America at war! (1941– ) (Part 1)

Editorial: Action called for

Editorial: Let the public function

Senators want WPB to control output of arms

‘Harmony’ deal is feared to be compromise for Nelson

Life on Guadalcanal

Jap sniper in a tree a constant menace
By Sherman Montrose

Josephine Baker is alive, popular in Casablanca

Georgia-born Negro singing and dancing star of Parisian stage resides in Arabian splendor

Casablanca, French Morocco (UP) –
Josephine Baker, the Negro dancing and singing star of the Paris stage, is alive and well here today, living in an elegant Arabian house in the native quarter.

Any sunny afternoon, Miss Baker, who was falsely reported to have died in a Casablanca hospital recently, can be seen riding through the streets in a handsome carriage, drawn by two fawn-colored horses.

Now in “quite good health,” although still recuperating from a recent illness, she moved to the quaint Arabian home three days ago from the Hotel Mamounia, one of the best in the city.

Miss Baker, who lives alone in Arabian splendor, came to Morocco after the fall of France, but she still hopes to return to Paris where she won her fame as a singer and dancer. She is held in high regard by foreigners and the native population here.

Here is where hundreds of Arabs from the Atlas Mountains bring their wares by camel train and sell them to a public, enthralled by snake charmers, trained baboons, magicians and storytellers.

On one of her trips through the market, Georgia-born Miss Baker saw for the first time the newly-arrived American correspondents.

As they passed by, she stood up in the carriage, waved her parasol and yelled “Vive l’Amérique.

She kept waving until the correspondents were out of sight.

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War economy plan backed by retailers

Reports show merchants restrict deliveries, return of gifts

Still a casualty of war, but would be categorized as a “home front accident.”

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U.S. Navy Department (December 6, 1942)

Communiqué No. 214

South Pacific.
On December 4 on Guadalcanal Island:

  1. Army patrols killed seven Japanese in the vicinity of the Matanikau River.

  2. Army “Airacobra” fighters made a number of attacks against the enemy and strafed 15 landing barges and rafts near Tassafaronga.

  3. Marine Corps “Raiders” returned to their base from extended operations in the mountainous jungle. The “Raiders” destroyed 5 enemy bases and killed 400 Japanese during the operations with a loss to themselves of 17 dead.


Navy Department
News Release

NAVY DEPARTMENT
For Release 
December 6, 1942

The Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941

On the morning of December 7, 1941, Japanese aircraft temporarily disabled every battleship and most of the aircraft in the Hawaiian area. Other naval vessels, both combatant and auxiliary, were put out of action, and certain shore facilities, especially at the naval air stations, Ford Island and Kaneohe Bay, were damaged. Most of these ships are now back with the fleet. The aircraft were all replaced within a few days, and interference with facilities was generally limited to a matter of hours.

When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, 2 surface ship task forces of the Pacific Fleet were carrying out assigned missions at sea, and 2 such task forces were at their main base following extensive operations at sea. Discounting small craft, 86 ships of the Pacific Fleet were moored at Pearl Harbor. Included in this force were 8 battleships, 7 cruisers, 28 destroyers and 5 submarines. No U.S. aircraft carriers were present.

As result of the Japanese attack five battleships, the Arizona, Oklahoma, California, Nevada, and West Virginia; three destroyers, the Shaw and Downes; the minelayer Oglala; the target ship Utah, and a large floating drydock were either sunk or damaged so severely that they would serve no military purposes for some time. In addition, three battleships, the Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Tennessee, three cruisers, the Helena, Honolulu, and Raleigh, the seaplane tender Curtiss and the repair Vestal were damaged.

Of the 19 naval vessels listed above as sunk or damaged, the 26-year-old battleship Arizona will be the only one permanently and totally lost. Preparations for the righting of the Oklahoma are now in process, although final decision as to the wisdom of accomplishing this work at this time has not been made. The main and auxiliary machinery, approximately 50% of the value, of the Cassin and Downes were saved. The other 15 vessels either have been or will be salvaged and repaired.

The eight vessels described in the second sentence of paragraph three returned to the fleet months ago. A number of the vessels described in the first sentence of paragraph three are now in full service, but certain others, which required extensive machinery and intricate electrical overhauling as well as refloating and hull repairing, are not yet ready for battle action. Naval repair yards are taking advantage of these inherent delays to install numerous modernization features and improvements. To designate these vessels by name now would give the enemy information vital to his war plans; similar information regarding enemy ships which our forces have subsequently damaged but not destroyed is denied to us.

