An interesting, and cheap way to see much of the USA. At this speed we can also avoid having to speak to any Yanks or Rebels that we may come across! And you know what they are like!
Remember
Early on the morning of the seventh of December 1941 the Japanese attacked the US naval base at Pearl Harbour. While relations between the two nations were in a state of high tension a state of war was not to be expected outside of an official 'opening' of hostilities. In an effort, vain as it happened, to destroy the US aircraft carrier fleet and as many battleships and major infrastructure as possible the Japanese followed the plan developed by Naval Marshal General Isoroku Yamamoto. His plan was a copy of the Royal Naval attack on the Italian naval base at Taranto on November 1940. As military attache he was in Italy at the time he was able to view the success of the 'Stringbag' 'Fairey Swordfish aircraft disable the Italian fleet with one attack. The intention was to prevent the United States Navy interfering in Japanese efforts to dominate south east Asia and grab all the natural resources for themselves and remove the British, Dutch and French colonial forces there. The attack was totally unexpected, two waves comprising over three hundred and fifty planes sunk four battleships, damaging four others. Three cruisers were sunk or damaged, one minelayer, one anti aircraft training ship and three destroyers were also damaged along with one hundred and eighty eight aircraft. Almost two and a half thousand Americans were killed and well over a thousand wounded. A mere twenty nine aircraft and five midget Japanese submarines were destroyed along with sixty five men killed. One midget submariner was captured, to his eternal shame. The shock of the nature of the attack brought the United States into the war,and almost immediately Germany and Italy declared war on America also, siding with the Japanese in a failed alliance and sealed their own doom, Hitler having already attacked the Soviet Union in May of that year. Four long and hard fought years later, on the decks of the USS Missouri General Douglas MacArthur declared these proceedings to be, 'closed.'
These two photographs were taken during the raid on a
small Kodak Box Camera. The camera was discovered with the
film still inside and when developed a dozen or so pictures
of the raid appeared.
The were published in a newspaper and stupidly I cannot find the link!
There fore I am not sure what happened to the photographer or
why they lay so long undiscovered.
.
6 comments:
Well, that certainly is one way to view America! We rebels are a friendly lot. Very polite according to soubry! Slow down, stop and drink some sweet iced tea with us, okay?
xxx
My gosh what amazing photos - whoever took them must have been good. the road trip is fun if you keep stopping it - there's one point in which the driver appears to drive through a tornado!!!!
RDG, I'm on my way, but I bet Soub has drink the lot!
Jenny, Indeed, but was that a tornado or rain storm I couldn't decide. Do that in Scotland and it would be rain most of the way!
It was just a very intense rain storm under a low hanging cloud, but I am still dizzy from the trip. By the way, my wife's sister and her daughter got to go see the USS Arizona Memorial on a school trip earlier in the year, and they said that it was quite moving, which is really something for both of them to say. For neither has much interest in history at all--despite Jim being retired Navy and being on board the USS Briscoe when JKF, Jr. was buried at sea.
Fish, USS Arizona would be a moving memorial.
Post a Comment