Thursday, December 9, 2021

Tuesday, December 9, 1941. The Expanding Japanese Offensive.


President Roosevelt delivered a "fireside chat" to the nation on the arrival of war with Japan.  You can listend to it above, or read it below:

My fellow Americans:

The sudden criminal attacks perpetrated by the Japanese in the Pacific provide the climax of a decade of international immorality.

Powerful and resourceful gangsters have banded together to make war upon the whole human race. Their challenge has now been flung at the United States of America. The Japanese have treacherously violated the long-standing peace between us. Many American soldiers and sailors have been killed by enemy action. American ships have been sunk; American airplanes have been destroyed.

The Congress and the people of the United States have accepted that challenge.

Together with other free peoples, we are now fighting to maintain our right to live among our world neighbors in freedom and in common decency, without fear of assault.

I have prepared the full record of our past relations with Japan, and it will be submitted to the Congress. It begins with the visit of Commodore Perry to Japan 88 years ago. It ends with the visit of two Japanese emissaries to the Secretary of State last Sunday, an hour after Japanese forces had loosed their bombs and machine guns against our flag, our forces, and our citizens.

I can say with utmost confidence that no Americans, today or a thousand years hence, need feel anything but pride in our patience and in our efforts through all the years toward achieving a peace in the Pacific which would be fair and honorable to every Nation, large or small. And no honest person, today or a thousand years hence, will be able to suppress a sense of indignation and horror at the treachery committed by the military dictators of Japan, under the very shadow of the flag of peace borne by their special envoys in our midst.

The course that Japan has followed for the past ten years in Asia has paralleled the course of Hitler and Mussolini in Europe and in Africa. Today, it has become far more than a parallel. It is actual collaboration so well calculated that all the continents of the world, and all the oceans, are now considered by the Axis strategists as one gigantic battlefield.

In 1931, ten years ago, Japan invaded Manchukuo—without warning.

In 1935, Italy invaded Ethiopia—without warning.

In 1938, Hitler occupied Austria —without warning.

In 1939, Hitler invaded Czechoslovakia- without warning.

Later in 1939, Hitler invaded Poland- without warning.

In 1940, Hitler invaded Norway, Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg- without warning.

In 1940, Italy attacked France and later Greece—without warning.

And this year, in 1941, the Axis powers attacked Yugoslavia and Greece and they dominated the Balkans—without warning. In 1941, also, Hitler invaded Russia—without warning.

And now Japan has attacked Malaya and Thailand—and the United States—without warning.

It is all of one pattern.

We are now in this war. We are all in it- all the way. Every single man, woman, and child is a partner in the most tremendous undertaking of our American history. We must share together the bad news and the good news, the defeats and the victories—the changing fortunes of war.

So far, the news has been all bad. We have suffered a serious set-back in Hawaii. Our forces in the Philippines, which include the brave people of that Commonwealth, are taking punishment, but are defending themselves vigorously. The reports from Guam and Wake and Midway islands are still confused, but we must be prepared for the announcement that all these three outposts have been seized.

The casualty lists of these first few days will undoubtedly be large. I deeply feel the anxiety of all of the families of the men in our armed forces and the relatives of people in cities which have been bombed. I can only give them my solemn promise that they will get news just as quickly as possible.

This Government will put its trust in the stamina of the American people, and will give the facts to the public just as soon as two conditions have been fulfilled: first, that the information has been definitely and officially confirmed; and, second, that the release of the information at the time it is received will not prove valuable to the enemy directly or indirectly.

Most earnestly I urge my countrymen to reject all rumors. These ugly little hints of complete disaster fly thick and fast in wartime. They have to be examined and appraised.

As an example, I can tell you frankly that until further surveys are made, I have not sufficient information to state the exact damage which has been done to our naval vessels at Pearl Harbor. Admittedly the damage is serious. But no one can say how serious, until we know how much of this damage can be repaired and how quickly the necessary repairs can be made.

I cite as another example a statement made on Sunday night that a Japanese carrier had been located and sunk off the Canal Zone. And when you hear statements that are attributed to what they call "an authoritative source," you can be reasonably sure from now on that under these war circumstances the "authoritative source" is not any person in authority.

Many rumors and reports which we now hear originate with enemy sources. For instance, today the Japanese are claiming that as a result of their one action against Hawaii they have gained naval supremacy in the Pacific. This is an old trick of propaganda which has been used innumerable times by the Nazis. The purposes of such fantastic claims are, of course, to spread fear and confusion among us, and to goad us into revealing military information which our enemies are desperately anxious to obtain.

Our Government will not be caught in this obvious trap—and neither will the people of the United States.

It must be remembered by each and every one of us that our free and rapid communication these days must be greatly restricted in wartime. It is not possible to receive full, speedy, accurate reports from distant areas of combat. This is particularly true where naval operations are concerned. For in these days of the marvels of radio it is often impossible for the commanders of various units to report their activities by radio at all, for the very simple reason that this information would become available to the enemy, and would disclose their position and their plan of defense or attack.