On December 15, 1941, only 8 days after the Japanese attack and at a time when there was an immediate possibility of the enemy’s coming back, the Secretary of the Navy announced that the Arizona, Shaw, Cassin, Downes, Utah, and Oglala had been lost, that the Oklahoma had capsized and that other vessels had been damaged. Fortunately, the salvage and repair accomplishments at Pearl Harbor have exceeded the most hopeful expectations.

Eighty naval aircraft of all types were destroyed by the enemy. In addition, the Army lost 97 planes on Hickam and Wheeler Fields. Of these 23 were bombers, 66 were fighters, and 8 were other types.

The most serious American losses were in personnel. As result of the raid on December 7, 1941, 2,117 officers and enlisted men of the Navy and Marine Corps were killed, 960 are still reported as missing and 876 were wounded but survived. The Army casualties were as follows: 226 officers and enlisted men were killed or later died of wounds; 396 were wounded, most of whom have now recovered and have returned to duty.

At 7:55 a. m. on December 7, 1941, Japanese dive bombers swarmed over the Army Air Base, Hickam Field, and the naval air station on Ford Island. A few minutes earlier the Japanese had struck the naval air station at Kaneohe Bay. Bare seconds later enemy torpedo planes and dive bombers swung in from various sectors to concentrate their attack on the heavy ships at Pearl Harbor. The enemy attack, aided by the element of surprise and based on exact information, was very successful.

Torpedo planes, assisted effectively by dive bombers, constituted the major threat of the first phase of the Japanese attack, lasting approximately a half-hour. Twenty-one torpedo planes made 4 attacks, and 30 dive bombers came in in 8 waves during this period. Fifteen horizontal bombers also participated in this phase of the raid.

Although the Japanese launched their initial attack as a surprise, battleship ready machine guns opened fire at once and were progressively augmented by the remaining antiaircraft batteries as all hands promptly were called to general quarters. Machine guns brought down two and damaged others of the first wave of torpedo planes. Practically all battleship antiaircraft batteries were firing within 5 minutes; cruisers, within an average time of 4 minutes, and destroyers, opening up machine guns almost immediately, average 7 minutes in bringing all antiaircraft guns into action.

From 8:25 to 8:40 a.m. there was a comparative lull in the raid, although air activity continued with sporadic attack by dive and horizontal bombers. This respite was terminated by the appearance of horizontal bombers which crossed and recrossed their targets from various directions and caused serious damage. While the horizontal bombers were continuing their raids, Japanese dive bombers reappeared, probably being the same ones that had participated in earlier attacks; this phase, lasting about a half-hour, was devoted largely to strafing. All enemy aircraft retired by 9:45 a. m.

Prior to the Japanese attack 202 U.S. naval aircraft of all types on the Island of Oahu were in flying condition, but 150 of these were permanently or temporarily disabled by the enemy’s concentrated assault, most of them in the first few minutes of the raid. Of the 52 remaining naval aircraft, 38 took to the air on December 7, 1941, the other 14 being ready too late in the day or being blocked from take-off positions. Of necessity therefore, the Navy was compelled to depend on antiaircraft fire for its primary defensive weapon, and this condition exposed the fleet to continuous air attack. By coincidence, 18 scout bombing planes from a U.S. aircraft carrier en route arrived at Pearl Harbor during the raid. These are included in the foregoing figures. Four of these scout bombers were shot down, 13 of the remaining 14 taking off again in search of the enemy. Seven patrol planes were in the air when the attack started.

It is difficult to determine the total number of enemy aircraft participating in the raid, but careful analysis of all reports makes it possible to estimate the number as 21 torpedo planes, 48 dive bombers, and 36 horizontal bombers, totaling 105 of all types. Undoubtedly certain fighter planes also were present, but these are not distinguished by types and are included in the above figures.

The enemy lost 28 aircraft due to Navy action. In addition, three submarines, of 45 tons each, were accounted for.

The damage suffered by the U.S. Pacific Fleet as result of the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941, was most serious, but the repair job now is nearly completed, and thanks to the inspired and unceasing efforts of the naval and civilian personnel attached to the various repair yards, especially at Pearl Harbor itself, this initial handicap soon will be erased forever.

Update on Press Release

Insert in 2nd sentence, 1st paragraph, page 1:

…facilities, especially at the Army Bases, Hickam and Wheeler Fields, and the naval air stations . . .

Insert after paragraph 3, page 3:

There were a total of 273 Army planes on the Island of Oahu on December 7, 1941. Very few of these were able to take off because of the damage to the runways at Hickam and Wheeler Fields.

