Top 5 questions to ask yourself before you drive yourself to Pearl
Harbor
- Have I ever been there?
- Do I really know why we were attacked?
- While I figure out how to navigate the sites how much will I
miss?
- What do I do when the parking lot is full?
- What will keep my kids busy for 5 hours?
If you can't answer these questions confidently, then you would
probably be
better off with a tour and a guide who makes your experience smoother.
Select your Pearl Harbor Tour Now
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WHO WAS INVOLVED?
General Hideki Tojo served as Chief of Staff of the Army, and
Minister of War. With so much power, Tojo was often thought of as a
dictator. He assumed an additional position of Prime Minister in
October 1941, just before the attack on
Pearl Harbor and the Pacific
Fleet. Tojo had an extensive military career and believed in an
aggressive foreign policy. He strongly opposed any plans to take
Japanese troops out of Korea or China. He did however, initially
support negotiations with the US but when he realized it was
impossible, ordered the attack on Pearl Harbor.
He turned over the position of Minister of War to Umezu when
militaries began to turn against Japan. He resigned from his
remaining positions in July 1944 after the fall of Saipan, and he
unsuccessfully attempted suicide shortly thereafter. He was later
tried and convicted of war crimes by the Allies and executed in
December 1948.
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto’s navy career began in 1904 when he
graduated from Japan’s Imperial naval academy. While participating
in battle in 1905 he was wounded and lost two fingers, but recovered
and continued his naval career. In 1919, Yamamoto was sent to the US
where he studied English at Harvard, and learned about the strengths
and weaknesses of the Country during his visit in America. After
graduation from Harvard in 192l, Yamamoto returned to Japan to
specialize in the new field of naval aviation.
He again returned to the United States in 1926, as the Japanese
naval attaché in Washington. During this two year visit he became
familiar with and developed an opinion of the US Navy, which was not
good. However he was fully aware of the power of the US as a nation.
Upon return to Japan, Yamamoto became a driving force in developing
Japan’s aircraft carriers. His demands led to the Japanese Navy
being equipped with excellent carrier-launched fighters and the
world’s most powerful, fastest and efficient torpedoes and the
Japanese Navy became one of the most modern and powerful in the
world. Yamamoto strongly opposed Japan going to war. However, he was
promoted to full Admiral and became the commander of the Combined
Fleet. Yamamoto was to lead Japan’s entire Navy into war.
Thereafter, Yamamoto devised a well thought out plan to attack Pearl
Harbor and destroy the US Pacific Fleet. His plan became a
tremendous success and Yamamoto became a national hero in Japan.
Six months later, Yamamoto led the Combined Fleet into the Battle of
Midway, a battle which Japan lost. The US still viewed Yamamoto as
its biggest enemy in the war with Japan. Shortly thereafter, a US
Air Force fighter squadron shot down two Japanese bombers and one
Zero fighter over Japanese airspace, killing Yamamoto.
Dorie Miller, an American War Hero, had enlisted as a mess attendant
in the Navy in 1939 to earn money for his family. This was the only
position offered to African Americans in the US Military at this
time. Serving in the Pacific Fleet aboard the USS West Virginia,
Miller was a cook and the ship’s heavy weight boxing champion. When
Pearl Harbor was attacked, Miller, who was collecting laundry,
reported to the deck and was assigned to carry wounded sailors to
safety. Thereafter, he went up on deck to help the fatally wounded
Captain. Miller immediately manned a 50 caliber anti-aircraft
machine gun, something he was not trained on and had never done
before. When he ran out of ammunition, he was ordered to abandon
ship which subsequently sunk.
He was presented with the Navy Cross for his extra ordinary courage
during battle, the first African-American to receive such an honor
during the conflict.
In November 1943, Miller was serving on the USS Liscome Bay in the
Gilbert Islands which was struck by a torpedo from Japanese
submarine. The warship was sunk and Miller was presumed to be among
the 646 crew members who died.
He was entitled to receive the Purple Heart Medal; the American
Defense Service Medal; the Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal; and the
World War II Victory Medal. In 1973 the USS Miller was named in his
honor. In 1991 a bronze commemorative plaque of Dorie Miller at the
Miller Family Park located at the U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii. |
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