Category Archives: Loose thoughts and musings

Salvaging the Fleet: Salvage Efforts after the Attack on Pearl Harbor

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
I have had a busy day working on a chapter revision of my Gettysburg text dealing with the critical role of ideology and religion as a cause of the Civil War, as a motivation to those who fought it as well as in shaping the history of it, especially in regards to the Lost Cause. This like many of my the chapters has taken on a life of its own and is fascinating to me. It is hard to believe how many details of the ante-Bellum era fit our current political crisis as well as can teach us about the role of religion in the conflicts in the Middle East and Africa.
But tonight will be the next to last segment of my yearly Pearl Harbor series, this one about the Herculean taks of salvaging the Pacific Fleet after the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Have a great night.
Peace
Padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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One of the more interesting aspects of the Pearl Harbor attack were the efforts of the US Navy to salvage and return to duty the ships sunk or so heavily damaged that they were thought to be irreparable after the attack. 21 ships were sunk or damaged during the attack, roughly 20% of the fleet present.

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Of these were battleships, the USS Arizona sunk by a cataclysmic explosion, her broken hulk with her collapsed foremast the iconic symbol of the attack. USS Oklahoma was capsized on Battleship Row.  USS Nevada was grounded and sunk off Hospital Point after an abortive attempt to sortie during the attack. USS California and USS West Virginia lay upright on the bottom of Pearl Harbor, their superstructure, distinctive cage masts and gun turrets visible above the oily water.

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The former battleship USS Utah lay capsized on the far side of Ford Island while the light…

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Awarding the Heroes of Pearl Harbor

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
One final Pearl Harbor article before we forget that day for another year. This is about the men who in many cases gave their lives during that attack, and others whose heroism was amazing by any stretch of the imagination. We can write about ships and tactics, politics and strategy but in the end war always comes down to the sacrifice of human beings. Sacrifice that more often than not cannot be measured and only be recognized by the people of a nation in their words, and with a small amount of metal and fabric, something that we call a medal. Until tomorrow.
Peace
Padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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On the morning of December 7th 1941 aircraft from the Japanese First Air Fleet attacked the United States Pacific Fleet as it lay at anchor at Pearl Harbor.

The attack inflicted great damage and casualties on the Pacific Fleet as well as the Army Air Forces based on Oahu. On that fateful Sunday the US Navy had 19 ships sunk or damaged. The Navy, Marine Corps and Army Air Corps lost 188 aircraft destroyed and another 159 damaged. 2402 American Sailors, Marines and Soldiers, including members of the Army Air Corps lost their lives and another 1247 were wounded.

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It was a day where men, suddenly shaken from their peacetime routine by bombs, bullets and torpedoes conducted themselves in in an extraordinary manner. When the last Japanese aircraft turned away the previously placid waters of Pearl Harbor were littered with wrecked and sunken ships, blazing fires and the bodies of…

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Pearl Harbor, the Missing Carriers: USS Enterprise, USS Lexington and USS Saratoga

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
One of the most interesting things about the Pearl Harbor attack is what ships were not present, the American aircraft carriers. In 1941 the aircraft carrier was still considered by most naval leaders to be a support to fleets of battleships. Despite the fact that Admiral Yamamoto relied on his carrier strike force for the attack on Pearl Harbor, even he did not recognize that the day of the battleship’s supremacy was at an end. So here is the story of the ships that were missing on December 7th 1941.
Peace
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padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

h50931

On the morning of December 7th 1941 8 of the 9 Battleships assigned to the US Pacific Fleet were in Pearl Harbor. Seven, the USS California, USS Maryland, USS Oklahoma, USS Tennessee, USS West Virginia, USS Arizona and USS Nevada were moored on Battleship Row. The USS Pennsylvania was in the massive dry dock which she shared with the destroyers USS Cassin and USS Downes. The USS Colorado, a sister ship of Maryland and West Virginia was at the Puget Sound Naval Yard being overhauled.

