INFAMOUS DAY: Marines at Pearl Harbor
by Robert J. Cressman and J. Michael Wenger
They Caught Us Flat-Footed
At 0740, when Fuchida's fliers had closed to within a few miles of
Kahuku Point, the 43 Zeroes split away from the rest of the formation,
swinging out north and west of Wheeler Field, the headquarters of the
Hawaiian Air Force's 18th Pursuit Wing. Passing further to the south, at
about 0745 the Soryu and Hiryu divisions executed a hard
diving turn to port and headed north, toward Wheeler. Eleven Zeroes from
Shokaku and Zuikaku simultaneously left the formation and
flew east, crossing over Oahu north of Pearl Harbor to attack NAS
Kaneohe Bay. Eighteen from Akagi and Kaga headed toward
what the Japanese called Babasu Pointo Hikojo (Barbers Point
Airdrome) Ewa Mooring Mast Field.
Sweeping over the Waianae Range, Lieutenant Commander Shigeru Itaya
led Akagi's nine Zeroes, while Lieutenant Yoshio Shiga headed
another division of nine from Kaga. After the initial attack,
Itaya and Shiga were to be followed by divisions from Soryu,
under Masaji Suganami, and Hiryu, under Lieutenant Kiyokuma
Okajima, which were, at that moment, involved in attacking Wheeler to
the north.
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Ewa
Mooring Mast Field, later a Japanese target is seen hazily through the
windshield of a Battleship Row-bound Kate shortly before 0800 on 7
December 1941. Author's Collection
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In the officers' mess at Ewa, the officer-of-the-day, Captain Leonard
W. Ashwell of VMJ-252, noticed two formations of aircraft at 0755. The
first looked like 18 "torpedo planes" flying at 1,000 feet toward Pearl
Harbor from Barbers Point, but the second, to the northwest, comprised
about 21 planes just coming over the hills, from the direction of
Nanakuli, also at an altitude of about 1,000 feet. Ashwell, intrigued by
the sight, stepped outside for a better look. The second formation, of
single-seat fighters (the two division from Akagi and
Kaga), flew just to the north of Ewa and wheeled to the right.
Then, flying in a "string" formation, they commenced firing. Recognizing
the planes as Japanese, Ashwell burst back into the mess, shouting: "Air
Raid ... Air Raid! Pass the word!" He then sprinted for the guard house,
to have "call to arms" sounded.
Browning Machine Gun Drill on Board Ship
Marines man a water-cooled, .50-caliber Browning M2 machine gun
during a drill on board the gunnery training ship Wyoming (AG-17)
in late 1941. The M2 Browning weighed (without water) 100 pounds, 87
ounces, and measured five feet, six inches in length. It fired between
550 and 700 rounds per minute to a maximum horizontal range of 7,400
yards. The two hoses carry coolant water to the gun barrel. The gun
could be fired without the prescribed two and a half gallons of cooling
water as Gunnery Sergeant Douglas's men did on board
Nevada (BB-36) on 7 December 1941 but accuracy diminished
as the barrel heated and the pattern of shots became more widely
dispersed. Experience would reveal that a large number of .50-caliber
hits were necessary to disable a plane, and that only a small number of
hits could be attained by any single ship-mounted gun against a dive
bomber.
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That Sunday morning, Technical Sergeant Henry H. Anglin, the
noncommissioned-officer-in-charge of the photographic section at Ewa,
had driven from his Pearl City home with his three-year-old son, Hank,
to take the boy's picture at the station. The senior Anglin had just
positioned the lad in front of the camera and was about to take the
photo the picture was to be a gift to the boy's grandparents
when they heard the "mingled noise of airplanes and machine
guns." Roaring down to within 25 feet of the ground, Itaya's group most
likely carried out only one pass at their targets before moving on to
Hickam, the headquarters of the Hawaiian Air Force's 18th Bombardment
Wing.
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LCdr
Shigeru Itaya, commander of Akagi's first-wave fighters, which
carried out the initial strafing attacks at Ewa Field. Prange
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Thinking that Army pilots were showing off, Sergeant Anglin stepped
outside the photographic section tent and, along with some other
enlisted men, watched planes bearing Japanese markings strafing the edge
of the field. Then, the planes began roaring down toward the field
itself and the bullets from their cowl and wing-mounted guns began
kicking up puffs of dirt. "Look, live ammunition," somebody said or
thought, "Somebody'll go to prison for this."
Shiga's pilots, like Itaya's, concentrated on the tactical aircraft
lined up neatly on Ewa's northwest apron with short bursts of 7.7- and
20-millimeter machine gun fire. Shiga's pilots, unlike Itaya's, however,
reversed course over the treetops and repeated their blistering attacks
from the opposite direction. Within minutes, most of MAG-21's planes sat
ablaze and exploding, black smoke corkscrewing into the sky. The enemy
spared none of the planes: the gray BD-1s and -2s of VMSB-232 and the
seven spare SB2U-3s left behind by VMSB-231 when they embarked in
Lexington just two days before. VMF-211's remaining F4F-3s, left
behind when the squadron deployed to Wake well over a week before,
likewise began exploding in flame and smoke.
At his home on Ewa Beach, three miles southeast of the air station,
Captain Richard C. Mangrum, VMSB-232's flight officer, sat reading the
Sunday comics. Often residents of that area had heard gunnery exercises
but on a Sunday morning? The chatter of gunfire and the dull thump of
explosions, however, drew Mangrum's attention away from the cartoons. As
he looked out his front door, planes with red ball markings on the wings
and fuselage roared by at very low altitude, bound for Pearl Harbor. up
the valley in the direction of Wheeler Field, smoke was boiling skyward,
as it was from Ewa. As he set out for Ewa on an old country road, wives
and children of Marines who lived in the Ewa Beach neighborhood began
gathering at the Mangrums' house.
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A
Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero, flown by PO2 Masao Taniguchi in the 7 December
attack on Ewa Mooring Mast Field, takes off from the carrier
Akagi, circa spring 1942. Author's Collection
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