Remembering the “Day of Infamy”
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Danette Goulet
Frank Weitzel was 19 years old and fresh out of high school when he
enlisted in the Navy. His first assignment on Oct. 19 1940 was aboard the
USS San Francisco headed to Pearl Harbor.
The heavy cruiser was in the Naval yard the morning of Dec. 7, 1941
getting a complete overhaul. That meant she was stripped of everything
from oil to ammunition.
“I had just come out from eating breakfast,” Weitzel, 79, recalled. “I
don’t remember who I was with, but I said let’s go up and watch planes
dive on Ford Island -- that’s where our planes practiced.
“At about the second one I seen two bombs drop out and I saw the
insignia and I said I don’t think they were ours, and they weren’t. Then
all hell broke loose. The Oklahoma was first to go over. There were men
trapped underneath. They worked all day and night trying to get ‘em out.”
Weitzel recalls the mayhem that followed: Japanese fighters diving and
firing and sailors scrambling to man guns and fight back with whatever
they could.
“The Arizona blew up across from us and the Oklahoma sank. Our gun
crews manned their guns on the opposite side of the dock.
“Down there the Honolulu got hit and the Saint Louis chopped line
around Ford Island just firing away like mad,” Weitzel said. “I was a
19-year-old kid -- you really didn’t know what to do.”
Weitzel had just returned to the ship that morning for breakfast after
being in the hospital, where he had his tonsils out.
He returned to the hospital, a quarter mile away, that same morning
for his belongings and stayed for four days helping with the sick and
wounded and manning Marine machine guns right outside the hospital.
“It was chaos and confusion,” he said.
Weitzel said he reacted the best way he knew how.
“I had a rifle just shooting at ‘em, just hoping I hit ‘em,” he said.
“[American soldiers] were firing pistols ‘cause they were coming so close
you thought you could hit ‘em, but you couldn’t.”
Weitzel was in the Navy for another six years. The USS San Francisco
he was on went on to be the second most decorated ship in World War II,
earning 17 battle stars.
“We spent a lot of miles out there, went all the way up to Tokyo,” he
said. “We were in every battle up there.”
Pearl Harbor, on the Island of Oahu, Hawaii was attacked by the
Japanese Imperial Navy at 7:55 a.m., Sun. Dec. 7, 1941. The surprise
attack, which consisted of a force of 353 Japanese aircraft, was
conceived by Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto. There had been no formal
declaration of war.
There were about 100 U.S. Navy ships present that morning, including
battleships, destroyers, cruisers and various support ships.
Simultaneously, there was an attack on Hickam Field where 18 Army Air
corps aircraft including bombers and fighters and attack bombers were
destroyed or damaged on the ground. A few US fighters managed to struggle
into the air against the invaders and fight back.
A total of 29 Japanese aircraft were shot down by ground fire and
pilots from various military installations.
Huntington Beach resident Donald Weir, 83, contends there was an
inkling of what was to come that morning.
“I was a supply Sargent and I had been issued live ammo and that’s a
nono,” he said. “In peace times you don’t have that. When the attack come
we broke it out, put it in our clips and fired on ‘em. We didn’t have big
guns, we had 30.06 machine guns.”
Weir served in the California National Guard, mobilized in 1940.
Unlike Weitzel, Weir never made it to breakfast that day.
“We was getting ready to go to breakfast, it was a normal day. Sunday
is a laid-back day, there was no duties to be pulled outside -- there was
guard duty, but nobody was drilling or having to do any of the chores,”
he said. “We could see the fire and the smoke and all that. A guy that I
knew real well, he said there’s something going wrong, but we didn’t
know.”
Stationed in camp Malkakole, Weir and his battery didn’t suffer loses
like those of the Navy or Air corps, but his group does have the
distinction of suffering the first American casualties of the war.
“The first casualty of World War II by U.S. forces was out of our
camp. There was four guys that got shot down, four guys wanted to learn
to fly. They were taking lessons in little bitty planes. They were up
taking there lessons, so they were shot down,” Weir said.
It was 60 years ago Friday that Weitzel, Weir and thousands of other
men and women came under attack and fought back.
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