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USS West Virginia sinking at left and USS Tennessee burning at Pearl Harbor

At the time both the United States Navy and the Japanese Imperial Navy still viewed the Battleships as the heart of the fleet and the essence of naval power. Aircraft Carriers were still viewed as an adjunct and support to the traditional battle line.

Japanese-carriersJapanese Aircraft preparing to launch at Pearl…

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In Harm’s Way: The Ships that Got Underway at Pearl Harbor

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
First of two articles today on Pearl Harbor. This is a re-post of an article that I did last year. This is about the ships that somehow got underway during the attack on Pearl Harbor. Each one has an amazing story, and most got underway without key members of their crews and even their commanding officers. They are a testament to the courage, devotion and honor of those who serve in the United States Navy.
Peace
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padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

They were an odd collection of ships. A battleship, two modern light cruisers, an elderly light cruiser and a collection of destroyers, destroyer minesweepers and destroyer minelayers. Yet in the midst of the din and bloody chaos of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor these ships, sometimes with only the most junior of officers in charge got underway and took to sea in order to seek out and engage the Japanese.

Their sortie is dramatized in the Otto Preminger film In Harm’s Way. 

http://www.tcm.com/mediaroom/video/477483/In-Harm-s-Way-Movie-Clip-Twelve-Bat-Blind-Ships.html

For the first forty minutes of the attack only two ships were underway. The USS Ward which had sunk the Japanese midget submarine outside the harbor entrance an hour before the attack began. The USS Helm was in the main channel as the attack began. They were joined over the next two hours by other ships.

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The USS Nevada was the only battleship to get underway…

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Battleship Row: The Story of the Battleships of Pearl Harbor

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
I hope that you are having a good night. Today was busy, more work on Gettysburg articles and other work duties and I spent the afternoon with my new primary care provider. Finally after years of trying it looks like I may get a number of different sleep studies as was as an evaluation for TBI or a Concussion Syndrome. It was really great to have a doctor who spent the time to listen and take action. Since the past few nights have been filled with vivid nightmares it is nice to after so long to finally be heard. Now if only all the consults get approved…As I mentioned last night this Sunday is the 73rd anniversary of the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor. This is another of my older articles about that attack. This one is about the Battleships that were moored on Battleship Row that were the focus of the Japanese attack. The story of these ships is a testimony to the bravery and courage of their crews, not only on December 7th 1941 but during the salvage operations and when each ship with the exception of the Arizona and Oklahoma reentered the fight against the Axis powers.
Have a great night,
Peace
Padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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“Yesterday, Dec. 7, 1941 – a date which will live in infamy – the United States of America was suddenly and deliberately attacked by naval and air forces of the Empire of Japan…. The attack yesterday on the Hawaiian Islands has caused severe damage to American naval and military forces. Very many American lives have been lost.” Except of President Franklin D Roosevelt’s Pearl Harbor Speech December 8th 1941

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Today is the 72nd anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor and as we were then we are at war. Of course it is not the same kind of war and most Americans live in the illusion of peace which makes it even more important to remember that terribly day of infamy.

I remember reading Walter Lord’s classic and very readable book about Pearl Harbor “Day of Infamy” when I was a 7th grade student at Stockton Junior High School…

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The “Eyes” have it; they’ve got Sammy Davis Eyes….an Experience from My Clinical Pastoral Education Residency

Friends of Padre Steve’s World,
I have spent the day and much of the evening working and re-editing the Gettysburg text chapter about Pickett’s Charge. It is now in the hands of my wife Judy to do some editing, checking grammar and making sure that I really meant to write what I wrote.
So tonight a bit of Emergency Room gallows humor from over 20 years ago when I was a young minister and recent seminary graduate doing a Pastoral Care Residency at Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas Texas. I published the article on this site like five years ago and tonight did a bit of editing to make it just a bit easier to follow.
It is positively creepy but true and a testimony to what some people will do to themselves under the delusion, drug induced or not that God is telling them to do it.
So I hope this gives you great appetite and a few laughs even as you shake your head in disbelief.
Have a great night,
Peace
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padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

Sometimes I gotta wonder about people, especially some religious people.  Of course we can all probably relate to some incident where someone with their religious beliefs led to somewhat unusual situations, even funny or tragic situations.

