Posted on 12/07/2008 11:10:20 AM PST by SandRat
SIERRA VISTA Floyd Turner hadnt been in his rack too long before he was awakened by the call to man your battle stations.
Having just gotten off midwatch from midnight to 4 a.m., Turner had made his way down to his tight sleeping quarters on the USS St. Louis, expecting a quiet Sunday in the pleasant warmth of a Hawaiian harbor.
But the Japanese had other plans for him and thousands of other sailors the morning of Dec. 7, 1941. The naval might of the Japanese empire struck Pearl Harbor and other American military installations on the island of Oahu in the then territory of Hawaii, an act that officially brought the United States into World War II. The soon-to-be 89-year-old remembers the surreal and shattering early morning general quarters call to head for his battle station in one of the light cruisers 6-inch gun turrets.
I picked up my pillow and blanket and headed top side through the galley, stopping for a quick drink of water, Turner said.
As far as he knew, the call to battle station could have been another drill. If he had the time, he was going to make himself comfortable in the gun turret until the exercise was over.
But it was no drill. Turner realized that as he came out onto the deck and saw Japanese planes flying overhead, heard explosions going off near the St. Louis and smelled burning bunker fuel flaming on the harbors water.
The cruiser, one of the more modern Navy ships, having been commissioned in May 1939, had been tied up for minor repair work near battleship row.
Not far from the St. Louis was the USS Arizona, which soon exploded, sinking in less than 10 minutes after a bomb hit the ships forward ammunition magazine, killing more than 1,100 of the ships crew of sailors and Marines.
At one time, Turner said, two enemy aircraft flew over the St. Louis heading for the Arizona and I thought they were so low I could have lit a match on the bottom of one of those planes.
Leaving the harbor under fire
Many movies made about the attack on Pearl Harbor have scenes of mass confusion involving crews of American ships. Turner said he does not remember that being the case, at least on the St. Louis.
Although the ship was undergoing maintenance, the crew was able to get the boilers going and back the ship out of where it was tied up so the captain could take her out of the harbor, Turner said.
Using the 6-inch guns to shoot down attacking Japanese aircraft was out of the question because the weapons were designed for bombardment. Besides, Turner said, he and other crew members manned fire hoses to force flames on the water away from their ship.
As the light cruiser moved to escape the tight confinement of Pearl Harbor, numerous American ships were being bombed and torpedoed. Ahead of the St. Louis, the battleship USS Nevada also was trying to escape the conflagration. But that ship was a main target of the Japanese. Turner believes it is because the USS Nevada still had wooden planks on her deck, making the ship look like an aircraft carrier.
The Japanese wanted to hit the American aircraft carriers, but they were out to sea on the day of the attack.
Prior to the day of the attack, the Nevada and other ships had been out of the harbor on training maneuvers, and the Nevada became an aircraft carrier for the exercise to give Navy pilots the opportunity to attack the ship, Turner said.
The old Nevada was at sea for 17 days and was hit by a number of flour bombs, he said.
Little did he or any other American sailor know that about a half year after the attack on Pearl Harbor the American and Japanese navies would fight a major and war-changing aircraft carrier battle near Midway.
A concern for the St. Louis crew was that the Nevada may have been so badly hit by the Japanese that it would have gone down, blockading the exit from the harbor. The Nevadas captain beached his ship to keep the channel opened, allowing the St. Louis to get out of the harbor.
We were the only major ship to get out of Pearl that day, Turner said.
But getting out of the harbor wasnt easy.
As the St. Louis approached the area separating the harbor from the ocean, a Japanese midget submarine was spotted.
Fortunately, the two torpedoes it launched toward the ship exploded on the reef, Turner said.
One of the 5-inch mounts fired on the submarine. To this day, it is a matter of dispute if the submarine was hit as stated in the USS St. Louis captains official reports, which also noted apparently at least three Japanese airplanes were also shot down by the ships gunners.
Once out of the harbor, the light cruiser and some destroyers, as well as other ships that were out at sea during the attack, became a small task force hunting the Japanese.
When Turners ship returned to Pearl Harbor, the sight that greeted him and the others aboard CL-49, the St. Louis number, was utter destruction.