Insert in 1st sentence, last paragraph, page 3:

…Navy action, and the few Army pursuit planes that were able to take off shot down more than 20 Japanese planes.

The Pittsburgh Press (December 6, 1942)

FULL STORY OF PEARL HARBOR!
19 warships and 177 U.S. planes crippled

Most of enemy fliers died in 110 flaming minutes of Jap treachery
By Sandor S. Klein, United Press staff writer

Three battleships burn, Japs blasted five more

Battleship Row V Norman
Their powerful guns helpless and their crews surprised and stunned, these three mighty ships of the line, the battleships Arizona, West Virginia and Tennessee, burn in Pearl Harbor after the Jap sneak attack. The Arizona (right) was a total loss. The West Virginia (next in line) was severely damaged and it not yet back in service. The Tennessee (the third ship) was damaged but returned to the fleet several months ago. The Jap torpedo and dive bombers hit five other battleships besides these. They were the Oklahoma, California, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Maryland.

Washington – (Dec. 5)
The Navy Department tonight released hitherto secret details of the Pearl Harbor disaster revealing that eight U.S. battleships and 11 other naval vessels were crippled and 177 of our planes destroyed in 110 flaming minutes of Japanese attack.

Hitting every battleship in the harbor, the Japanese put out of action temporarily the bulk of the Pacific Fleet’s battle line.

A high naval officer said it was fair speculation that the balance of the Pacific Fleet could have been annihilated if the main Japanese battle force had followed up the initial blow. Hawaii then might have been open to an invasion attempt.

However, the officer said, the Japanese apparently aimed only at knocking out the fleet so they would be free to carry out their conquest of the Philippines and the Southwest Pacific without interference. There was no evidence that they had intended the attack as a prelude for an invasion of Hawaii.

In launching undeclared war a year ago, the Japanese fliers executed one of the most perfectly-timed, precise attacks in modern warfare.

In hitting every U.S. battleship in port, they accounted for eight out of the 17 battleships then in the entire U.S. Navy.

They destroyed or disabled “most of the aircraft in the Hawaiian area,” the Navy said.

All told, the Navy revealed in an anniversary statement, 86 ships of the Pacific Fleet – exclusively of small craft – were moored at Pearl Harbor on the morning of Dec. 7.

The Japanese struck at 7:55 a.m. At 9:45 a.m., when the last of the raiders had retired, the U.S. Pacific Fleet had been crippled to this extent:

PUT OUT OF ACTION: 11 ships

  • Battleships (5): Arizona (sunk), Oklahoma (capsized), California, Nevada and West Virginia
  • Destroyers (3): Shaw, Cassin and Downes
  • Minelayer Oglala
  • Target ship Utah
  • A large floating drydock

DAMAGED: 8 ships

  • Battleships (3): Pennsylvania, Maryland and Tennessee
  • Cruisers (3): Helena, Honolulu and Raleigh
  • Seaplane tender Curtiss
  • Repair ship Vestal

Other losses:

PLANES DESTROYED: 177

  • Navy: 80
  • Army: 87

In addition, 70 Navy planes and a still-undisclosed number of Army planes were disabled.

PERSONNEL KILLED, WOUNDED OR MISSING: 4,575

  • Navy: 2,177 killed, 960 missing and 876 wounded
  • Army: 226 killed and 396 wounded.

Shore facilities were damaged at the naval air stations on Ford Island and Kaneohe Bay and at the Army air bases at Hickam and Wheeler Fields.

It cost the Japanese at least 48 planes out of an estimated 105 in the attacking force. They also lost three baby subs, which had caused no damage.

Of the 19 U.S. vessels sunk or damaged, the Navy said, only the 26-year-old battleship Arizona will be “permanently and totally lost.”

The hulls of two other ships – the destroyers Cassin and Downes – were too badly damaged to be repaired but their main and auxiliary machinery was saved. In addition, the capsized battleship Oklahoma may be lost for the duration. She still lies bottom side up and the Navy has not yet decided whether to right her for repairs soon.

At least nine of the remaining 15 damaged ships have been repaired and again taken their places in the fleet. The rest are in process of repair and modernization.

Thus, a number of the ships which Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox listed as lost in his report of Dec. 15, 1941 – eight days after the Japanese attack – will see service again. In that previous official report, Mr. Knox announced that the Arizona, the destroyers Shaw, Cassin, and Downes, the target ship Utah and the minelayer Oglala had been lost and the Oklahoma had been capsized. He did not disclose the number or types of vessels damaged, saying merely that the “Navy sustained damage to other vessels.”