Of course when you work as a Trauma and Surgery Department Chaplain at a major inner city Level One Trauma Center like Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, the unusual, the funny and the tragic can all be wrapped into one or maybe two two stories, sometimes on the same day.  Such an occasion occurred about halfway through my residency year at Parkland in March 1994.

About a quarter into my residency my Clinical Pastoral Care Residency Supervisor moved me from the Internal Medicine service to Trauma, Surgery and Neurosurgery service which included the Trauma and Surgery section of the Emergency Department. This several years before the hospital began their Emergency Medicine Residency and unified…

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Happy Thanksgiving!

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I want to wish everyone a very Happy Thanksgiving. I do hope that we all can find something to be thankful for this year. Surprisingly despite how shitty much of the year has been I am surprisingly thankful and I actually believe that this is a good thing.

Now please don’t get me wrong. There have been a lot of good things that have occurred this year that I both am thankful for and rejoice in. That being said there is a lot of this year that I would not want to experience again and if I never do again I will even be more thankful, to to God, to my fellow human beings or even to Darwin but I digress.

I want to say that I am thankful for family and friends, my wonderful and often long-suffering wife Judy, and my two four legged babies, Molly and Minnie.

But when I think about the origins of holiday that we in the United States call “Thanksgiving” I am often troubled because it celebrates the beginnings of a campaign by our proud forefathers to exterminate the people that lived here before us, often in the “name of Jesus” beginning with the members of the same tribes who welcomed them, helped them and did not send them back because they were undocumented Pilgrims. Men who not many years later went on  to accuse innocent women of being witches and and persecuting other white guys and gals like the Quakers and the Baptists because they didn’t follow the Puritan way in an pure enough way.

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A Good “Old Fashioned Thanksgiving”

Now personally I like the idea of a yearly celebration of Thanksgiving, whether we give thanks to God, our families, friends, neighbors, our broker, our bookie, or whoever is playing the Dallas Cowboys is this year. I just think that giving thanks is good.

Mark Twain described the holiday in wonderful terms even before it became a complete orgy of gluttony and watching big grown men crush other big grown men in football games. Not that there is anything wrong with that, but the ever pithy and observant Twain said of Thanksgiving Day:

“Thanksgiving Day, a function which originated in New England two or three centuries ago when those people recognized that they really had something to be thankful for — annually, not oftener — if they had succeeded in exterminating their neighbors, the Indians, during the previous twelve months instead of getting exterminated by their neighbors, the Indians. Thanksgiving Day became a habit, for the reason that in the course of time, as the years drifted on, it was perceived that the exterminating had ceased to be mutual and was all on the white man’s side, consequently on the Lord’s side; hence it was proper to thank the Lord for it and extend the usual annual compliments.”

But really. I am so thankful to you, all of my readers. Those that subscribe to this site, those who follow me on Twitter or Facebook and the many others who like our Pilgrim ancestors got lost on the way somewhere else and found this site. You cannot believe just how thankful I am for all of you, especially those who sent words of support and encouragement when I was really doing bad. So thank all of you. Your time is valuable and I appreciate your taking to read what I post here.

So anyway, sometime tomorrow, or rather later today after I go to bed and get back up, and then  after I awake from my turkey, pie and beer induced coma I hope to post another note.

Have a great Thanksgiving!

Peace and Blessings

Padre Steve+

 

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UPDATE: It Depends on What Your Definition of “Christian” Is…

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
I wrote about a situation that I encountered a few days ago and felt that I needed to update you with what I could say. Likewise I did some pretty major editing to the article, which I wrote when I was very tired and in a lot of pain from the PTSD nightmare accident that I had on Monday. I was surprised just how badly written it was and because it is something that others may come across in the future I want it to be more articulate and thus enhance its credibility.
Have a great day. Expect the Gettysburg article about the troubled life and career of Gouverneur Warren tomorrow.
Peace and blessings
padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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This article was updated Sunday 23 November to clear up some grammar issues, and in doing so I have provided some updates to let you know what is currently happening, and to better enhance my arguments.

