyler. God Bless you Sir.
 

Ben

Moderator
Staff member
Sounds like a man who served his Country honorably.
Rest in Peace !

Ben
 

Missionary

Well-Known Member
Thank you everyone for this good thread.
Through the years met a couple Pearl Harbor Survivors. None felt they did anything worth note but stated they could not do enough.
 

Rick

Moderator
Staff member
One of our club members wasn't at Pearl but he was enlisted in the in the Marines the following day. He did all the island hopping and was on most of them by the end of the war. Amazing stories of courage and endurance he would tell and not once did I ever hear him say "I", not once. No matter where he was or what he was doing it was always "WE". He moved to Arizona several years ago, a great loss to the club. Last I heard a few years back he was still alive, gotta be in his mid 90's now.
 

KHornet

Well-Known Member
May God bless all the the WWII Vets! There are not many left, and the count is dwindling
almost daily. I buried a LtCmdr friend, 3 weeks ago, age 91.

Paul
 

Chris

Well-Known Member
They are being buried at an alarming rate. Possibly the best generation.

Dad would be 100 this year, 5 years in combat, Purple Heart and a strong wish to never go back to war again. He fought for a just cause from North Africa to the Ardennes. Never liked to talk about it but what he spoke of was memorable to this young guy.

BTW, in keeping with the common interest of this forum he spoke glowingly about the Colt 1911 and the effect of the .45 ACP on enemy. He was a fan of the "Tommy Gun", that's what they called it then. He had low regard for the M1 carbine, and as an officer that is what he was assigned. Garand was it for him.