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                  John McGoran Remembers the 
                    Way Peace Ended                
               
                  USS California (BB-44)      
                    
    John H. McGoran - U.S.      
                    Navy Seaman,      
                        "striking" for Signalman in Admiral      
                    Pye's Flag.      
                        19 Years old      
                        Born November 5, 1922      
                        USS California (BB 44)      
                        Battle Station; Number 3 Turret      
                        Lower Powder Handling Room.     
                       
                      The morning of December      
                    7, 1941 was typical of any Sunday morning aboard the battleship      
                    USS CALIFORNIA. My billet for meals was the Marines' casemate      
                    #8 (an armored enclosure for a gun) located portside mid-ship,      
                    just where the forecastle breaks and a ladder leads down to      
                    the quarter-deck. Breakfast over, I took my dirty dishes to      
                    the scullery below. Lamentably, that's the way peace ended.      
                    Just then a sailor ran by crazily singing, "The Japs      
                    are coming - hurrah, hurrah!"       
                       I don't remember the alarm      
                    that sounded General Quarters. I only know that suddenly I      
                    joined in a rush to battle stations, in No. 3 turret's lower      
                    powder handling room.       
                      When hurrying to our battle      
                    stations, to reach the decks below, we were trained to jump      
                    down the hatch - instead of using it's ladder - (ladder is      
                    ship talk and most often refers to a steep iron stairway).      
                    Then, grab onto a bar attached to the overhead (ceiling) of      
                    the deck below and swing ones body into a run in the lower      
                    passageway. That's roughly the way I arrived at my battle      
                    station in the "lower powder handling room" where a First-class      
                    petty-officer, named Allen, was in charge.       
                      Allen was one of those      
                    old-time petty officers referred to as "The backbone      
                    of the Fleet." Now, he was busily giving orders we couldn't      
                    carry out because no one had the keys to the powder magazines      
                    (room).       
                      Suddenly, a violent lurching      
                    shook us all, tossing us around like so many unmuscled puppets      
                    as the ship seemed to rise up a foot, then settle back. Allan      
                    grabbed at his ear phones. "We're hit." he cried.      
                    "A torpedo!"       
                      "So what!" I      
                    thought foolishly. "Enjoy it!" The armor plating      
                    around the USS CALIFORNIA was at least a foot thick.       
                      My idiot elation was brief.      
                    A torpedo had hit us. (Three in all hit below the armor plating      
                    and made huge holes.) The fuel tank next to our port magazine      
                    ignited in flames and there we were, surrounded on three sides      
                    by powder-filled magazines.       
                      Immediately orders came      
                    to check the temperature of the bulkhead (wall) separating      
                    the magazine from the fuel tank. We forced the lock on the      
                    magazine door and opened it. With that accomplished we discovered      
                    the covers had shaken off some of the cans containing the      
                    14-inch powder bags and the aisle was strewn with ripped open      
                    bags of gunpowder.       
                      Anxiously, I entered, walking      
                    carefully over the debris to feel the bulkhead. I returned      
                    and reported to Allen that the bulkhead was cool. Allen in      
                    turn passed the reassuring word over the mouthpiece of his      
                    headset to the bridge.       
                      Whatever reply came back      
                    over the phones was reflected in the strain on Allen's face.      
                    He couldn't seem to comprehend, perhaps he didn't want to      
                    believe. He turned to us and almost in a whisper said, "The      
                    OKLAHOMA! It has capsized!" Frighteningly, our ship was      
                    beginning to list dangerously.       
                      Allan received a report      
                    that our anti-aircraft ammunition supply line had broken down      
                    from an explosion. The break was reported to be in "CL"      
                    compartment, my sleeping quarters, and when the call came,      
                    I said I'd go. Two other seamen also volunteered for the job.      
                          
