La bandera izada a toda asta en el USS Oklahoma Memorial
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Visit the USS Oklahoma Memorial

Pearl Harbor National Memorial

The USS Oklahoma Memorial stands to honor the 429 men who lost their lives aboard the Oklahoma on December 7th, 1941. These men were not only sailors and Marines, they were 429 brothers, sons, husbands, and fathers.

USS Oklahoma, 1927 In May of 1916, the USS Oklahoma was the 37th battleship commissioned by the United States Navy. After her sea trials, she joined the Atlantic Fleet and saw duty on the Eastern Seaboard, where she protected convoys during World War I. In the years leading up to World War II, she cruised the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans as well as the Mediterranean Sea. In October of 1936, the battleship was transferred to the Pacific Fleet. She operated for four years out of her homeport in San Pedro, California, before being moved to Pearl Harbor on December 6, 1940. Her last mooring took place on December 5, 1941, when she took her place with six other battlewagons in a location that would forever be known as "Battleship Row." Sailors pose on the ship's 14-inch guns. To the crew, she was affectionately know as "The Okie." A battleship was a small town gone to sea, her inhabitants mostly young and far from home. USS Oklahoma survivor Stephen Bower Young, wrote: "Despite the passage of time, it seems like yesterday. My mind sees clearly the shipmates I knew so well as they emerged, laughing and talking from a hatch, portside, main deck, aft, of the Oklahoma. It is a time for morning quarters for muster, and at the urging of their petty officers, the white-uniformed sailors good-naturedly form into double ranks. They stand at ease, squaring round hats over suntanned faces. Their talk is animated and they turn in my direction. Then a cloud grows darker and I see those certain few less clearly." At 7:56 A.M., a second salvo of torpedoes was dropped against Battleship Row. This graphic depicts the dramatic aerial attack & capsizing of USS Oklahoma after being hit by as many as nine torpedoes. The USS Oklahoma capsized at 8:08 A.M., approximately 12 minutes after the first torpedo hit. Hundreds of men were trapped below her decks. They found themselves in a bizarre world turned upside down, in pitch-black darkness, as compartments filled with water. Death came to 429 officers, sailors and Marines, marking the second greatest loss of life at Pearl Harbor. But not all was lost. Some men waited in compartments for rescue, while others began thinking of ways to escape their watery tomb. Original escape diagram by James Bryant. Of the 14 men trapped in D-57, three made a daring escape. They swam nearly 20 feet down the trunk space, 35 feet out of the hatch and across the upside down deck, and finally ascended almost 30 feet to the water's surface. Ordinary men with extraordinary courage swam approximately 90 feet to freedom. The hours passed by slowly for those trapped below decks. Using hammers and wrenches, they pounded on bulkheads to draw attention to would-be rescuers. For those in compartment D-57, time was running out as the air grew foul and the water steadily rose. Over the next two days, 32 men would be pulled from the hull of the USS Oklahoma. Eleven came from D-57, a storage compartment known as the "Lucky Bag." In 1944, the Oklahoma was salvaged and raised at Pearl Harbor. Because new battleships of greater strength and size had been added to the fleet, she was denied future service and decommissioned. In 1947, she was sold for scrap but sank in a storm while being towed to the West Coast.

Etiquetas

Exposiciones de MuseoBurial, Cemetery and GravesiteShips and ShipwrecksMilitaryUS Air Force (Army Air Corps)US ArmyUS Coast GuardUS MarinesUS NavyMonuments and MemorialsWars and ConflictsUSS Oklahoma memorialUSS OklahomaPearl Harborworld war 2WW IImedal of honor

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Detalles

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Pearl Harbor National memorial is a fee free site. The USS Oklahoma Memorial and USS Utah Memorial are both located on Ford Island. Visitors can access the USS Oklahoma Memorial via a shuttle from the Pearl Harbor Visitor Center. However, the USS Utah Memorial is not available to the public via shuttle. Access is currently limited to visitors who have military base access.

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Hora del día

Day

Accesibilidad

The park is in ADA compliance and handicap accessible. Wheelchairs and scooters can be brought on site and throughout all parts of the visitor center, to include the theaters and the memorial. Please note: The visitor center does not offer wheelchairs, except in emergency situations. Walking between facilities can be challenging for visitors with mobility issues, but there are several benches throughout the visitor center for rest opportunities. There are no doctors or nurses on-site. EMS is available and a hospital is nearby. If you have a medical need please call 911.

Mascotas

No — Animales de servicio. Si tiene un animal de servicio que le gustaría traer al monumento, consulte las pautas de animales de servicio de la ADA. También puede consultar sus preguntas frecuentes.

Reservaciones

No

Ubicación

USS Oklahoma Memorial

Ver en NPS.govVolver a Pearl Harbor

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