Of necessity there will be delays in officially confirming or denying reports of operations but we will not hide facts from the country if we know the facts and if the enemy will not be aided by their disclosure.

To all newspapers and radio stations—all those who reach the eyes and ears of the American people—I say this: You have a most grave responsibility to the Nation now and for the duration of this war.

If you feel that your Government is not disclosing enough of the truth, you have every right to say so. But—in the absence of all the facts, as revealed by official sources—you have no right in the ethics of patriotism to deal out unconfirmed reports in such a way as to make people believe that they are gospel truth.

Every citizen, in every walk of life,. shares this same responsibility. The lives of our soldiers and sailors- the whole future of this Nation—depend upon the manner in which each and every one of us fulfills his obligation to our country.

Now a word about the recent past—and the future. A year and a half has elapsed since the fall of France, when the whole world first realized the mechanized might which the Axis Nations had been building for so many years. America has used that year and a half to great advantage. Knowing that the attack might reach us in all too short a time, we immediately began greatly to increase our industrial strength and our capacity to meet the demands of modern warfare.

Precious months were gained by sending vast quantities of our war material to the Nations of the world still able to resist Axis aggression. Our policy rested on the fundamental truth that the defense of any country resisting Hitler or Japan was in the long run the defense of our own country. That policy has been justified. It has given us time, invaluable time, to build our American assembly lines of production.

Assembly lines are now in operation. Others are being rushed to completion. A steady stream of tanks and planes, of guns and ships, and shells and equipment—that is what these eighteen months have given us.

But it is all only a beginning of what still has to be done. We must be set to face a long war against crafty and powerful bandits. The attack at Pearl Harbor can be repeated at any one of many points, points in both oceans and along both our coast lines and against all the rest of the hemisphere.

It will not only be a long war, it will be a hard war. That is the basis on which we now lay all our plans. That is the yardstick by which we measure what we shall need and demand; money, materials, doubled and quadrupled production—ever-increasing. The production must be not only for our own Army and Navy and Air Forces. It must reinforce the other armies and navies and air forces fighting the Nazis and the war lords of Japan throughout the Americas and throughout the world.

I have been working today on the subject of production. Your Government has decided on two broad policies.

The first is to speed up all existing production by working on a seven-day-week basis in every war industry, including the production of essential raw materials.

The second policy, now being put into form, is to rush additions to the capacity of production by building more new plants, by adding to old plants, and by using the many smaller plants for war needs.

Over the hard road of the past months, we have at times met obstacles and difficulties, divisions and disputes, indifference and callousness. That is now all past—and, I am sure, forgotten.

The fact is that the country now has an organization in Washington built around men and women who are recognized experts in their own fields. I think the country knows that the people who are actually responsible in each and every one of these many fields are pulling together with a teamwork that has never before been excelled.

On the road ahead there lies hard work—grueling workday and night, every hour and every minute.

I was about to add that ahead there lies sacrifice for all of us.

But it is not correct to use that word. The United States does not consider it a sacrifice to do all one can, to give one's best to our Nation, when the Nation is fighting for its existence and its future life.

It is not a sacrifice for any man, old or young, to be in the Army or the Navy of the United States. Rather is it a privilege.

It is not a sacrifice for the industrialist or the wage earner, the farmer or the shopkeeper, the trainman or the doctor, to pay more taxes, to buy more bonds, to forego extra profits, to work longer or harder at the task for which he is best fitted. Rather is it a privilege.

It is not a sacrifice to do without many things to which we are accustomed if the national defense calls for doing without.

A review this morning leads me to the conclusion that at present we shall not have to curtail the normal use of articles of food. There is enough food today for all of us and enough left over to send to those who are fighting on the same side with us.

But there will be a clear and definite shortage of metals of many kinds for civilian use, for the very good reason that in our increased program we shall need for war purposes more than half of that portion of the principal metals which during the past year have gone into articles for civilian use. Yes, we shall have to give up many things entirely.

And I am sure that the people in every part of the Nation are prepared in their individual living to win this war. I am sure that they will cheerfully help to pay a large part of its financial cost while it goes on. I am sure they will cheerfully give up those material things that they are asked to give up.

And I am sure that they will retain all those great spiritual things without which we cannot win through.

I repeat that the United States can accept no result save victory, final and complete. Not only must the shame of Japanese treachery be wiped out, but the sources of international brutality, wherever they exist, must be absolutely and finally broken.

In my message to the Congress yesterday I said that we "will make it very certain that this form of treachery shall never again endanger us." In order to achieve that certainty, we must begin the great task that is before us by abandoning once and for all the illusion that we can ever again isolate ourselves from the rest of humanity.

In these past few years- and, most violently, in the past three days- we have learned a terrible lesson.

It is our obligation to our dead—it is our sacred obligation' to their children and to our children-that we must never forget what we have learned.

And what we all have learned is this:

There is no such thing as security for any Nation—or any individual- in a world ruled by the principles of gangsterism.

There is no such thing as impregnable defense against powerful aggressors who sneak up in the dark and strike without warning.