My friends, last week I had something occur that was so troublesome that I had to report it to certain Federal law enforcement authorities as well as a nationally known advocate for religious liberty issues.

Since the Feds are still doing their investigation I have to wait to post the article. I spoke with and I am in contact with the head of that group. Like me he is waiting to see what the investigators report. As things stand right now I expect that it may be sometime in December before I can publish in any detail what happened.

Conceivably this could end up getting some media attention because it involves a military member…

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For the Future: The Assassination of John F Kennedy at 50 Years

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
Sorry for another re-run but after spending half of the day getting my neck checked out following the injury I sustained during the PTSD nightmare that I wrote about Monday. I also had very little sleep last night, and since coming home have been working on the revision of the chapter for my Gettysburg text. It has taken on an interesting twist as I deal with the probable effects of PTSD and Moral Injury in the life of the Hero of Little Round Top, Major General Gouverneur Kemble Warren. I am having Judy do some edits before I post it here, so I decided to re-post an article from last year about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Last year was the 50th anniversary of this tragic event, but it seems that this year little has been written or posted about it. Kennedy is a hero to me, an imperfect one, but a hero to be sure. I had feet of clay, did not always make the right decisions, but I go back to his service as a young Naval Officer in World War Two, serving on PT Boats in the Solomon Islands. Someday I will do a more detailed article on JFK’s Naval service.
So have a great night,
Peace
Padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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President John F Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas Texas on a sunny November afternoon 50 years ago.  The images of the event and its aftermath in photos and film still haunt us and find themselves etched in our individual and collective memory. The two shots that killed the President were fired by Lee Harvey Oswald according to the Warren Commission and subsequent inquiries although there are a host of conspiracy theories regarding the assassination. My purpose is not to prove or disprove the official version or any alternative explanation. I personally believe that Oswald was the lone gunman, but I have to wonder if there were others involved in the plot and at times if there was a second shooter.

However today my purpose is to remember Kennedy’s assassination, a horrible event in the life of our nation and to reflect on how easily something similar could happen again.

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Kennedy in…

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Civility is Not a Sign of Weakness: The Hope of John F Kennedy and his Inaugural Address

Friends of Padre Steve’s World
Well my friends it is Friday night after a long week that began very painfully when one of my PTSD induced nightmares got way too physical. My neck still hurts really bad after busting my former nightstand/bookcase with my chin. Doctor said that it was like being in an auto accident. I do have a follow up appointment scheduled because I guess I jammed or did something else to my neck. Pray for me a sinner…. but I digress…. I have also been working and re-working a chapter of my Gettysburg text, I think that I will have it completed by Sunday of Monday. I also tantalized you with a note about a situation dealing with some harassment that I received from someone using a government computer on government time, that situation is ongoing and I have to hold off on putting out anything while law enforcement and others look into the situation. Believe you me I want to put this out but can’t do it just yet. Promise when I can it will be good.
But tomorrow, November 22nd is the 51st anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. It is a date that always gets me, especially when I see the films of the assassination. I just think of a life cut far too short and an event that coupled with the Vietnam War and the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. has left scars on our country that have never fully healed.
So until tomorrow,
Peace
Padre Steve+

padresteve's avatarThe Inglorius Padre Steve's World

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“So let us begin a new remembering on both sides that civility is not a sign of weakness, and sincerity is always subject to proof. Let us never negotiate out of fear. But let us never fear to negotiate.” John F Kennedy

Fifty-three years ago a young, handsome Irish Catholic from Massachusetts took the oath of office of the President of the United States. President John F. Kennedy had won an exceptionally close Presidential Race against Republican Voce President Richard M. Nixon, a race that some believe was decided by votes of the dead in places like Chicago and West Virginia. Despite the contested nature of the election Nixon was gracious and conceded the race to avoid deeper division.

Fifty years ago today that young President was gunned down in Dealey Plaza in Dallas Texas by Lee Harvey Oswald. It was an event that shattered our nation which helped in…

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