INFAMOUS DAY: Marines at Pearl Harbor
by Robert J. Cressman and J. Michael Wenger
On the afternoon of 6 December 1941, Tai Sing Loo, the colorful Pearl
Harbor Navy Yard photographer, arranged with Platoon Sergeant Charles R.
Christenot, the noncommissioned-officer-in-charge of the Main Gate at
the Navy Yard, to have his Marines pose for a photograph between 0830
and 0930 Sunday morning, in front of the new concrete main gate. The
photo was to be for a Christmas card.
As war clouds gathered over the Pacific basin in late 1941, the
United States Pacific Fleet operated, as it had since May 1940, from
Pearl Harbor. While the security of that fleet and for the island of
Oahu lay in the Army's hands, that of the Navy Yard and the Naval Air
Stations at Pearl Harbor and Kaneohe Bay lay in the hands of Marines. In
addition, on board the fleet's battleships, aircraft carriers, and some
of its cruisers, Marines provided security, served as orderlies for
embarked flag officers and ships' captains, and manned secondary
antiaircraft and machine gun batteries seagoing duties familiar
to the Corps since its inception.
|
Ford
Island, seen on 10 October 1941 from much the same angle as Japanese
bomber pilots viewed it on 7 December. National Archives Photo
80-G-279375
|
The Marine Barracks at Pearl Harbor comprised a Barracks Detachment
and two companies, A and B, the men living in a comfortable three-story
concrete barracks. Company A manned the main gates at the Submarine Base
and Navy yard, and other "distant outposts," providing yard security,
while Company B enforced traffic regulations and maintained proper
police and order under the auspices of the Yard Police Officer. In
addition, Marines ran the Navy Yard Fire Department. Elements of Marine
defense battalions made Pearl Harbor their home, too, residing in the
several 100-man temporary wooden barracks buildings that had been
completed during 1940 and 1941. Less commodious but no less important
was the burgeoning airbase that Marines of Marine Aircraft Group (MAG) 2
(later 21) had hewn and hammered out near Barbers Point Ewa
Mooring Mast Field, home for a Marine aircraft group consisting of
fighting, scout-bombing, and utility squadrons.
On 27 November, having been privy to intelligence information gleaned
from intercepted and translated Japanese diplomatic message traffic,
Admiral Harold R. Stark, the Chief of Naval Operations, and General
George C. Marshall, the Army's Chief of Staff, sent a war warning to
their principal commanders on Oahu, Admiral Husband E. Kimmel, the
Commander in Chief, Pacific Fleet, and Lieutenant General Walter C.
Short, the Commander of the Hawaiian Department. Thus adjured to take
appropriate defensive measures, and feeling that his more exposed
advance bases needed strengthening, Kimmel set in motion a plan that had
been completed as early as 10 November, to provide planes for Midway and
Wake. The latter was to receive fighters 12 Grumman F4F-3
Wildcats of Marine Fighter Squadron (VMF) 211 while Midway was to
get scout bombers from Marine Scout-Bomber Squadron (VMSB) 231. The
following day, 28 November 1941, the carrier Enterprise (CV-6)
departed Pearl in Task Force 8 under Vice Admiral William F. Halsey,
Jfr., Commander, Aircraft, Battle Force, embarking VMF-211 at sea.
VMSB-231 was to embark in another carrier Lexington (CV-2), in
Task Force 12 under Rear Admiral John H. Newton, on 5 December.
|
Pearl Harbor Navy Yard, looking south, on 13 October
1941. Marine Barracks complex is located to the left of the tank farm
visible just to left of center. Several temporary wooden barracks,
completed in early 1941, ring the parade ground. National Archives Photo
80-G-451123
|
At the outset, apparently no one except the squadron commanders knew
their respective destinations, but the men of VMF-211 and VMSB-231,
meanwhile, apparently ordered their affairs and made ready for what was
to appear as "advanced base exercises." Among those men seeing to his
financial affairs at Ewa Mooring Mast Field on 3 December 1941 was First
Lieutenant Richard EW. Fleming, USMCR, who wrote to his widowed mother:
"This is the last time I'll be able to write for probably sometime. I'm
sorry I can't give you any details; it's that secret."
On the 5th, Task Force 12 sailed from Pearl. Eighteen light gray
Vought SB2U-3 Vindicators from CMSB-231, under 41-year old Major
Clarence J. "Buddy" Chappell, then made the 1.7-hour flight from Ewa and
landed on board Lexington, along with the "Lady Lex" air group.
Planes recovered, the force set course for Midway. The Lexington
departed Pearl Harbor on the morning of 5 December. That afternoon saw
the arrival of Battleship Division One from gunnery exercises in the
Hawaiian Operating Area, and the three dreadnoughts, Arizona
(BB-39), Nevada (BB-36), and Oklahoma (BB-37), moored in
their assigned berths at the quays along Ford Island. The movements of
the ships in and out of Pearl Harbor had been the object of much
interest on the part of th espionage system operating out of the
Japanese consulate in Honolulu throughout the year 1941, for the
information its operatives were providing went to support an ambitious
and bold oeration that had taken shape over several months.
Unbeknownst to Admiral Kimmel, a Japanese task force under the
command of Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, formed around six carriers and
the most powerful force of its kind ever assembled by any naval power,
had set out from the remote Kurile Islands on 27 November. It observed
radio sxilence and steamed via the comparatively less traveled northern
Pacific.
Nagumo's mission was to destroy the United States Pacific Fleet and
thus ensure its being unable to threaten the Japanese Southern Operation
posed to attack American, British, and Dutch possessions in the Far
East. All of the warning signs made available to Admiral Kimmel and
General Short pointed toward hostilities occurring within the forseeable
future, but not on Oahu. War, however, was about to burst upon the
Marines at Pearl Harbor "like a thunderclap from a clear sky."
|