We have learned that our ocean-girt hemisphere is not immune from severe attack—that we cannot measure our safety in terms of miles on any map any more.

We may acknowledge that our enemies have performed a brilliant feat of deception, perfectly timed and executed with great skill. It was a thoroughly dishonorable deed, but we must face the fact that modern warfare as conducted in the Nazi manner is a dirty business. We don't like it- we didn't want to get in it -but we are in it and we're going to fight it with everything we've got.

I do not think any American has any doubt of our ability to administer proper punishment to the perpetrators of these crimes.

Your Government knows that for weeks Germany has been telling Japan that if Japan did not attack the United States, Japan would not share in dividing the spoils with Germany when peace came. She was promised by Germany that if she came in she would receive the complete and perpetual control of the whole of the Pacific area—and that means not only the Far East, but also all of the islands in the Pacific, and also a stranglehold on the west coast of North, Central, and South America.

We know also that Germany and Japan are conducting their military and naval operations in accordance with a joint plan. That plan considers all peoples and Nations which are not helping the Axis powers as common enemies of each and every one of the Axis powers.

That is their simple and obvious grand strategy. And that is why the American people must realize that it can be matched only with similar grand strategy. We must realize for example that Japanese successes against the United States in the Pacific are helpful to German operations in Libya; that any German success against the Caucasus is inevitably an assistance to Japan in her operations against the Dutch East Indies; that a German attack against Algiers or Morocco opens the way to a German attack against South America, and the Canal.

On the other side of the picture, we must learn also to know that guerrilla warfare against the Germans in, let us say, Serbia or Norway helps us; that a successful Russian offensive against the Germans helps us; and that British successes on land or sea in any part of the world strengthen our hands.

Remember always that Germany and Italy, regardless of any formal declaration of war, consider themselves at war with the United States at this moment just as much as they consider themselves at war with Britain or Russia. And Germany puts all the other Republics of the Americas into the same category of enemies. The people of our sister Republics of this hemisphere can 'be honored by that fact.

The true goal we seek is far above and beyond the ugly field of battle. When we resort to force, as now we must, we are determined that this force shall be directed toward ultimate good as well as against immediate evil. We Americans are not destroyers —we are builders.

We are now in the midst of a war, not for conquest, not for vengeance, but for a world in which this Nation, and all that this Nation represents, will be safe for our children. We expect to eliminate the danger from Japan, but it would serve us ill if we accomplished that and found that the rest of the world was dominated by Hitler and Mussolini.

We are going to win the war and we are going to win the peace that follows.

And in the difficult hours of this day—through dark days that may be yet to come- we will know that the vast majority of the members of the human race are on our side. Many of them are fighting with us. All of them are praying for us. For in representing our cause, we represent theirs as well- our hope and their hope for liberty under God.

Prime Minister Curtin of Australia also addressed his nation, terming the events his nation's "darkest hour".  Unlike the US, Australia had already been a declared belligerent in the war against Germany.  The arrival of the war with Japan put Australia in an extreme position of disadvantage as it had substantial troops numbers serving in the Middle East already.

Some person apparently undeterred by the news or not inspired by patriotism in the wake of the Japanese attacks robbed a payroll train at Yanderra, New South Wales, Australia.

It was a day of additional set backs and attacks, and expansion of the war, as detailed in Today In Wyoming's History: December 9

1941 China declared war on Japan, Germany and Italy. 

Hitler ordered US ships torpedoed. 

The 19th Bombardment Group attacks Japanese ships off the coast of Vigan, Luzon. 

USS Swordfish (SS-193) makes initial U.S. submarine attack on Japanese ship. 

Canadian government orders blackouts and closes Japanese-Canadian newspapers and schools. 

China declares war on Japan, after nine years of "incidents". They were, of course, already at war.

Cuba, Guatemala, the Philippine Commonwealth, and the Provisional Government of the Republic of Korea also declare war on Japan. Korea, of course, is already occupied by Japan. 

Japanese troops from Kwajalein occupy Tarawa in the Gilberts. 

Japanese bomb Nichols Field on Luzon. Japanese capture Khota Baru airfield on Malaya. 

Siam agrees to a cease fire with Japan, signaling an early defeat there. 

Japanese ground forces attack across the frontier of the New Territories into Hong Kong; capture the key position of Shing Mun Redoubt; 

D Company of The Winnipeg Grenadiers dispatched to the mainland to strengthen this sector.

Expanding on that, the Japanese occupied Bangkok, Thailand.  British Indian troops crossed the Thai frontier to destroy railroad lines but met resistance from Thai police units and then the Japanese.

The Prince of Wales and Repulse were turned back by the Japanese discovering their whereabouts off of Malaya.  An effort of Japanese torpedo bombers station in Saigon to find and attack the failed, however.

The German Navy lost sank two merchant ships in the Battle of the Atlantic.  In the Mediterranean, the appearance of aircraft from Malta turned back an Axis convoy with supplies for the Axis mission in North Africa.

