We recently passed the 84th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the attack that finally dragged the United States into the second world war. When I was a kid, I remember it being something that most people observed every December 7th, much like the media still takes note each September 11th to mark the anniversary of the terrorist attacks against the twin towers in New York and the Pentagon in Washington D.C.
When we look back on World War II in the Pacific, we tend to remember it in shorthand. Pearl Harbor. Then—almost immediately—Midway. But for the Americans who were already in the Pacific when the attack on Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the war, history did not move that quickly.
While Americans at home marked a somber Christmas and began preparing for a global conflict against both Imperial Japan and Nazi Germany, Americans in the Philippines, Guam, Wake Island, and other U.S. territories in the Pacific faced something far more immediate.
They were fighting for survival.
Research: Elena, the Roots of Today archivist
Music by: Andrii Poradovskyi (lNPLUSMUSIC - Pixabay)
Show Notes: www.rootsoftoday.blog