                      As I stood there looking      
                    into "CL" compartment, my companion, a seaman named      
                    "Smitty", called to me. I turned to see him on the      
                    opposite side of the conveyor trying to help a shipmate whose      
                    back was against the bulkhead, but who was slowly slipping      
                    to the deck (floor). His eyes were rolled back into his head.      
                    He looked like he was dying.       
                      "This one is still      
                    alive," Smitty said calmly. Smitty was a small fellow      
                    but he managed to wrestle the wounded shipmate to me and I      
                    pulled his limp body over the conveyor into the passageway.      
                    If on December 6th anyone had asked me to help save the life      
                    of this offensive guy, I would have answered, "To hell      
                    with him." I had known this fellow since boot-camp, and      
                    he was one of the most overbearing individuals I had ever      
                    met. But now, unconscious, he had no personality; his was      
                    a life to be saved.       
                      To reach the first-aid      
                    station, Smitty and I back-tracked aft on the starboard side.      
                    Now and then, we had to stop and lay him down, so we could      
                    rest. Catching our breaths, we moved on again. As we trudged      
                    along, we had to again open and close the watertight bulkhead      
                    doors while making our way back through the passageway to      
                    a ladder up, which was near the man-hole down to number three      
                    lower handling, from where we started. The hatch-cover at      
                    the top of the ladder was dogged down - another Navy term      
                    for closed and watertight. But, it was the nearest escape      
                    to the decks above. We unlocked the hatch and pushed it open.      
                    Smitty took the injured man's legs and started up the ladder;      
                    I got him under the arms again and just as I'd taken a second      
                    or third step up the ladder an explosion again rocked the      
                    ship.       
                      Suddenly, a steam pipe      
                    nearby blew out. In a stunning moment of chaos that followed,      
                    I heard the cry, "Gas!" Unquestioningly, I held      
                    my breath until I could fit my gas-mask to my face. The gas      
                    mask was very uncomfortable and it was difficult to cope with.      
                    Finally, I lifted it a bit to sniff the air to determine whether      
                    or not it smelled safe to breathe; it did.       
                      Smitty and I debated whether      
                    to try to escape by going back to "CL" compartment      
                    and try a ladder there, or opening this hatch again and trying      
                    to escape here. Hesitatingly, we again tackled this ladder.      
                    We again opened the hatch cover and saw no evidence of damage      
                    from the explosion.       
                      What actually happened      
                    was a bomb penetrated the decks above and exploded in front      
                    of the ship's store, several feet forward of the ladder. It      
                    killed "Boots," one of the masters-at-arms (ship's      
                    policeman). It bent a heavy steel hatch-combing flush with      
                    the deck.       
                      We picked up our injured      
                    shipmate and carried him up. This time, we were lucky and      
                    got him to the first-aid station.       
                      Some station! It was normally      
                    the crews' recreation room, but now a state of incredible      
                    confusion prevailed. We laid our shipmate on the deck. A chief      
                    petty officer, whom I recognized as one of the "black-gang"      
                    (engine room crew), came over and with great authority asked      
                    if he was alive. "We think so," I said. "Then      
                    get him out of the way," ordered the chief. "Slide      
                    him under the table where nobody will trip over him."      
                    (Later in the week, I learned that the fellow's back had been      
                    broken, but he would recover.) Then the chief went back to      
                    directing and sorting the living from the dead. As men brought      
                    in casualties, the chief would say, "Dead or alive? If      
                    they're dead, take them into the other room and throw them      
                    on the dead pile." He repeatedly made rounds of the room      
                    inspecting bodies. "This man is dead - Get him out of      
                    here." Normally this cold, hard manner would have been      
                    resented. Now, I could only feel admiration for his efficiency.      
                          
                      As I stood, trying to comprehend      
                    all of this, someone handed me a bottle of root-beer and a      
                    sandwich. Ordinarily I would have retch at the sight of so      
                    much blood, but I ate and drank, completely amazed at my appetite      
                    under such conditions and decided it was all incomprehensible.      
                          