The Germans lost ground in Russia as the  Red Army recaptured Yelets and Venev, south of Moscow, and Tikhvin, near Leningrad.

British commandos raided Florø, Norway, in an inconclusive raid.  It's become common to think of these raids as universally successful, but that's far from true.  Indeed, British Commando raids were often unsuccessful and, at least in this period, a little messed up. This one featured some accidental deaths due to a hand grenade detonating while they were being fused.

A photographer took a photo of the damaged Catholic Church in Tobruk.  Services were still being held there.



At least as of 2017, this church was still serving a Catholic population in the town.

The U.S. experienced its first East Coast air raid drills.  Businesses and schools were cleared out in a practice drill.

Newspapers across the country reported that San Francisco had been raided ineffectively, which local commanders of the U.S. Army confirmed.

Early in the war this sort of false alarm was common on the jittery Pacific Coast.  It has been the subject of a somewhat amusing move, 1941.

Bob Feller of the Cleveland Indians was one of the thousands of men who joined the service this week.  He joined the Navy.


Additional information on this day in World War Two.

Day 831 December 9, 1941


Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Monday, December 8, 1941. Declarations of War.

Newspaper stand, San Francisco, December 8, 1921. The headline in the visible paper was focused on New York, not the Pacific, proclaiming "Enemy Planes Near N.Y. From Atlantic!", which was complete baloney.

Time Magazine had an illustration of German Field Marshall Von Bock on its cover, with the lead in story being on the German offensive on Moscow.

Ironically, on the same day, Hitler ordered the Germans into a winter time stand down of the offensive, concluding Operation Barbarossa, which had actually ground to a halt some days prior.

American newspapers, in contrast to Time, which had gone to press earlier in the week, covered yesterday's Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.



A great deal was happening all over the globe due to yesterday's attack on Pearl Harbor, as partially detailed in our entry on Today In Wyoming's History: December 8: 1941




1941  The FBI warned Japanese residents of Rawlins to be discreet.

1941 Japan released its Declaration of War against the United States and the UK, which stated:
By the grace of Heaven, Emperor of Japan, seated on the throne occupied by the same dynasty from time immemorial, enjoin upon ye, Our loyal and brave subjects:

We hereby declare War on the United States of America and the British Empire. The men and officers of Our Army and Navy shall do their utmost in prosecuting the war. Our public servants of various departments shall perform faithfully and diligently their respective duties; the entire nation with a united will shall mobilize their total strength so that nothing will miscarry in the attainment of Our war aims.

To ensure the stability of East Asia and to contribute to world peace is the far-sighted policy which was formulated by Our Great Illustrious Imperial Grandsire and Our Great Imperial Sire succeeding Him, and which We lay constantly to heart. To cultivate friendship among nations and to enjoy prosperity in common with all nations, has always been the guiding principle of Our Empire's foreign policy. It has been truly unavoidable and far from Our wishes that Our Empire has been brought to cross swords with America and Britain. More than four years have passed since China, failing to comprehend the true intentions of Our Empire, and recklessly courting trouble, disturbed the peace of East Asia and compelled Our Empire to take up arms. Although there has been reestablished the National Government of China, with which Japan had effected neighborly intercourse and cooperation, the regime which has survived in Chungking, relying upon American and British protection, still continues its fratricidal opposition. Eager for the realization of their inordinate ambition to dominate the Orient, both America and Britain, giving support to the Chungking regime, have aggravated the disturbances in East Asia. Moreover these two Powers, inducing other countries to follow suit, increased military preparations on all sides of Our Empire to challenge Us. They have obstructed by every means Our peaceful commerce and finally resorted to a direct severance of economic relations, menacing gravely the existence of Our Empire. Patiently have We waited and long have We endured, in the hope that Our government might retrieve the situation in peace. But Our adversaries, showing not the least spirit of conciliation, have unduly delayed a settlement; and in the meantime they have intensified the economic and political pressure to compel thereby Our Empire to submission. This trend of affairs, would, if left unchecked, not only nullify Our Empire's efforts of many years for the sake of the stabilization of East Asia, but also endanger the very existence of Our nation. The situation being such as it is, Our Empire, for its existence and self-defense has no other recourse but to appeal to arms and to crush every obstacle in its path.

The hallowed spirits of Our Imperial Ancestors guarding Us from above, We rely upon the loyalty and courage of Our subjects in Our confident expectation that the task bequeathed by Our forefathers will be carried forward and that the sources of evil will be speedily eradicated and an enduring peace immutably established in East Asia, preserving thereby the glory of Our Empire.

