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The U.S.S. Arizona BB-39. The first photograph Americans saw of Arizona in the Pearl Harbor attack.

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Presentation on theme: "The U.S.S. Arizona BB-39. The first photograph Americans saw of Arizona in the Pearl Harbor attack."— Presentation transcript:

1 The U.S.S. Arizona BB-39

2 The first photograph Americans saw of Arizona in the Pearl Harbor attack

3 Sailor’s scrapbook, recovered from the wreck

4 Crew, 1924

5 Heavy seas, off the California coast, mid 1930s

6 Recovered “letterman’s sweater”

7 1931: Underway during President Hoover’s visit

8 Sheen from oil, still leaking from the wreck

9 Binoculars with lanyard, recovered from the wreck

10 Recovered service cap

11 Ship’s band, Nov. 22, 1941… …All of these men were killed on December 7

12 One of the Arizona’s bandsmen, Jack Leo Scruggs, went to Arroyo Grande High Scruggs and two other bandsmen were preparing to play the National Anthem when a Japanese bomb blew them off the ship and into the water. Scruggs probably drowned.

13 Flag recovered from a crew member’s body

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15 14-inch guns from Arizona’s sister ship, Pennsylvania

16 Arizona’s #1 gun turret is still intact

17 The attack begins: Taken from a Japanese airplane about 7:55 a.m.

18 “Battleship Row:” Arizona is not hit yet; Oklahoma is beginning to capsize

19 “Battleship Row”—oil flooding out of West Virginia and Oklahoma

20 Destroyer Shaw exploding

21 Two bombs on Arizona’s stern about 8:05; this is the moment when Jack Scruggs dies

22 The fatal bomb: Arizona is hit forward, moments later

23 This clock was in the cabin of Arizona’s chaplain

24 It took three days for the fire to burn itself out

25 “ Battleship Row” three days after the attack; note the Oklahoma and Arizona

26 Burial ashore: Most of the Arizona dead remain aboard

27 Arizona today

28 A scale model of the memorial and the wreck

29 “Last Mooring,” Arizona in her last berth, Pearl Harbor, December 5, 1941

30 Beneath Pearl Harbor today

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36 The air trapped in the upper half of this porthole is from December 7, 1941

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39 The impact December 7 would have on the South County would be devastating

40 From a book by John Loomis and Gordon Bennett: AGUHS before the War

41 And this is the Letterman’s Club By the following year, a third of these AG Eagles would be in internment camps for Japanese-Americans I grew up here, and I don’t recognize some of these names; those families never came back The coach in this photograph would be killed in the Pacific in 1943


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