Title: WWII (Pearl Hrbor)
1WWII (Pearl Hrbor)
Ms. Haberman
2Overview
- The surprise was complete. The attacking planes
came in two waves the first hit its target at
753 AM, the second at 855. By 955 it was all
over. By 100 PM the carriers that launched the
planes from 274 miles off the coast of Oahu were
heading back to Japan.
3The First Wave
- Of the 8 attack planes, the Akagi was assigned
to bomb the U.S.S. Maryland, Tennesee and West
Virginia - The Kaga and Hiryu was assigned the U.S.S.
Arizona - Two dive bombers attacked fields
- 6 combat fighters took out Air and ground control
as well as aircraft fields.
4Battleship Row
- The primary attack of the First wave was
Battleship Row - Ten minutes after the attack began the ARIZONA
was hit, igniting its magazine. - Within minutes she sank.
5 Second Wave
- During the second wave the Akagi, 13th Attack
Unit where to attack the Ford Island NW, U.S.S.
Neosho, U.S.S. Shaw, and U.S.S. Nevada this is
only one attack there were many more.
6 Approximately 100 ships of the U.S. Navy were
present that morning, consisting of battleships,
destroyers, cruisers and various support ships .
USS Arizona (BB39)
Battleship USS West Virginia (BB48)
Battleship USS California (BB44)
Battleship USS Oklahoma (BB37)
Battleship USS Nevada (BB36)
Battleship USS Pennsylvania (BB38)
Battleship (in dry dock 1) USS Tennessee (BB43)
Battleship USS Maryland (BB46)
Battleship USS Vestal (AR4)
Repair ship USS Neosho (AO23)
Oiler USS Detroit (CL8)
Light cruiser USS Raleigh (CL7)
Light cruiser USS Utah (AG16)
Target Ship USS Tangier (AV8)
Seaplane Tender
7Losses
- Eight American battleships and 13 other naval
vessels were sunk or badly damaged - 200 American aircraft were destroyed,
- approximately 3000 naval and military personnel
were killed or wounded.
8Important people
- The striking force of 353 Japanese aircraft was
led by Commander Mitsuo Fuchida. - he transmitted the radio message to ra ... to ra
... to ra ..., the coded signal to Japanese
commanders that the attack was a surprise.
9FDR
- Word of an attack reached FDR wile he was in his
study having lunch. - The rest of the afternoon was spent receiving
news of the attack, in bits and pieces, from the
Navy Department.
10Dorrie Miller
- SHIPS COOK THIRD CLASS DORIS DORIE MILLER
fired and took down Japanese Planes. - the first African American to receive the Navy
Cross, presented for courage under fire.
11Col. James Doolittle
- Shortly before US entry into World War II, he
returned to active duty as a major with the Army
Air Corps. - led the first U.S. air raid on Japan during
World War II, Doolittle Raid.
12Gen. George C. Marshall
- December 1941 he was chiefly responsible for the
training, organization, and deployment of U.S.
troops in all sectors of the fighting, and for
the appointment of commanders in all major
operations. - Roosevelt's principal advisers on strategy.
13 LT. COMDR. EDWIN T. LAYTON
- Layton was head of intelligence for the U.S.
Pacific Fleet during World War II. He was largely
responsible for intelligence
14ADM. HUSBAND E. KIMMEL
- service was effectively confined to one
day--December 7, 1941 - he did not expect the war to begin with an attack
on Hawaii--even though his fleet order of October
14,1941, said that war might begin with a
surprise attack on the fleet at Pearl Harbor.
15VICE ADMIRAL NAGUMO
- Nagumo was commander of the Japanese carrier
striking force that attacked Pearl Harbor - He traveled throughout the southwestern Pacific
and Indian Oceans in the first six months of
1942.
16LT. GEN. WALTER C. SHORT
- Walter Short was in charge of U.S. Army defenses
in Hawaii when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. - He served as assistant chief of staff during the
World War.
17ADM. HAROLD R. STARK
- after a survey of U.S. naval ships, aircraft, and
personnel, he recommended a dramatic expansion of
the Navy and presided over the two-ocean Navy
buildup that began in early 1940s.
18ADM. ISOROKU YAMAMOTO
- The commander in chief of the Japanese Combined
Fleet at the start of the war, Yamamoto was the
key architect of Japans success at the start of
the war. - He had conceived of a surprise attack on the
U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor early in 1941 as a
means of stopping the U.S. from interfering with
Japanese expansion in the Pacific.
19December 8th War is DECLARED!
- "Yesterday, December 7,1941 - a date which will
live in infamy -- The United States was suddenly
and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces
of the Empire of Japan." -FDR
20 Bibliography
- http//plasma.nationalgeographic.com/pearlharbor/
- http//www.ibiscom.com/pearl.htm
- http//www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq66-1.htm