In witness whereof, we have hereunto set our hand and caused the Grand Seal of the Empire to be affixed at the Imperial Palace, Tokyo, this seventh day of the 12th month of the 15th year of Shōwa, corresponding to the 2,602nd year from the accession to the throne of Emperor Jimmu. 
 The UK declared war on Japan.
Sir,
On the evening of December 7th His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom learned that Japanese forces without previous warning either in the form of a declaration of war or of an ultimatum with a conditional declaration of war had attempted a landing on the coast of Malaya and bombed Singapore and Hong Kong.
In view of these wanton acts of unprovoked aggression committed in flagrant violation of International Law and particularly of Article I of the Third Hague Convention relative to the opening of hostilities, to which both Japan and the United Kingdom are parties, His Majesty's Ambassador at Tokyo has been instructed to inform the Imperial Japanese Government in the name of His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom that a state of war exists between our two countries.
I have the honour to be, with high consideration,
Sir,
Your obedient servant,
Winston S. Churchill 
 The US declared war on Japan, with President Roosevelt declaring the following:
Mr. Vice President, Mr. Speaker, members of the Senate and the House of Representatives:
Yesterday, December 7, 1941 - a date which will live in infamy - the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan.

The United States was at peace with that nation, and, at the solicitation of Japan, was still in conversation with its government and its Emperor looking toward the maintenance of peace in the Pacific.

Indeed, one hour after Japanese air squadrons had commenced bombing in the American island of Oahu, the Japanese Ambassador to the United States and his colleague delivered to our Secretary of State a formal reply to a recent American message. And, while this reply stated that it seemed useless to continue the existing diplomatic negotiations, it contained no threat or hint of war or of armed attack.

It will be recorded that the distance of Hawaii from Japan makes it obvious that the attack was deliberately planned many days or even weeks ago. During the intervening time the Japanese Government has deliberately sought to deceive the United States by false statements and expressions of hope for continued peace.

The attack yesterday on the Hawaiian Islands has caused severe damage to American naval and military forces. I regret to tell you that very many American lives have been lost. In addition, American ships have been reported torpedoed on the high seas between San Francisco and Honolulu.

Yesterday the Japanese Government also launched an attack against Malaya.

Last night Japanese forces attacked Hong Kong.

Last night Japanese forces attacked Guam.

Last night Japanese forces attacked the Philippine Islands.

Last night the Japanese attacked Wake Island.

And this morning the Japanese attacked Midway Island.

Japan has therefore undertaken a surprise offensive extending throughout the Pacific area. The facts of yesterday and today speak for themselves. The people of the United States have already formed their opinions and well understand the implications to the very life and safety of our nation.

As Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy I have directed that all measures be taken for our defense, that always will our whole nation remember the character of the onslaught against us.

No matter how long it may take us to overcome this premeditated invasion, the American people, in their righteous might, will win through to absolute victory.

I believe that I interpret the will of the Congress and of the people when I assert that we will not only defend ourselves to the uttermost but will make it very certain that this form of treachery shall never again endanger us.

Hostilities exist. There is no blinking at the fact that our people, our territory and our interests are in grave danger.

With confidence in our armed forces, with the un-bounding determination of our people, we will gain the inevitable triumph. So help us God.

I ask that the Congress declare that since the unprovoked and dastardly attack by Japan on Sunday, December 7, 1941, a state of war has existed between the United States and the Japanese Empire.
Congress declared war within one hour of the speech being delivered.  Only Jeanette Rankin voted against the declaration of war.

Guards were posted at the entrance to Pearl Harbor.

Army Guards at Pearl Harbor, December 8, 1941.


Blackouts were ordered on the Pacific Coast.


Some surprising scheduled events carried on.

USO dance, heavily attended by sailors, December 8, 1941.



Charles Lindbergh issued a statement in support of the US entering the war, in light of Pearl Harbor.

New Zealand declared war on Japan at 11:00 a.m. New Zealand time.

Likewise, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Haiti, Honduras, the Dutch government in exile, and Nicaragua declared war on Japan.

Japan bombed Singapore and invaded Thailand, the latter of which had once been more or less allied to Japan.  The invasion resulted in a surrender that day, and a formal alliance with Japan, with Thailand declaring war on the Allied powers.

The Germans carried on their atrocities near Riga, Latvia.






Closer to Home:

Both of my parents would have been back in school on this day in 1941.  No doubt the talk in the schools was all about the arrival of war on American shores.  

Thousands of American men who were not yet in the service through conscription went to recruiting stations, flooding the lines.  A large number of men joined the service on this day.


Men enlisting in the Marine Corps.

Men enlisting in the Navy.




December 8, 1921. Opposing Irish Views.

On this day in 1921, the Irish President, Éamon de Valera, announced that he was opposed to the treaty negotiated in London, even though he'd left his delegates there virtually without instruction.  He did, however, say that he'd leave the matter to the Dail Eirann to decide.  On the same day, one of those delegates, Republican Arthur Griffith, stated that he was strongly in favor of ratifying the treaty.

The Anti Saloon League met in Washington D. C., although it seemingly would have had little to meet about.


Babe Ruth was selling Christmas Seals.


When its suddenly the early 1970s, or maybe the 1950s, again on the elevator.


I parked in the bank parking lot, as the city was still resurfacing our lot.  As I rounded the corner to our building, I saw the very petite Asian woman who works for the accountants (she may be an accountant) coming down the sidewalk, about a block away.*

She's very nice.  I don't know her other than to recognize her, but she's very friendly. She's usually very well-dressed.

