• Hey Guest!
    British Car Forum has been supporting enthusiasts for over 25 years by providing a great place to share our love for British cars. You can support our efforts by upgrading your membership for less than the dues of most car clubs. There are some perks with a member upgrade!

    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Upgraded members don't see this banner, nor will you see the Google ads that appear on the site.)
Tips
Tips

December 7, 1941

NutmegCT

Great Pumpkin
Bronze
Offline
Sources: Armytimes.com and USAFM fact sheet.

704px-Bulletholes.jpg


"December 7, 1941 was a pretty bleak day but we did get in a few licks. One person who did so was Phil Rasmussen, an Army Air Corps second lieutenant assigned to the 46th Pursuit Squadron at Wheeler Field on the island of Oahu during the Japanese attack on December 7, 1941. He was one of the few American pilots to get into the air that day.

He had just woken up when the attack began. Still wearing his purple pajamas, Rasmussen sped toward the flight line. At the flight line, all of the aircraft were destroyed or burning except for a few P-36 Hawks. Rasmussen jumped in one and taxied to a revetment at the edge of the airfield, where he joined three other pilots also preparing undamaged P-36 fighters. The pilots took off under fire, and were directed by radio toward Kaneohe Bay where they engaged 11 Japanese fighters in battle.

After shooting down one Japanese aircraft, Rasmussen was attacked by two Japanese Mitsubishi A6M2 Zero fighters. Gunfire and 20mm cannon shells shattered the canopy, destroyed the radio and severed the P-36's hydraulic lines and rudder cable. Rasmussen sought refuge in nearby cloud cover and began flying back toward Wheeler Field. He landed the P-36 without brakes, rudder or tailwheel, and with more than 500 bullet holes.

Second Lt. Philip M. Rasmussen, a young American pilot stationed at Wheeler Field, was wearing purple pajamas when he awoke to hear the attack beginning.

ā€œI saw our planes burning at Wheeler Field,ā€ Rasmussen said in a 2002 interview. ā€œBut I also saw several P-36s that were intact.ā€
ā€œWe climbed to 9,000 feet and spotted Japanese ā€˜Val’ dive bombers,ā€ Rasmussen said. ā€œWe dived to attack them.ā€

Rasmussen and three other P-36 pilots tore into a Japanese formation. Though his P-36 was slower than any of the Japanese aircraft, 1st Lt. Lewis M. Sanders got behind one of the raiders and shot it down. Second Lt. Gordon H. Sterling Jr. also shot down a Japanese aircraft but was shot down over water and drowned after getting out of his aircraft.

In his cockpit, Rasmussen charged his guns only to have the machine guns start firing on their own. While he struggled to stop them, a Japanese aircraft passed directly in front of him, flew into his bursts of gunfire and exploded.

Shaking off two Zeros on his tail, Rasmussen got his guns under control, raked another Japanese aircraft with gunfire, then felt himself taking hits from a Japanese fighter.

ā€œThere was a lot of noise. He shot my canopy off,ā€ Rasmussen said. He lost control of the P-36 as it tumbled into clouds, its hydraulic lines severed and tail wheel shot off.

Rasmussen did not know it yet, but two cannon shells had buried themselves in a radio behind his pilot’s seat. The bulky radio saved his life.

02RasmussenP36Diorama.jpg


For his actions, Rasmussen received the Silver Star. He survived the war, shooting down a second Japanese aircraft in 1943. He retired from the Air Force in 1965 as a Lieutenant Colonel. His feat lives on at the National Museum of the Air Force in Dayton, Ohio, where a pajama-clad mannequin scrambles into a P-36 cockpit at a display detailing his story."
 
My dad was stationed in Jackson Mississippi celebrating his 26th birthday at the home of a civilian who found it was his birthday. He was on his way to San Francisco the next day, and then to spend the rest of the war in New Guinea. Dad would have been 95 today. I sure do miss him.
 
