Titel
Remember Pearl Harbor / The Attack That Plunged America into World War II
Schrijver
Advertiser, Honolulu Star
Taal
Engels
ISBN
9781939487766
Uitgever
Mutual Pub Co
Prijs
€ 20,94
Bijzonderheden
2017, 168pp, Gebonden, Conditie: Normale sporen van gebruik en/of veroudering
Meer info
Samenvatting
In the tragedy that was Pearl Harbor, about 2,455 men, women and children were killed in the attacks on Oahu.
The total includes 2,390 American service members and Oahu civilians, fifty-six Japanese aviators, and up to nine Japanese submariners.
It was a brilliantly executed Japanese attack to neutralize the Pacific Fleet and gain time as the empire conquered Southeast Asia.
USS Arizona dead would total 1,177 - the single greatest loss of life in U.S. Navy history. Hawaii's service members and civilians paid the initial price, but Japan would face a much greater one as America's economic might and fighting spirit eventually brought victory in the Pacific.
"Pearl Harbor is a saga of swift action, stark tragedy and great heroism," author Gordon W. Prange wrote in At Dawn We Slept.
Stories abound of U.S. military men, unprepared for what had come, standing up to fight back in the face of the onslaught. Many of those stories are recounted in the Honolulu Star- Advertiser's extensive coverage of the historic seventy-fifth anniversary. Those stories, along with many from our daily coverage, are featured in this book. Most appear as they ran in the newspaper; a few have minor changes.
Three-quarters of a century after the attack, the wounds inflicted at Pearl Harbor have largely healed. The U.S. State Department likes to point out that the U.S.-Japanese alliance is the cornerstone of U.S. security interests in Asia.
At a ceremony at Ewa Field on December 6, 2016, retired Marine Maj. John Hughes, 97, who returned fire on December 7, 1941, with a Springfield bolt-action rifle, said he has no resentment toward the Japanese.
"On this seventy-fifth anniversary," said Daniel Martinez, chief historian at the USS Arizona Memorial, "as we pause here to remember Pearl Harbor and also now to celebrate seventy years of peace between the United States and Japan, we can look at the words that Mr. Hughes said - that he has no ill feelings toward (the Japanese) -and we can move forward."
William Cole Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Star Advertiser THE PULSE OF PARADISE
7 Waterfront Plaza, Suite 210, 500 Ala Moana Blod
In the tragedy that was Pearl Harbor, about 2,455 men, women and children were killed in the attacks on Oahu.
The total includes 2,390 American service members and Oahu civilians, fifty-six Japanese aviators, and up to nine Japanese submariners.
It was a brilliantly executed Japanese attack to neutralize the Pacific Fleet and gain time as the empire conquered Southeast Asia.
USS Arizona dead would total 1,177 - the single greatest loss of life in U.S. Navy history. Hawaii's service members and civilians paid the initial price, but Japan would face a much greater one as America's economic might and fighting spirit eventually brought victory in the Pacific.
"Pearl Harbor is a saga of swift action, stark tragedy and great heroism," author Gordon W. Prange wrote in At Dawn We Slept.
Stories abound of U.S. military men, unprepared for what had come, standing up to fight back in the face of the onslaught. Many of those stories are recounted in the Honolulu Star- Advertiser's extensive coverage of the historic seventy-fifth anniversary. Those stories, along with many from our daily coverage, are featured in this book. Most appear as they ran in the newspaper; a few have minor changes.
Three-quarters of a century after the attack, the wounds inflicted at Pearl Harbor have largely healed. The U.S. State Department likes to point out that the U.S.-Japanese alliance is the cornerstone of U.S. security interests in Asia.
At a ceremony at Ewa Field on December 6, 2016, retired Marine Maj. John Hughes, 97, who returned fire on December 7, 1941, with a Springfield bolt-action rifle, said he has no resentment toward the Japanese.
"On this seventy-fifth anniversary," said Daniel Martinez, chief historian at the USS Arizona Memorial, "as we pause here to remember Pearl Harbor and also now to celebrate seventy years of peace between the United States and Japan, we can look at the words that Mr. Hughes said - that he has no ill feelings toward (the Japanese) -and we can move forward."
William Cole Honolulu Star-Advertiser
Star Advertiser THE PULSE OF PARADISE
7 Waterfront Plaza, Suite 210, 500 Ala Moana Blod
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