She's also well-dressed in a way that you don't see much in the US much anymore, at least round here.  She favors, for example, very high heels, which may in part be because she is very short.  But she has a certain look.

A man was entering the building at the same time.  He was clearly looking up the street.  I came in the building just after him.  She was too far away to  hold the elevator, and I went ahead and go on.

Then came the comment.

This occurred long enough ago now, that I can't quite recall what he said.** But it was something in the nature of a wolf whistle in a sentence.

It took me off guard.

You don't hear stuff like this anymore.  Men don't say stuff like "she sure fills out that dress nicely" or "look at the gams on that one" and the like anymore, and they really shouldn't.  It was so out of context I think my reaction was something like "um. . . "

The reply from the elevator rider was "I'm married, but you have to look, am I right?"

Um. . . .

I don't know if you have to look, but commenting?  It was like being transported back to the 1970s, and like most things from the 70s, not really in a good way.

Footnotes:

*When I say Asian, I mean it. She's from someplace in Asia and has a fairly thick accent.  I don't know where she's from as I've never asked.

**This post was started in July.

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Sunday, December 7, 1941. Japan attacks the West.

This is, of course, the "day that shall live in infamy", the anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.  The attack was an extremely skillfully executed naval/air raid designed to take out the U.S. Navy in the Pacific while the Japanese launched invasions throughout the western South Pacific.

For that event, we link in our entry from   Today In Wyoming's History: December 7

1941  US military installations were attack in Hawaii by the Imperial Japanese Navy bringing the US formally into World War Two.

It was a surprisingly warm day in Central Wyoming that fateful day.  The high was in the upper 40s, and low in the lower 20s.  Not atypical temperatures for December but certainly warmer than it can be.

Events played out like this:

0342 Hawaii Time, 0642 Mountain Standard Time:  The minesweeper USS Condor sighted a periscope and radioed the USS Ward:   "Sighted submerged submarine on westerly course, speed 9 knots.”
 


USS Condor

0610 Hawaii Time, 0910 Mountain Standard Time:  Japanese aircraft carriers turn into the wind and launch the first attack wave.

0645-0653:  Hawaii Time, 0945-0953 Mountain Standard Time:  The USS Ward, mostly staffed by Naval Reservists, sights and engages a Japanese mini submarine first reported by the USS Connor, sinking the submarine. The Ward reports the entire action, albeit in code, noting:  "“We have dropped depth charges upon sub operating in defensive sea area" and “We have attacked, fired upon, and dropped depth charges upon submarine operating in defensive sea area.”

 USS Ward

At this point in time, most Wyomingites would be up and enjoying the day.  A large percentage would have gone to Church for the Sunday morning and have now started the rest of their Sundays.

0702 Hawaii Time, 1002 Mountain Standard Time:    An operator at the U.S. Army's newly installed Opana Mobile Radar Station, one of six such facilities on Oahu, sights 50 aircraft hits on his radar scope, which is confirmed by his co-operator.  They call Ft. Shafter and report the sighting.

 0715 Hawaii Time, 1015 Mountain Standard Time:  USS Ward's message decoded and reported to Admiral Kimmel, who orders back to "wait for verification."

0720 Hawaii Time, 1020 Mountain Standard Time:  U.S. Army lieutenant at Ft. Shafter reviews radar operator's message and believes the message to apply to a flight of B-17s which are known to be in bound from Califorina.  He orders that the message is not to be worried about.

0733 Hawaii Time, 1033 Mountain Standard Time, 1233 Eastern Time:  Gen. George Marshall issues a warning order to Gen. Short that hostilities many be imminent, but due to atmospheric conditions, it has to go by telegraph rather than radio.  It was not routed to go as a priority and would only arrive after the attack was well underway.

0749  Hawaii Time, 1049 Mountain Standard Time:  Japanese Air-attack commander Mitsuo Fuchida looks down on Pearl Harbor and observes that the US carriers are absent.  He orders his telegraph operator to tap out to, to, to: signalling "attack" and then: to ra, to ra, to ra: attack, surprise achieved.  This is interpreted as some as Tora, Tora, Tora, "tiger, tiger, tiger" which it was not.  Those who heard that sometimes interpreted to be indicative of the Japanese phrase; "A tiger goes out 1,000 ri and returns without fail.” 

0755 Hawaii Time, 1055 Mountain Standard Time:  Commander Logan C. Ramsey, at the Command Center on Ford Island, looks out a window to see a low-flying plane he believes to be a reckless and improperly acting U.S. aircraft.  He then notices “something black fall out of that plane” and realizes instantly an air raid is in progress.  He orders telegraph operators to send out an uncoded message to every ship and the base that: "AIR RAID ON PEARL HARBOR X THIS IS NOT DRILL"

0800 Hawaii time, 11:00 Mountain Standard Time.  B-17s which were to be stationed at Oahu begin to land, right in the midst of the Japanese air raid.

