U.S. Department of Defense

11/07/2024 | News release | Archived content

USS Arizona's Crew Displays Valor Amid Carnage at Pearl Harbor

Just after 8 a.m. on Dec. 7, 1941, the battleship USS Arizona, at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, was attacked by Japanese bombers multiple times.

Battleship Arizona
The battleship USS Arizona is modernized around the latter half of 1929 at Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Va.
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Credit: Navy
VIRIN: 291010-O-D0439-001

USS Arizona
Commissioned: 1916
Place Built: Brooklyn Navy Yard, N.Y.
Early Cruises: No World War I battle service. Before the Japanese attack, the ship deployed for peacetime cruises in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and Pacific oceans.
Decommissioned: 1941
Legacy: The Arizona's bell is on display at the University of Arizona. A gun, mast and anchor from the battleship are on display in Phoenix. The Virginia-class submarine USS Arizona was laid down on Dec. 7, 2022, in Groton, Connecticut. It's in the process of being completed.

At 8:06 a.m. a bomb detonated the ship's magazines, causing catastrophic damage and fires, sinking the ship and killing 1,177 of the 1,512-person crew - about half of all lives lost during the attack on all of the ships and airfields.

Arizona Damage
The battleship USS Arizona is broken and sunk in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, in the days following the Japanese attack on Dec. 7, 1941.
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Credit: Navy
VIRIN: 411225-O-D0439-001

Three Medals of Honor were awarded to crew members.

Navy Lt. Cmdr. Samuel G. Fuqua saw a Japanese airplane fly by, so he ran to the ship's quarterdeck. Immediately, he was knocked unconscious by a massive explosion.

When Fuqua came to, he quickly started directing sailors to fight the fire and rescue the wounded. According to a National WWII Museum's account of the attack, the Arizona's sailors used hand-held, carbon dioxide extinguishers because there was no pressure in the fire hoses. The extinguishers were no match for the growing inferno on the ship, but they knocked down the flames enough to allow some to escape.

As the enemy continued bombing and strafing the Arizona and other nearby ships, Fuqua directed other sailors to fight the flames so they could get as many wounded men off the ship as possible. According to his Medal of Honor citation, Fuqua "supervised the rescue of these men in such an amazingly calm and cool manner and with such excellent judgment that it inspired everyone who saw him" to carry on despite the pandemonium.

Fuqua stayed on the quarterdeck and directed the exodus until he was satisfied that all the men who could be saved were off the ship. Only then did he leave the Arizona on the last boatload of survivors.

Fuqua retired from the Navy in 1953 as a rear admiral. He died in 1987.

Navy Captain
Navy Capt. Franklin Van Valkenburgh of the battleship USS Arizona poses for a photo in his dress uniform.
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Credit: Navy
VIRIN: 411205-O-D0439-001

Navy Capt. Franklin Van Valkenburgh's Medal of Honor citation reads in part: "He gallantly fought his ship until the USS Arizona blew up from magazine explosions and a direct bomb hit on the bridge, which resulted in the loss of his life."

The destroyer USS Van Valkenburgh, named in his honor, was commissioned in 1944.

Navy Rear Adm. Isaac C. Kidd, the highest-ranking officer on battleship row, immediately went to the bridge of the Arizona to direct recovery efforts during the attack, instead of abandoning ship.

Isaac C. Kidd
Navy Capt. Isaac C. Kidd, sometime between 1930 and 1932. During the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 1941, then-Navy Rear Adm. Kidd, would be killed.
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Credit: Navy
VIRIN: 311010-O-D0439-001
He was killed when the ship's magazine exploded after the bridge took a direct hit from a bomb.

Unlike most of the other vessels at Pearl Harbor, damage to the Arizona was so extensive that it could not be salvaged.

While the Arizona suffered the most severe damage of the eight battleships at Pearl Harbor, it's the only one to survive as a monument - albeit on the Pearl Harbor seabed - where it's known as the USS Arizona Memorial. All of the other battleships were scrapped or scuttled after the war.

USS Arizona Memorial
The USS Arizona Memorial is seen from the air in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, May 23, 2002.
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Credit: PH3(AW/SW) JAYME PASTORIC, USN
VIRIN: 020523-N-9769P-057

The Arizona has been designated a National Historic Landmark administered by the National Park Service. Thousands of people visit the site daily, with about 2 million people annually honoring those lost that day.