It was unbelievable, Turner said.
Soon, he and other shipmates would experience the destruction up close.
Like many, he was assigned to a work detail, one that was gruesomely grotesque. He and others worked from small boats to pull remains from the water.
We could only do it for two or three hours at a time, Turner noted.
The smell of death was overpowering, and the work was horrific, he remember.
One time I reached for a hand, expecting to pull a body out of the water, Turner said. All there was, was the hand.
Turner in the Navy
Little did he know when he enlisted in the Navy in 1940 that he would find himself part of a world war.
Turner was born on Jan. 27, 1920, in Morrison, Tenn. A boy of the Depression, Turner grew up in farm family, leaving school when he was 14.
The Great Depression was hard on people, and families had to struggle to make money, he remembered.
I worked any place I could make a dollar, Turner said.
In 1940, a friend came home on Navy furlough and asked him to join the sea service. There wasnt much binding him to Tennessee, except family, as jobs were not plentiful.
After boot camp, Turner shipped out on the USS St. Louis. He spent a little time on the ship as she plied the Atlantic and Caribbean before heading to Hawaii.
Even before its official entry into World War II, the United States provided escort help to convoys heading to Great Britain and other areas. Once in the Pacific, the USS St. Louis took part in providing support to convoys in that ocean as the United States built up some of its far-flung possessions.
After the Pearl Harbor attack, the cruiser took part in protecting convoys between the West Coast and Hawaii, as well as providing protection for material delivered to Midway and other islands, including to the Aleutian Islands off Alaska.
The cruiser eventually went to Vallejo, Calif., for repairs. While there, Turner and a few other gunners from the ship were sent back east to become crew members of the USS Essex, CV-9, a new aircraft carrier being readied at the Newport News Shipyard and Dry Dock in Virginia.
After its shakedown cruise, the aircraft carrier went through the Panama Canal and took part in most of the major engagements in the Pacific, as the United States slowly pushed the Japanese back from their earlier conquests.
His shipboard duties on the Essex was on 40 mm guns.
During the many battles Turner took part in, a kamikaze once crashed into some 20 mm gun mounts, killing a number of gunners.
The Essex saw combat off Tarawa, the Gilbert Islands, the Marshall Island, the Philippines, Okinawa, Formosa, China and eventually the Japanese home islands.
After the war, the ship sailed to Bremerton, Wash. While there performing shore guard duty, Turner heard about the opportunity to volunteer to be a member of an underwater demolition team.
I became a frogman, he said.
His new duty eventually saw him take part in action in Inchon harbor during the Korean War to destroy some obstacles before the United States made an amphibious landing.
After that mission that, he came down with double pneumonia, leading to a stint in naval hospitals in Guam, Hawaii and California. It also was discovered he was suffering from a slight case of tuberculosis and asthma.
His Navy career was over. Turner was medically discharged as a petty officer first class.
Life after the Navy
Turner headed back to Tennessee, where he reacquainted himself with my childhood sweetheart. On Dec. 6, 1952, he and Gertuha married and remained so until her death a couple of months after their 50th wedding anniversary.
In 1956, he and his wife moved to Arizona because the doctors told him Tennessees climate wasnt good for his health. Arizona has been his home since then, and Arizona has been good to me, he said.
He first lived near Benson. After a couple of years of doing aircraft maintenance, he got a job on Fort Huachuca as a civil service automotive mechanic. He eventually moved to the Sierra Vista area.
Today, he keeps himself busy making small wagons out of wood and clocks. One of his clocks has a photo of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and is part of the Sierra Vista Hank Hauser Museum collection concerning World War II.
For Turner, that war is but a fleeting memory of his life.
Saying he doesnt dwell on those days, Turner said the only movie he has seen that came close to capturing Dec. 6, 1941, was Tora, Tora, Tora. But then even that film was too Hollywood, with liberties taken about that historical time.
His memories are of that day are limited.
I just remember short flashes. I dont remember a big picture, he said.
His military service is what is important to him, as well as how he and others who fought in World War II kept America free.