0810  Hawaii Time, 11:10 Mountain Standard Time.  The USS Arizona fatally hit.

 USS Arizona

0817 Hawaii Time:  11:17 Mountain Standard Time.  The USS Helm notices a submarine ensnared in the the antisubmarine net and engages it.  It submerges but this partially floods the submarine, which must be abandoned.

 USS Helm

0839  Hawaii Time.  1139  Mountain Standard Time. The USS Monaghan, attempting to get out of the harbor, spotted another miniature submarine and rammed and depth charged it.

 USS Monaghan

0850 Hawaii Time.  11:50 Mountain Standard Time.  The USS Nevada, with her steam now up, heads for open water.  It wouldn't make it and it was intentionally run aground to avoid it being sunk.

USS Nevada

0854  Hawaii Time.  1150 Mountain Standard Time.  The Japanese second wave hits.

0929 Hawaii Time.  1229 Mountain Standard Time.  NBC interrupts regular programming to announce that Pearl Harbor was being attacked.

0930  Hawaii Time.  1230  Mountain Standard Time.  CBS interrupts regular programming to announce that Pearl Harbor was being attacked.

0930 Hawaii Time.  1230 Mountain Standard Time.  The bow of the USS Shaw, a destroyer, is blown off.  The ship would be repaired and used in the war.

 Explosion on the Shaw.

0938 Hawaii Time, 1238 Mountain Standard Time.  CBS erroneously announces that Manila was being attacked.  It wasn't far off, however, as the Philippines would be attacked that day (December 8 given the International Date Line).

10:00 Hawaii Time, 13:00 Mountain Standard Time

The USS West Virginia at Pearl Harbor on this day.

1300 Hawaii Time.  1600 Mountain Standard Time.  Japanese task forces begins to turn towards Japan.

A third wave was by the Japanese debated, but not launched.

Wyoming is three hours ahead of Hawaii (less than I'd have guessed) making the local time here about 10:30 a.m. on that Sunday morning when the attack started..  The national radio networks began to interrupt their programming about 12:30.  On NBC the announcement fell between Sammy Kaye's Sunday Serenade and the University of Chicago Round Table, which was featuring a program on Canada at war.  On NBC the day's episode of Great Plays was interrupted for their announcement. CBS had just begun to broadcast The World Today which actually  headlined with their announcement fairly seamlessly.
The attack on Pearl Harbor so strongly dominates this day that it's easy to forget that other things occurred on it, although much of the history worth events of this day are likewise associated with the Japanese assault on Western powers.  Japan also launched an invasion of British Malaya, declared war on the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, Canada New Zealand and South Africa, and bombed Midway Island.

Panama declared war on Japan.

It's not too much to ask why did Japan do it?  In retrospect the Japanese assault, while initially successful, seems so fanciful as to be obviously doomed from the onset.

The reason are surprisingly difficult to discern.  

Japan had committed itself, of course, to war in China and in spite of years of effort it had never been able to digest the giant country or to defeat either of the two claimants to national supremacy there. The recognized government, the Nationalist, had proven incapable of defeating Japan to date, but they fought the war much more effectively than they've generally been credited with.  If not winning, they really weren't losing in 1941 either.

The war in China had almost been accidental in some ways, but it demonstrated how deeply militarized Japan had become.  In essence, the war commenced because Japan's occupation of Korea and portions of Manchuria were irreconcilable with China's sovereignty.  Neither China nor the Soviet Union could really tolerate Japan's obviously imperial presence in the region.  Japan's presence there was purely colonial, and in a way it differed very little from Germany's presence in 1941 on the Russian steppes.  Japan had a large and growing population, and it had a concept of settling a portion of that population on lands that it regarded as suitable for them, views of the occupants of that land notwithstanding.

Japan's invasion of Manchuria inevitably lead to clashes with the Chinese Nationalist, and Soviet, armies. For its part, the Japanese army in Manchuria operated nearly independently.  Ultimately clashes with the Chinese lead to full-scale war and an invasion by Japan of China.

While Japanese offensive operations were initially successful, ultimately China was too vast and too populous for the Japanese to defeat.  The Chinese Nationalist held on, first with German and Soviet material help, and then with American and Soviet help  The United States, sympathetic with the Chinese Nationalist started to put in place economic boycotts against Japan, fully aware that Japan could not continue to function without access to foreign raw materials.  That made it plain to the administrations in both nations that Japan would have to go into diplomacy with the Chinese, or launch a war against the United States.  In spite of the seeming obstacles of the latter, the Japanese did not back down and in fact expanded into French Indochina when the German occupation of France made that practical.

The Japanese Navy itself was a major factor in Japan's launching strikes against the West.  A major world navy, it had not seen significant combat since the Russo Japanese War and was involved in intense rivalry with the Japanese Army.  In spite of being bogged down in a quagmire against China, the Japanese Army saw a future war against the Soviet Union as being both inevitable and desirable, contrary to the views of some latter-day historians who assert that the Japanese Army did not have that in mind.  It very much did, but did not view it as practical until China was defeated.  The Japanese Navy, however, which was extremely dependent upon foreign oil, saw a quick sharp strike and series of invasions as a way for Japan to secure the raw materials it needed.

