And our grandparents and great grandparents. Don’t forget them. Our parents were young then, but their parents were still alive and were from the World war 1 generation. Just imagine their horror. And their grandparents were also still alive and had sent their sons to fight in WW1, and now, their grandsons would have to go to war. Just imagine the anguish in homes across America that night. As an example, my maternal grandmothers oldest brother fought in the trenches in WW1, and her youngest brother was a bombardier in a B17 in WW2. The ripple effect of Dec 7, 1941 was HUGE. It touched 4 living generations when you include the children of the men killed in WW2. And sadly, there were allot of them.
The first bulletin was WOR New York breaking into a New York Football Giants game at around 2:27 P.M. Eastern time. The WOR flash appears to be the first news of the attack to be broadcast on the mainland.
Neat compilation, thank you! Hearing the part where they tried to call Honolulu and Manila must have been very ominous and a little scary when they got nothing back from either.
@@wetcanoedogs and we might be independent now but our combined us-filipino bases would probably be first or second attacked when war erupts. Almost 250,00 americans in the Philippines.
It's weird to think that the sponsors had more pull on the radio networks than the networks themselves. Otherwise, all the networks would've probably suspended programming for news.
I don't know. News didn't work back then like it does now. The spread of factual information was much, much slower. It was probably better to just keep people entertained, calm, and give them info as it comes it. The "journalistic masturbation" that goes on now is counterproductive. 1 piece of info= hours of people flapping gums, speculating, and spreading rumors.
Why wasn't the Japanese envoy to the US immediately placed under military custody? I'd have thought they'd be the first to be interrogated and held as POWs.
we don't want our people to be seized,they had a lot of trouble getting out as it was.i worked with a guy at a va hospital who was a marine at the embassy and he was a pow until the end.
@@wetcanoedogs yes but for all intensive purposes the envoy was acting as the Japanese government go between on US soil. They should be the first ones that are at the least put under custody.
@@davidmoser3535 I thought that only extends to civil crimes? If a diplomat murders someone or commits some type of federal offense that immunity doesn't apply
There are two things about this attack that most people don't know. I have heard reports that this was NOT a sneak attack at all. FDR had seen the attacks coming but said it was a sneak attack. Also this was last declared war by any nation. Since than since 1950 we have had UN police actions or pre-emtive strikes by the resident but under the Constitution ONLY Congress can declare war not the President. On the bright site the US involvement in WWII stopped the great Depression. We still have US troops over 80 years later for no reason. My dad served in this war and said if had not used the Atom bombs they would have eventually attack us and that was why there was no long land invasion by the US in 1945. Fighting stopped in 1945 but there was no official end of this war. My dad never trusted the Germans or the Japanese as he called them. Sadly we rounded up Japanese Americans were put in interment camps.
I often hear people compare the Japanese-American internment camps to the camps run by the axis nations. It's hard to justify that comparison -- because the thing about safety is that you don't see what you prevent.
That an attack was coming was known, that's what the fleet was doing in Hawaii. That they would dare attack Hawaii was what they did not know. To do it without a declaration of war was what convinced the American citizen they were living in a neutrality dream world. The first thing everyone wanted to know was, when did the recruiting stations open in the morning. Note that an internment camp is not a concentration camp.
@@tonyburzio4107My dad was in the Army stationed in the Los Angeles area at the time. I don’t know what to make of this, if anything, but it’s interesting. He said that after their duties they’d always go into town to party. On the Friday night, a week prior to the attack, their sergeant came out to the men and said, no one leaves base, no cigarettes, no phone calls out, and then they were all issued live ammunition. After that, for the entire week they were patrolling up and down the California coast. My dad told me that the skinny between the men was that they( the higher ups ) always knew an attack was coming. Right after that my father shipped out to the South Pacific.
Thank you for this compilation. So we can witness history. Our parents lived it.
And our grandparents and great grandparents. Don’t forget them. Our parents were young then, but their parents were still alive and were from the World war 1 generation. Just imagine their horror. And their grandparents were also still alive and had sent their sons to fight in WW1, and now, their grandsons would have to go to war. Just imagine the anguish in homes across America that night. As an example, my maternal grandmothers oldest brother fought in the trenches in WW1, and her youngest brother was a bombardier in a B17 in WW2. The ripple effect of Dec 7, 1941 was HUGE. It touched 4 living generations when you include the children of the men killed in WW2. And sadly, there were allot of them.
The first bulletin was WOR New York breaking into a New York Football Giants game at around 2:27 P.M. Eastern time.
The WOR flash appears to be the first news of the attack to be broadcast on the mainland.
When news WAS news.
Exactly. Unlike the "entertainment style news" we get together.
Neat compilation, thank you!
