December 1941: “The Most Tremendous Undertaking”

December 1941: “The Most Tremendous Undertaking”

December 1941: “The Most Tremendous Undertaking” when she first heard that pearl harbor had been attacked, sixteen- year-old Elaine R. Engelson of Brooklyn was “amazed and ashamed” of her “weakness in facing a world crisis.” She wrote to the New York Times the next day that although she, like many others, had “felt the inevitability of war” for some time, “the thought of it actually having come upon us was sudden.” The horrifying events in Hawaii suddenly changed the rhythms of the teenager’s life. She had grown accustomed to countless airplanes fl ying overhead, but on December 8, the sound of an approaching plane produced a new sense of dread. Although “the world has not yet come to an end by any means,” she had the ominous feeling that “we are on the brink of a precipice overhanging a world of complete darkness.” What was at stake, she said, was something she and many Americans had not fully appreciated until then: “We are fi ghting to save the world from a fate worse than death.”1 For a stunned nation, it seemed impossible that the U.S. Pacifi c Fleet had been caught so unaware. Over twenty-four hundred Americans had died, and the navy had lost eight battleships, four destroyers, and 350 air- planes. Along with shock and anger came another reaction, shared by mil- lions on both coasts. People wondered if Pearl Harbor was just a prelude to something far worse. In a Gallup poll taken shortly after December 7, 60 percent responded that it was “very likely” or “fairly likely” that the West Coast would be attacked in the next few weeks. 1 2 DECEMBER 1941 Though Americans could not know it at the time, the leader of the fi rst wave of planes, Mitsuo Fuchida, wanted to return to Hawaii and bomb fuel tanks and other supply stations. Fleet Commander Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo was not persuaded, arguing that the American aircraft carriers Lexington and Enterprise still posed a threat to Japanese forces, and he re- fused to order a second air strike. Yet one Japanese fl ight deck offi cer suc- cinctly expressed both the growing confi dence of the Imperial forces and the fears of anxious Americans: “We’re not returning to Tokyo; now we’re going to San Francisco.”2 After being informed of the attack, President Franklin D. Roosevelt sum- moned his cabinet to an emergency meeting at the White House, where Interior secretary Harold Ickes noted that the sullen crowds gathered near the gates “were responding to that human instinct to get near a scene of action even if they could see or hear nothing.” The president told his cabi- net that it was the most serious situation the nation had faced since 1861. He also asked congressional leaders for time to address a joint session the next day. Afterward, over a late dinner with journalist Edward R. Murrow, the president vented his frustration that U.S. planes had offered such easy targets: “On the ground, by God! On the ground!”3 As Roosevelt understood, nothing since the Civil War reached the mag- nitude of Pearl Harbor. The United States had escaped destruction on its own shores in previous wars, but it was now vulnerable to enemy planes. Recent events had made Americans aware of the chilling possibilities: the mustard gas used by Italian bombers against Ethiopians in 1935; the fascist bombing of Guernica, Spain, in April 1937, made famous by the Picasso mural; the Luftwaffe bombings of London in 1940 and 1941. Airplanes with such destructive power were a new and terrifying technology. In the United States, Orson Welles’s radio broadcast War of the Worlds in 1938 had inspired panic among listeners. By the time the news of the Pearl Harbor attack reached the East Coast, Americans were besieged with a sense of dread. Paris and much of France were already occupied; England was pre- paring for imminent invasion; Poland, Czechoslovakia, China, and South- east Asia had fallen; now, suddenly, America seemed vulnerable too. As the nation struggled to understand how an American base could have been so exposed to a brazen attack, few heroes could be found. One sailor’s DECEMBER 1941 3 courageous actions during the attack went largely unknown for months. Messman Third Class Doris “Dorie” Miller was a twenty-two-year-old Afri- can American from Waco, Texas, who found himself in the middle of the attack on the U.S.S. West Virginia. Because of the military’s segregation policy, Miller could perform only kitchen duties. Yet not only did he risk his life by carrying his mortally wounded captain to safety, he manned an anti- aircraft gun, despite the fact that he had never used such weaponry. Miller likely downed at least one, if not more, enemy