Commenting on Mr. Knox’s earlier summary, the Navy’s Pearl Harbor anniversary statement said:

Fortunately, the salvage and repair accomplishments at Pearl Harbor have exceeded the most hopeful expectations.

The battleships Pennsylvania, Maryland and Tennessee, the three damaged cruisers, the plane tender and repair ship, all were repaired and returned to the fleet “months ago,” the Navy said. A number of the other vessels, including the destroyer Shaw, are also now in full service but the Navy withheld their names.

The Navy indicated that, from one standpoint, the fleet will ultimately benefit from the injury suffered at Pearl Harbor. Because certain of the damaged ships required extensive machinery and intricate electrical overhauling, naval yards are taking advantage of the opportunity to incorporate up-to-the-minute features and improvements.

At a press conference called to discuss the Navy’s new report, a naval spokesman said that considering the lack of an “air umbrella” – since the preponderance of the Army and Navy planes were either destroyed on the ground or were grounded because of damage to the airfields – the naval vessels did a magnificent job fighting off the enemy.

Some ships were firing two minutes after the start of the initial assault. The average for all ships was five minutes.

The spokesman suggested that if the fleet had been caught at sea without air protection, instead of in harbor, most of the ships probably would have gone down.

The Japanese, he said, were poised to hit well in advance and had probably been getting into position for weeks. He estimated they used three and possibly four aircraft carriers.

The assault was so perfectly executed, he added, that it was probable the enemy rehearsed it “like a Hollywood movie.” Appreciating the thoroughness of the Japs, he said it was not improbable that the enemy may have set up a replica of Pearl Harbor in a restricted area of the inland sea off Japan to practice.

Naval experts assumed, he said, that most of the Jap fliers failed to get back to their carriers because they could not have carried sufficient fuel and large bomb or torpedo loads to have completed the round trip. In that respect, he added, they had engaged in a suicidal mission.

The spokesman said it was most fortunate for the U.S. Navy that the Japs failed to hit many cruisers and destroyers. These ships, because of their great worth as convoy escorts, made it possible for the United States to continue the war in the Pacific.

He said the Japs had made passes at the destroyers but the ships put up such a stiff fight the enemy gave up the attempt.

Asked why the Navy had held up its complete disclosure of our losses at Pearl Harbor for nearly a year, the spokesman said that the Pacific situation was “touch and go” until battleship repairs had progressed to their present point.

The report conceded that the damage suffered last Dec. 7 was “most serious.”

It concluded:

But the repair job now is nearly completed, and thanks to the inspired and unceasing efforts of the naval and civilian personnel attached to the various repair yards, especially at Pearl Harbor itself, this initial handicap soon will be erased forever.

On the morning of Dec. 7, the Pacific Fleet was divided into four task forces – two at sea and two at Pearl Harbor.

There were two phases to the Jap attack. The first began at 7:55 a.m., when dive bombers struck at Hickam Field and the naval air stations at Ford Island and Kaneohe Bay. A few seconds later, torpedo planes and dive bombers swarmed in from all directions to concentrate on the heavy ships at Pearl Harbor.

The Navy said:

The enemy attack, aided by the element of surprise and based on exact information, was very successful.

Twenty-one torpedo planes, which constituted the major threat initially, made four attacks and 30 dive bombers came over in eight waves. In addition, 15 horizontal bombers participated in the first phase which lasted about a half hour.

Except for sporadic attack by dive and horizontal bombers, there was a comparative lull between 8:25 and 8:40. Then, the horizontal bombers came back in numbers, crossing and recrossing their targets from various directions. The Navy said they caused “serious damage.” Dive bombers reappeared, but contented themselves with strafing. The last enemy plane left by 9:45.

The Navy estimated the attacking planes numbered 105 in all – 21 torpedo carriers, 48 dive bombers and 36 horizontal bombers. At least 48 of these planes were lost. Navy action accounted for 28. The few Army pursuit planes that were able to get off the ground shot down more than 20. In addition, the enemy lost three “midget” submarines.

Before the attack, there were 202 U.S. naval aircraft of all types on Oahu in flying condition. In the first few minutes of the raid, 150 were disabled. Of the 52 remaining, 38 took to the air. The other 14 were made ready for flight too late or were blocked from takeoff. Eighty of the Navy’s planes were totally lost.

