The Day the War Began
December 7, 1941, is one of those days engraved in the twentieth century memory. It is a landmark day, along with Armistice Day in 1918, the stock market crash in 1929, and the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. This book is about ordinary people on that extraordinary day. To a large extent, this book is by the people who remember that day because they have been permitted to tell their own stories in their own words. The book chooses representative stories from the entire country and concentrates on the stories of two destroyers, the USS Ward and the USS Henley, which were involved in the attack.

This book, like all good history, reminds us of the changes that have come since World War II. There has been an overall change in attitudes, especially with the dramatic changes in Europe and the economic dominance of Japan. Much of what we see now relates directly to World War II and the way America and its allies conducted themselves when the war ended. It was the last war which had virtually no gray areas—Germany, Japan, and Italy were the bad guys, and America and its allies were the good guys. It truly was that simple for us before and during World War II. Nothing has been that simple since the fateful day that brought America into the most catastrophic conflict in history.

"1000840616"
The Day the War Began
December 7, 1941, is one of those days engraved in the twentieth century memory. It is a landmark day, along with Armistice Day in 1918, the stock market crash in 1929, and the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. This book is about ordinary people on that extraordinary day. To a large extent, this book is by the people who remember that day because they have been permitted to tell their own stories in their own words. The book chooses representative stories from the entire country and concentrates on the stories of two destroyers, the USS Ward and the USS Henley, which were involved in the attack.

This book, like all good history, reminds us of the changes that have come since World War II. There has been an overall change in attitudes, especially with the dramatic changes in Europe and the economic dominance of Japan. Much of what we see now relates directly to World War II and the way America and its allies conducted themselves when the war ended. It was the last war which had virtually no gray areas—Germany, Japan, and Italy were the bad guys, and America and its allies were the good guys. It truly was that simple for us before and during World War II. Nothing has been that simple since the fateful day that brought America into the most catastrophic conflict in history.

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The Day the War Began

The Day the War Began

by Archie Satterfield
The Day the War Began

The Day the War Began

by Archie Satterfield

Hardcover

$75.00 
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Overview

December 7, 1941, is one of those days engraved in the twentieth century memory. It is a landmark day, along with Armistice Day in 1918, the stock market crash in 1929, and the day President John F. Kennedy was assassinated. This book is about ordinary people on that extraordinary day. To a large extent, this book is by the people who remember that day because they have been permitted to tell their own stories in their own words. The book chooses representative stories from the entire country and concentrates on the stories of two destroyers, the USS Ward and the USS Henley, which were involved in the attack.

This book, like all good history, reminds us of the changes that have come since World War II. There has been an overall change in attitudes, especially with the dramatic changes in Europe and the economic dominance of Japan. Much of what we see now relates directly to World War II and the way America and its allies conducted themselves when the war ended. It was the last war which had virtually no gray areas—Germany, Japan, and Italy were the bad guys, and America and its allies were the good guys. It truly was that simple for us before and during World War II. Nothing has been that simple since the fateful day that brought America into the most catastrophic conflict in history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275942519
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/30/1992
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.50(d)
Lexile: 1180L (what's this?)

About the Author

ARCHIE SATTERFIELD is a writer, photographer, editor, and lecturer-teacher. The author of more than twenty books, including The Home Front: An Oral History of the War Years in America, 1941-1945 (1981), he also writes writes magazine and newspaper articles on travel, history, and personalities.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Saturday, December 6, 1941
The First Shot
The Americans Fight Back
Adventures of the Henley
Game Called Due to War
View from the Cane Fields
Friendly Fire
A Chinese-American Family
Hell on a Sunshiny Day
The Military Takes Over Hawaii
Niihau Fights Back
The Saga of the Pacific Clipper
The Forgotten Attack
On the Home Front
War Comes to the Football Game
The Delayed Message
The White House Prepares for War
War Becomes a Reality
Extra! Extra!
Strange New Words
Sudden Heroes
The Mating Dance Continues
The Nation Unifies
Hawaii's Longest Night
Defending the East Coast
"I Slept Like a Baby"
Bibliography
Index

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