aircraft. In May, he became the fi rst African American to be awarded the Navy Cross. News of Miller’s heroics was widely disseminated throughout the African American com- munity, and a song was sung in Harlem: “Dorie Miller, he’s a killer—ask the Japanese.”4 On Monday, December 8, FDR spoke before a joint session of Congress. Calling the 7th “a day that will live in infamy,” he asked for a declaration of war against Japan. Summoning the “righteous might” of an angry nation, FDR promised a military response that would bring “absolute victory.” De- spite the rhetoric, many within the government and military understood the sobering reality. “This at once places at stake everything that is precious and worthwhile,” wrote Secretary of War Henry Stimson in his diary, add- ing that “self defense” was “the key point for the preservation of each and all of our civilized institutions.” The chances of defeat or stalemate were very real. William Batt, director of materials at the War Production Board, said it in the clearest of terms: “Not since the days of the revolution have we had much of a chance to lose a war. We have a chance to lose this one.”5 Within the areas of the country most worried about new assaults, a com- mon reaction on December 8 was to look guardedly at suspected enemies. Roosevelt had signed proclamations in the hours after Pearl Harbor desig- nating Japanese, German, and Italians whom the FBI had deemed danger- ous to American security in the United States as “enemy aliens.” In Los Angeles, FBI agents and soldiers from nearby Fort MacArthur began tak- ing “key” Japanese citizens into custody less than two hours after the attack, and some Italian Americans suffered the same fate. Filippo Molinari of San Jose, California, was arrested by the FBI on the night of the 7th, and soon found himself on a train bound for internment at Camp Missoula, Mon- tana. When he arrived in Missoula, Molinari recalled, he was “still in his 4 DECEMBER 1941 slippers, the temperature at 17 below and no coat or heavy clothes” to keep him warm.6 In Hawaii, the Justice Department established an internment camp at Sand Island to keep “enemy aliens” under control. New York mayor Fio- rello La Guardia, who had been appointed director of the Offi ce of Civilian Defense in May 1941, directed the city’s Japanese nationals to stay confi ned in their homes, and known Japanese meeting places and restaurants were closed. The FBI had already compiled a “Suspect Enemy Aliens” list with help from the Census Bureau, and now used it to arrest over a thousand Japanese American leaders throughout New York. In San Francisco, Briga- dier General William O. Ryan said “many planes” that were undoubtedly enemy aircraft had fl own over San Francisco Bay. Western Defense Com- mander General John DeWitt warned that a Bay Area blackout was not suffi cient and “a great many things will have to be corrected” in order to ensure the nation’s safety. Blackouts in Southern California had the unan- ticipated consequence of killing four people in nighttime traffi c accidents when cars could not use their headlights.7 In Washington, D.C., the fl oodlights illuminating the Capitol dome were turned off, and black drapes covered the White House windows. Large sand bins were scattered throughout the Capitol building in case of an incendi- ary attack. Two days before Christmas, curators at the National Archives removed the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, carefully placing the documents between two sheets of acid-free manila paper inside a bronze container, and then secured it all inside a lead box with heavy pad- locks. Guards took the box to the train station for a trip to Louisville, Ken- tucky, where the shipment was received by Secret Service agents and members of the Thirteenth Armored Division, stationed at nearby Fort Knox. They took the precious documents to the recently built Bullion De- pository, where they remained for the duration of the war.8 Adolf Hitler declared war on the United States on December 11. The week earlier, the German government called for spending the equivalent of $150 billion over the next two years. Describing himself as “the head of the strongest Army in the world,” the German Führer called the American president “the eternal Jew,” who “aimed at world domination and dictator- ship.” In response, Roosevelt sent Congress another request, asking that DECEMBER 1941 5 the U.S. recognize a “state of war” with Germany and Italy. Congress quick- ly gave its unanimous support, and the nation formally entered a truly global confl ict. The U.S. joined Great Britain and Russia in the Grand Alli- ance against Germany, Japan, and Italy (the Axis powers).

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