Indeed "A day which will live in infamy."

Flags at half staff.

My Old Man was in college, that didn't last after the events of the day.
 
Lots of amazing stories (and tragedies).

Although it can't be verified 100%, it appears that the first plane to be shot at by the Japanese during the PH attack was an Aeronca 65T.
It was on a civilian pleasure flight with a father and son. They took a few bullets but were able to land safetly. That Aeronca is now on display as part of the Pearl Harbor Memorial site.
It's virtually identical to mine and was only build a few weeks before mine. Here it is.

pam_011.jpg
 
I am very happy someone posted something about today. Seems we are all supposed to be embarrassed by it all not mention it anymore.
 
Bruce Bowker said:
I am very happy someone posted something about today. Seems we are all supposed to be embarrassed by it all not mention it anymore.

Embarrassed? Not I. It is a part of history that must be remembered! A few years ago I had the privilege of visiting the Arizona Memorial. What a sobering experience that was!
 
I'm not an American, but I have the flag out today.These events should never be forgotten. There is no reason to be embarrassed either.

Stuart. :cheers:
 
Dec. 7 was indeed a day of amazing acts performed by people under the most extreem conditions. We should never forget history as it often repeats itself.
My hat is off to all those involved in that day of infamy.
 
Alphonse said:
My hat is off to all those involved in that day of infamy.

As is mine. All true heroes. It just seems for such an important day that changed history and made such dramatic changes in people's lives, not a lot is said about it in the media. Just an almost casual reminder. And it gets less each year. I am surprised when I ask what Dec 7 means in history, how many do not know or forgot.
 
Bruce Bowker said:
As is mine. All true heroes. It just seems for such an important day that changed history and made such dramatic changes in people's lives, not a lot is said about it in the media. Just an almost casual reminder. And it gets less each year. I am surprised when I ask what Dec 7 means in history, how many do not know or forgot.

Most folks here know by now, I never wait for the media; I just take the ball and run with it. It's up to folks who remember, to remind those they know.

I couldn't ignore a memory I have, stirred up by Bruce's good comment above. Back in 1988, when the vice president addressed an American Legion group and said "This is Pearl Harbor Day; 47 years ago to this very day, we were hit and hit hard at Pearl Harbor..."

But unfortunately he said it on September 7.

It's up to each and every one of us to remember what's important to us, and to remind those we know of what it is, and of why.

T.
 
A few weeks ago, I called the company that installed my furnace to schedule a routine service for it.

The scheduler asked, "How about December 7?"

I replied, "Oh, a date which will live in infamy."

Scheduler, "Huh?"
 
Twosheds said:
A few weeks ago, I called the company that installed my furnace to schedule a routine service for it.

The scheduler asked, "How about December 7?"

I replied, "Oh, a date which will live in infamy."

Scheduler, "Huh?"

John - let me guess. The scheduler was in his/her 20s?

T.
 
NutmegCT said:
Twosheds said:
A few weeks ago, I called the company that installed my furnace to schedule a routine service for it.

The scheduler asked, "How about December 7?"

I replied, "Oh, a date which will live in infamy."

Scheduler, "Huh?"

John - let me guess. The scheduler was in his/her 20s?

T.

Good guess, Tom, but, sadly, judging by the voice, she sounded older.
 
Twosheds said:
A few weeks ago, I called the company that installed my furnace to schedule a routine service for it.

The scheduler asked, "How about December 7?"

I replied, "Oh, a date which will live in infamy."

Scheduler, "Huh?"

Yesterday in class, I said "What's December 7th?" and one of my students (in his mid-20s), called out, "A day that shall live in infamy."

Most of my guys knew about the date, once I reminded them.
 
On every December 7th, the survivors in our area, and those who make it a point to remember the date, go to the top of Mt. Diablo and light the Standard Oil beacon in the afternoon to burn all night in rememberance of that day.
 
Back
Top