                      While I was in the first-aid      
                    station, word came to abandon ship. Whether or not this was      
                    an official order, I don't know. But instead, the Chief Petty      
                    Officer in charge, and a Warrant Officer, named Applegate,      
                    formed a work-party of ten men to search for anti-aircraft      
                    ammunition, since ours could not be reached, due to a bomb      
                    explosion.       
                      Our work-party first went      
                    aft to the door which exited onto the starboard quarter-deck.      
                    We were about to proceed across the quarter-deck to board      
                    a motor launch when someone warned us that a wave of strafing      
                    Japanese planes was passing over. The planes came in low,      
                    firing their machine guns. Between sorties, men from nearby      
                    battle stations raced out on the quarterdeck and dragged to      
                    shelter those who had been struck by the machine gun fire.      
                    Then, as soon as we felt it was safe, we ran for the motor      
                    launch, which was waiting for us at the port quarter, dry-docks.      
                    She seemed to be out of the channel, perhaps she had turned      
                    to avoid a bomb.       
                      Our coxswain took our launch      
                    into the space between the capsized OKLAHOMA and the port      
                    side forecastle of the MARYLAND. Shouting up to sailors on      
                    the MARRYLAND's forecastle, we tried to convey to them that      
                    we needed ammunition, but we could rouse no support. Their      
                    problems were far greater to them than what we were shouting      
                    up to them from our motor launch, and spoken to an officer      
                    there, we might have been more successful.       
                      Once it became clear that      
                    we could expect no help from this quarter, we gave up trying      
                    to board the MARYLAND. The coxswain maneuvered the motor launch      
                    from between the two battleships and motored around the whale      
                    shaped hull of the capsized OKLAHOMA and went to the USS WEST      
                    VIRGINIA.       
                      By this time, the WEST      
                    VIRGINIA had sunk deep enough so that it was with little effort      
                    that Warrant Officer Applegate, and the five men he picked,      
                    to clamber aboard. I watched as they crossed the ship's forecastle,      
                    walking under the barrels of the 16-inch guns, and walk aft      
                    on the starboard side. We never saw them again.       
                      Within minutes the forecastle      
                    shot up in smoke and flames. (It may have been the bomb that      
                    hit the turret of the TENNESSEE.) An officer in his white      
                    uniform appeared engulfed in the fire. Someone on board shouted,      
                    "Get out of there. The ship can blow up any minute."      
                          
                      The explosion frightened      
                    us terribly. The coxswain began backing the launch away from      
                    the burning battleship. Suddenly, I saw that the coxswain      
                    was not aware of the danger immediately behind our launch;      
                    we were backing straight for one of the large propellers of      
                    the capsized OKLAHOMA sticking high out of the water.       
                      I yelled at the coxswain,      
                    "Reverse your engines." At the same time, two of      
                    us clambered to the tiller-deck, and scrambled over the taffrail.      
                    With one hand grasping the taffrail, we reached with our legs      
                    - spread eagle like - and with our feet, shoved against the      
                    propeller. Unquestionably, our effort prevented the motor      
                    launch from being damaged; but we just did what the situation      
                    required.       
                      The coxswain now had the      
                    launch underway forward. Then we saw a man struggling in the      
                    water near the mid-ship's section of the WEST VIRGINIA. "We're      
                    going in after him", he told us. The coxswain maneuvered      
                    in to pick up the man from the water, bringing him dangerously      
                    close to the perimeter of the burning oil that was closing      
                    in.       
                      By now I was overwhelmed      
                    by all that was happening around us and for the life of me,      
                    I can't recall whether that man made it into the boat. We      
                    headed for 1010 dock at the Navy shipyard.       
                      And there was, indeed,      
                    reason to feel overwhelmed. On every side were almost unbearable      
                    sights. Battleship Row was devastated. From the direction      
                    of the dry docks, an explosion shook the harbor. This was      
                    the destroyer SHAW. Just two weeks before, I had visited my      
                    brother's ship in that same dry dock.       
                      The ST. LOUIS was gaining      
                    speed, but we were able to come alongside her starboard quarter      
                    (there's another historical picture which shows our motor      
                    launch underway alongside the ST. LOUIS), where we tried to      
                    clamber aboard the gangway which was still hanging over the      
                    side. An officer on deck denied us permission to come aboard.      
                    Frustrated, we abandoned the attempt to board the ST. LOUIS      
                    and headed for 1010 dock at the Naval Ship Yard, where everyone      
                    went their individual ways.       
                      Only one who was there      
                    can fully appreciate what took place. As a Pearl Harbor Survivor      
                    who was at ground zero on "battleship row," the      
                    morning of December 7, 1941, I feel, "if you didn't go      
                    through it, there's no words that can adequately describe      
                    it; if you were there, then no words are necessary. "Paul      
                    Urdzik remembers.        
                   USS Vestal - AR 4      
                      I had just finished breakfast      
                    and had one leg up getting into my center bunk, ready to settle      
                    down with the local Sunday newspaper when General Quarters      
                    sounded.       
                      Everyone started cussing      
                    and grumbling about, "What a hell of time to hold a drill."      
                    I headed for the engine room.       
                      At the well deck someone      
                    shouted, "Get back! Here they come, strafing the ship."      
                    We ran back into the passageway and about four of us tried      
                    to squeeze into a corner behind a water fountain.       
                      As I started back across      
                    the well deck, I noticed Lionel Baker, Pharmacist Mate - Second      
                    Class, kneeling over and tending to one of the wounded and      
                    several other lying about the deck.       
                      With a quick glance to      
                    the right, I noticed the Arizona was a mass of flames and      
                    one of the AA guns was blasting away. Just about that time      
                    a plane was passing by very low and close. I saw the pilot      
                    looking over the Arizona, and as he pulled up, I noticed the      
                    red ball on the wing. Yes, I could have hit it with a stone      
                    if I had one to throw.       
                      The engine room was taking      
                    on water due to the bomb hit aft. The bulkheads were bowed,      
                    buckling inward and leaking throughout. The ship's Damage      
                    Control Department was really on the ball, bracing and shoring      
                    up the bulkheads against the main engines to keep them from      
                    collapsing. To me, they are the unsung heroes. We owe them      
                    many thanks, and I say they saved the lives of everyone in      
                    the engine room.       
                      When the Arizona blew up,      
                    it lifted and rattled the deck plates, knocking everyone off      
                    balance, and the Vestal also did a little bit of a dance.      
                          
