US to Honor Pearl Harbor Without Survivors
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The Navy is building a new dry dock for its nuclear submarines at Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard.
PRIMETIMER on MSN
Who are the Pearl Harbor survivors living today? Dec 7, 1941, bombing survivors skip Remembrance Day due to advanced age
None of the 12 survivors, all centenarians, of the 1941 Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor, were present at this year's remembrance ceremony held in Hawaii on Sunday.
A couple dozen people, many of them military veterans, gathered Sunday at North Little Rock's Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum to pay their respects to history.
A remarkable World War II love story is now becoming part of Pearl Harbor history. Alice Beck Darrow, a 106-year-old former Navy nurse, has donated the bullet that once threatened her future husband's life to the Pearl Harbor National Memorial.
Like most Americans, Christine Kuehn always mourned the tragedy at Pearl Harbor, haunted by the some 2,400 souls who perished in the stunning Dec. 7, 1941, attack. She even made the hallowed site
Air Force Times on MSN
How one Japanese vessel spectacularly failed at Pearl Harbor
Even before the first Japanese bomb fell, the HA-19 and four other Type A midget submarines were meant to deal the first blow to the "sleeping giant."
On Dec. 7, 1941, the Empire of Japan launched an air raid on the U.S. Navy base at Pearl Harbor in Hawaii, killing more than 2,300 Americans. The United States declared war against Japan the following day. In 1787, Delaware became the first state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.