If it wasnt for him becoming serious ill and having to leave the Navy for medical reasons, Turner said, You know, I probably would have made it a career.
Herald/Review senior reporter Bill Hess can be reached at 515-4615 or by e-mail at bill.hess@svherald.com.
Floyd Turner, who survived the attack on Pearl Harbor, recollects what happened to him on that day. (Ed Honda-Herald/Review)
The USS St. Louis during a speed trial in 1939. (Photo from the U.S. NAVY, provided by Michael Backauskas)
Floyd Turner made this clock, which commemorates the attack on Pearl Harbor. Turner survived the Japanese attack that day. The clock is on display at the Henry Hauser Museum located at the Ethel Berger Center. The museum has a display about World War II. (Ed Honda-Herald/Review)
Pearl Harbor Day
Many of us haven’t forgotten & never will.
For reference...with the warning that the servers seem to be running
slow (overloaded today?) at these sites:
St. Louis
http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/s17/st_louis-v.htm
The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941
http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq66-1.htm
On one of the ships that was sunk, the men who died were trapped inside and didn’t die right away. The sounds of the men tapping on the inside of the ship could be heard for a long time, but rescue was not possible.......... Lest we forget.
“Many of us haven’t forgotten & never will.”
I have a letter, postmarked Dec. 5, 1941, from my uncle to my grandmother ... by the time she received that letter on Dec. 8, the world had been changed forever. My grandmother saw him two or three times (after Pearl Harbor) until July of 1945. He spent most of the time in the “Canal Zone” flying patrols (submarine hunter) .... he said during his trip there, on a troop ship, that they rescued many Merchant Marines from life boats.
“
On one of the ships that was sunk, the men who died were trapped inside
and didnt die right away. The sounds of the men tapping on the inside
of the ship could be heard for a long time, but rescue was not possible...
“
Some of the bodies recovered from the West Virginia were in a compartment
with a calendar that had dates scratched off until Dec. 23.
West Virginia (BB48) (note: very slow download speed)
http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w6/west_virginia-ii.htm
Grim stuff for those doing recovery work.
I do recall some were rescued (alive) from the capsized Oklahoma;
I don’t know if a “rescue” came too late for sailors trapped in
other compartments on other ships.
“
I have a letter, postmarked Dec. 5, 1941, from my uncle to my grandmother ...
“
My mom says she remembers the Pearl Harbor radio reports and how
sad AND angry the adults got.
She was age 8, and said that after hearing enough of how the Japanese
had attacked over great distances, and the rumors about California
being at risk of invasion...she got scared the Japanese might attack
her home and town.
In north-central Oklahoma.
She laughs about it. But she said there was fear like that at the time.
My favorite BIL was on the USS New Orleans during the attack.
The Chaplain on this great Ship was the one who said these
famous words Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammunition.
Later in the war, the ship was hit by a torpedo and the bow
was blown off between turrets one and two.
This great crew saved the ship by backing it onto an atoll.
They made a temporary bow out of scrap and palm tree logs.
This allowed the ship to go at half speed to Australia where a
new bow was fabricated.
Being an old hand he was transferred to a new DE, the USS Laws and served on it until the war was won.
“I’ve been in combat, but I can’t even begin to fathom the hell that morning must have been.”
My grandmothers baby brother served in WW I, came home to his sweetheart, and they reared three sons during the depression years. He then saw those three sons go off to WW II (all came home though a cousin remains somewhere in France) ... he would sit at night and lister to Gabriel Heatter’s reports on the radio (not knowing where his sons were or if they were alive). I guess this is what made them so tough (what doesn’t kill us only makes us tougher).
The writer must have confused Nevada with the old USS Utah, which was not only occupying a carrier berth during the attack but, as a converted target ship, had heavy wooden planks covering her decks to protect her from dummy bomb strikes which supposedly gave her the appearance of being a carrier.
The Japanese wasted three or four torpedoes sinking her.
They knew what kind of ship Nevada was & exactly why they wanted to sink her.
Sunday Evening bump...for a fine thread
Her’s a bump SandRat.((((Hugs))))
Most moving account. Kudos to this exemplary WW II hero and all who served in that terrible war.
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