Hearing the part where they tried to call Honolulu and Manila must have been very ominous and a little scary when they got nothing back from either.
Manila was an American city,we tend to forget that.
@@wetcanoedogs and we might be independent now but our combined us-filipino bases would probably be first or second attacked when war erupts. Almost 250,00 americans in the Philippines.
It's weird to think that the sponsors had more pull on the radio networks than the networks themselves. Otherwise, all the networks would've probably suspended programming for news.
I don't know. News didn't work back then like it does now. The spread of factual information was much, much slower. It was probably better to just keep people entertained, calm, and give them info as it comes it. The "journalistic masturbation" that goes on now is counterproductive. 1 piece of info= hours of people flapping gums, speculating, and spreading rumors.
@@micahmorton4442 Brilliantly flawless accurate insight Good Sir
@@micahmorton4442*laughs in McCarthyism*
Thank you for taking the time and effort to upload videos like these; I've been enjoying them greatly.
Before mainlanders knew how to pronounce "Oahu"
I love me a vacation on the island of Whohawho
@@25thDaveWalker Lol!
Most people then didn't even know where Hawaii was. The battleships had only recently been moved to Pearl Harbor from San Pedro, California.
We still don't
I'm American and haven't actually seen the name Oahu before this comment
Sad events, but REAL news....Not BS. I miss this so much.
You miss hearing of American disasters? WTF
This brings back so many memories
Thanks you!
You're welcome!
Why wasn't the Japanese envoy to the US immediately placed under military custody? I'd have thought they'd be the first to be interrogated and held as POWs.
we don't want our people to be seized,they had a lot of trouble getting out as it was.i worked with a guy at a va hospital who was a marine at the embassy and he was a pow until the end.
@@wetcanoedogs yes but for all intensive purposes the envoy was acting as the Japanese government go between on US soil. They should be the first ones that are at the least put under custody.
They have diplomatic immunity-if you grab Japanese diplomats, they will do the same
@@davidmoser3535 I thought that only extends to civil crimes? If a diplomat murders someone or commits some type of federal offense that immunity doesn't apply
Diplomatic immunity. Diplomats can't be arrested, just kicked out.
youre probably looking for 15:30
John Charles Daly, a legendary reporter. Also was first to announce FDR's death.
Yes indeed, John Daly was one of the finest radio/TV newscasters who ever lived.
BBC radio one heard the attack on Pearl Harbor
Excellent
We think we got troubles. ha!
Forget to remember
When we actually had balls.
Lol okay
😂
@@StephenLuke actually I do
@@StephenLuke just like you think slavery was funny 🤣
@@StephenLuke we would still be having this conversation
@@dsb225 What the hell man?!?!?! You have no heart whatsoever!!! So piss off!
Pearl Harbor was the JFK assassination of its day or the 9/11 of its day.
What would Biden do?
Jill where's my pudding cup?
Hide
Surrender
Nobody tell him FDR was also a libtard
@@Jacob-df5hr LOL, exactly.
There are two things about this attack that most people don't know. I have heard reports that this was NOT a sneak attack at all. FDR had seen the attacks coming but said it was a sneak attack. Also this was last declared war by any nation. Since than since 1950 we have had UN police actions or pre-emtive strikes by the resident but under the Constitution ONLY Congress can declare war not the President. On the bright site the US involvement in WWII stopped the great Depression. We still have US troops over 80 years later for no reason. My dad served in this war and said if had not used the Atom bombs they would have eventually attack us and that was why there was no long land invasion by the US in 1945. Fighting stopped in 1945 but there was no official end of this war. My dad never trusted the Germans or the Japanese as he called them. Sadly we rounded up Japanese Americans were put in interment camps.
I often hear people compare the Japanese-American internment camps to the camps run by the axis nations. It's hard to justify that comparison -- because the thing about safety is that you don't see what you prevent.
BS
@@davidmoser3535please expand. Why do you feel it’s BS?
That an attack was coming was known, that's what the fleet was doing in Hawaii. That they would dare attack Hawaii was what they did not know. To do it without a declaration of war was what convinced the American citizen they were living in a neutrality dream world. The first thing everyone wanted to know was, when did the recruiting stations open in the morning.
Note that an internment camp is not a concentration camp.
@@tonyburzio4107My dad was in the Army stationed in the Los Angeles area at the time. I don’t know what to make of this, if anything, but it’s interesting. He said that after their duties they’d always go into town to party. On the Friday night, a week prior to the attack, their sergeant came out to the men and said, no one leaves base, no cigarettes, no phone calls out, and then they were all issued live ammunition. After that, for the entire week they were patrolling up and down the California coast.
My dad told me that the skinny between the men was that they( the higher ups ) always knew an attack was coming.
Right after that my father shipped out to the South Pacific.