The oddity of that view is that it required the United States to acquiesce to defeat.  In spite of some comments from within the Japanese Navy that suggest that it never regarded that as realistic, it did.  The thought was that taking out the United States Navy at Pearl Harbor, including its aircraft carriers, would render the United States defenseless and that after Japan invaded the Pacific territories it wished to take, the United States would sue for peace.

It was completely unrealistic.

In Europe, Japan's co-combatant, now that Japan had entered the war, Germany, issued its Nacht and Nebel, i.e., "night and fog" decree.  The order authorized the disappearance of dissidents.  This introduced a new element of terror into German repression, although by this point things were pretty terrifying as it was.  

Germany had, of course, on this day find itself in a situation which it had sought to avoid.  Japan, a member of the Axis powers, had brought the United States into the war as a full combatant and, moreover, Japan had entered the war in a fashion which had no immediate apparent benefit to Nazi Germany.  The Germans were already faced with full-scale American material support to the United Kingdom and the Soviet Union and the US was already fighting an undeclared naval war in the Atlantic.  The Japanese assault guaranteed that US forces would now soon be fighting the Germans on a much amplified level, but no Allied forces would be drawn away from their war against Germany.  The Germans had hoped for a Japanese attack on the USSR, which by this time was no longer on the immediate Japanese horizon.

Rommel withdrew his forces ten miles back from the Gazala line at Tobruk.

Closer to Home:

I actually have a pretty good idea of what my parents experienced on this historic day.

My father's family, this being a Sunday, would have gone to Mass and would have been at St. Agnes in that city.  If my parents later habits are any indication of those of their parents, they probably went to the early Mass, which was often quite early in those days.  It would have been a Latin Mass, of course, those being the only kind there were, but it would have been the "low" Mass, rather than a "high" Mass.

My father was an altar server in Scotsbluff, so he may have served that day.  I don't know the answer to that.

When I was young, we usually went to breakfast after Mass, and prior to the late 1960s the pre Mass fast was stricter.  I doubt that my grandparents took all their kids to breakfast, however, but I'm sure that something would have been done for a family of six, including parents and children, for a communal breakfast.  That probably basically took things into the mid-morning.  What did they do after that?  Well, I'm not certain.  Again, they may have planned to go duck hunting that afternoon, but I don't know.

My father mentioned that a lot of people learned about the attacks, which happened right about noon local time, while listening to a broadcast of a football game on the radio.  Given that recollection, I suspect that's how he learned of them.


Across the country, radio broadcast started interrupting their regular programming with short, and non-specific, announcements that Pearl Harbor was under attack.  That's pretty amazing, really, as it means that the press was reporting the event only 40 or so minutes into it.  WOR 710 in New York was the first to announce anything, at 2:26 Eastern time.  That was an interruption of a football game, so perhaps that's what my father was referencing in general.  NBC and CBS in general followed at 2:30 Eastern time on their shows, at least one of which was a news program.  A summary of the radio broadcasts, complete with audio, is here on the website Radio Days.

Even if they didn't hear it on the radio, somebody they knew would have, and the calls would have started.  By late in the day the evening newspapers, and every mid-sized city had one, would have had an issue out on Pearl Harbor being attacked.

They would have gone on to a larger Sunday dinner, most likely, with the news of the day being the ominous talk of the table.

In Quebec, where my mother's family was, they would have started the day much the same. With a larger family (six children still at home, one in the Canadian Army overseas in the UK) they would have gone to Mass, but my guess is that it wouldn't have been the first one of the day.  While you'd think that I'd be able to easily determine which church they went to, it appears that the church's in St. Lambert have been rebuilt since that time, so I don't know.  My guess is that they probably collectively walked to Mass and then went home to some sort of late morning meal.

My mother used to state that on Sundays the family often went somewhere together, and often by car.  Perhaps that's what occurred on this day, a drive to the country. But it was December and their finances were tight so perhaps not.  Perhaps it was just a day at home  At any rate, they wouldn't have received the news until around 2:30 at the earliest, if anyone was listening to the radio, which in a large family, somebody likely was.  Even if they were not, they too would have received calls shortly thereafter, and there would have been a late date newspaper.

They too would have gone on to talk of the news, but my guess is that the focus would have been much different.  By this date in 1941 Canada had been at war for two years, and while it would soon be losing some troops in the Pacific, in the Commonwealth there was a general sense of relief that the United States was now entering the war.


Wednesday, December 7, 1921 Peace and Violence.

President Harding at Red Cross meeting.

On this day in 1921 King George V summoned parliament while President Eamon de Valera summoned his cabinet, both to approve the Anglo-Irish Treaty securing independence for Ireland as a dominion within the British Commonwealth.  Norther Ireland's Stormont was asked by its head, Sir James Craig, to delay action on the agreement.

A riot ensued in Chicago when police attempted arrest striking meatpackers.  360,000 people would become involved in the riot.

Farmers group meeting with President Harding at the White House.