The Army had 273 planes on Oahu. Of those that escaped damage, few were able to take off because of damage to the runaways at Hickam and Wheeler Fields. Of the 97 that were destroyed, 23 were bombers, 66 fighters and eight were other types.

Aircraft replacements were made within a few days of the attack, the Navy said, and interference with facilities at the naval base and elsewhere on the island “was generally limited to a matter of hours.”

A few days after the attack, Secretary Knox visited Pearl Harbor. In his report, Mr. Knox at that time declared that “the United States services were not on the alert against the surprise air attack on Hawaii.”

The following day, President Roosevelt appointed an investigating board headed by Supreme Court Justice Owen J. Roberts. And on the next day, Adm. Husband E. Kimmel was removed as Commander-in-Chief of the Pacific Fleet and the U.S. Fleet, and Lt. Gen. Walter C. Short was deprived of his command as Chief of the Army’s Hawaiian Department.

The Roberts Committee reported, on Jan. 24, that there was inexcusable negligence on the part of trusted officers of the Armed Forces in Hawaii. Both Kimmel and Short then retired from active service and were ordered to be tried by courts-martial. The trials will probably be held after the war.

Navy report fills in gaps of statement by Knox

Washington (UP) – (Dec. 5)
The Navy’s Pearl Harbor anniversary report tonight filled in many of the gaps in the only previous official account of the crippling Japanese attack on the Pacific Fleet – that which Secretary of the Navy Frank Knox released eight days after the attack.

Mr. Knox, in a statement at Dec. 15, said five ships (including the battleship Arizona) were lost, that the battleship Oklahoma had capsized but could be righted and repaired, and that other vessels had sustained damage.

The new report reveals that 19 ships, including all eight battleships that were moored in Pearl Harbor, were hit. Mr. Knox’s report mentioned only the two battleships.

Of the five ships Mr. Knox listed as lost, the Navy now says that only the battleship Arizona was permanently out of action, although the Navy does not consider them wholly lost because their main and auxiliary machinery was saved. As for the capsized Oklahoma, the Navy said it has not yet decided whether to right and repair her soon.

Secretary Knox said the damage varied from ships already repaired as of Dec. 15 last to “a few which will take from a week to several months to repair.” He included the Oklahoma in the latter category.

Big ship beached foiling attempt to block harbor

Washington (UP) – (Dec. 5)
A high-ranking naval officer revealed tonight how the damaged battleship Nevada averted a Japanese attempt to block the entrance to Pearl Harbor last Dec. 7 by beaching herself.

The ship was heading out of the harbor toward the entrance when it became apparent the Japanese bombers were trying to sink her at a point where she would block the channel.

Whereupon, her commanding officer ordered a hard right rudder, which sent the nose of the big ship up on a sugarcane field not far from the entrance.

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Did they tell the actual story or sensationalise it?

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You’ll see when I finish transcribing it :slight_smile: And you don’t have to wait too long this time. I’ll finish it today.

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Aww come on, give me spoilers.

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Older group may request discharges

Younger soldiers better able to withstand rigors of war

McNutt gets full control of manpower

WMC given authority to order workers into war industries

Chocolate coating restriction covered

Washington (UP) – (Dec. 5)
American children will do their bit in the war program by sacrificing chocolate Santa Clauses, St. Valentine’s hearts, Easter bunnies and eggs and other chocolate novelties.

Beginning Dec. 15, use of chocolate is prohibited by the War Production Board in manufacturing or coating novelty items, coating miniature candy pieces, manufacturing chocolate shot, or decorating chocolate candy.

General relieved

Washington – (Dec. 5)
Maj. Gen. Emil F. Reinhardt, commanding officer of the 76th Division at Fort Meade, Maryland, was today relieved of his command to assume undisclosed assignment, the War Department announced. Brig. Gen. John E. Dahlquist is in temporary command of the 76th.

Salesmen win additional gas

OPA boosts mileage up to 8,600 a year

Army captain killed in West Coast wreck

Ex-Willkie Workers organized as ‘antis’

New York (UP) – (Dec. 5)
“The Associated Ex-Willkie Workers Against Willkie” was organized today by Robert Paterson, New Jersey newspaperman, and Miss Ayn Rand, Broadway playwright.

The group declared that it was composed of people who worked for Mr. Willkie for President in 1940 and that its first concern would be to block the making of a Willkie man as Republican National Chairman in St. Louis next week.

The organization called Mr. Willkie “a selfish opportunist” and “a communist sympathizer.”

Bow of tanker remains afloat in Mid-Atlantic

McKeesport sailor saved by British vessel