                      Because of lost communication      
                    with the top side, the Chief Engineer sent a man up to see      
                    what was happening. In no time the man returned and said,      
                    "Sir, they are abandoning ship." To which the Chief      
                    Engineer replied, "Let's get the hell out of here."      
                          
                      As we reached the well      
                    deck, the top side PA system was announcing, "All hands      
                    back to your battle stations and prepare to get under way."      
                    So, back to the engine room with everyone following the Chief      
                    Engineer like a flock of sheep.       
                      What happened, when the      
                    Arizona blew up, the Captain and some of the men were blown      
                    overboard, and the executive officer gave the order to abandon      
                    ship. The Captain came right back on board - water and oil      
                    soaked. He ordered everyone back to their stations to get      
                    underway. The shaft alleys were flooded and engine crank filled      
                    the water sloshing over the deck.       
                      Normal steam pressure for      
                    getting under way was 250 pounds. All we could get from the      
                    fire room was about 50 pounds, because of ruptured lines and      
                    leaks throughout the ship due to the bomb hits - one forward      
                    and one aft. As it was, the 50 pounds of steam was enough      
                    to turn over the main engine and beach the ship off Aiea.      
                      We witnessed all of the      
                    activity and commotion going on around the big white house      
                    sitting in a pineapple field half-way up the hillside from      
                    Aiea overlooking the harbor. A German couple was arrested      
                    for spying and relaying information to the Japanese. Admiral      
                    Nimitz came aboard in February 1942 to present Captain Cassin      
                    Young with the Congressional Medal of Honor and also presented      
                    Lionel Baker, Pharmacist Mate - Second Class, with the Navy      
                    Cross.       
                      Later on, Captain Young      
                    left the Vestal to take command of the cruiser, San Francisco,      
                    and nine days later, I am sorry to say, he lost his life.      
                    As the story goes, our main fleet met the Japanese main fleet      
                    one night in a major battle, and it was said that Captain      
                    Young took the San Francisco right down through the middle      
                    of the Japanese fleet. After the battle, we were sent to look      
                    the cruiser over, but were ordered to leave the area because      
                    no one knew who was winning at the time. Needless to say,      
                    the San Francisco was a sorry looking sight.       
                      On December 6, 1941, John      
                    Parker, (F 1/C Fire room) my best friend and who by coincidence      
                    enlisted in the Navy the same date as I, (December 7, 1939)      
                    two years to the day, were talking about how we were going      
                    to celebrate our second anniversary in the service. I told      
                    him, "Nothing special, just make the rounds."       
                      Well, later after things      
                    settled down, he came up to me with that sly laugh of his      
                    and said, "Boy Urdz - they sure gave us some kind of      
                    celebration, didn't they?"       
                      I can't even begin to put      
                    into words or describe my feelings of the pre-war visits to      
                    the islands and of its people. Like watching and listening      
                    to the radio program "Hawaii Calls" being broadcasted      
                    to the states from under the Banyan Tree (Moana Hotel), and      
                    also meeting the island's famous Hilo Hattie along the way.      
                    It was just another world.       
                      Thank you and Aloha.       
                      Paul P. Urdzik  
       
                         
				  
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