Traveling
Tuesday:
Hawaii’s Home Front After Pearl Harbor
The December 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor forced the
United States into war with Japan. The following day, Germany declared war on
the U.S., and the country became embroiled in WWII. Within hours of the attack,
the Territorial Governor stripped himself of his administrative powers, and
Hawaii (still a territory at that time) was put under martial law.
Under military law, the normal judicial process is
suspended, therefore courts, witnesses, and juries are unnecessary. Instead, a
military tribunal handles all violations and metes out punishment as it sees
fit. With more than a third of the residents being of Japanese descent, the
government was in a quandary about what to do with them. Interning the
individuals, as was being done on the mainland, was impractical for numerous
reasons, therefore it was hoped that martial law would take care of the
situation.
All residents over the age of six were fingerprinted
and issued identification papers that were to be carried all times and produced
upon demand. Curfews and blackouts (including electricity shutoff after
sundown) were implemented, the media and mail were censored, and food,
gasoline, and other items were rationed. Business hours were assigned and
alcohol was prohibited. Traffic was monitored and special garbage collection
was administered.
Civilians were banned from photographing coastal locations,
but they were also used to dig holes for bomb shelters and place barbed wire
around beaches, water pumping stations, electrical installations, and
government buildings. Gas masks were issued and regular drills were held to
prepare for gas attacks or air raids.
Waikiki’s beachfront hotels were closed to the public
and taken over for the exclusive use of the military (whose five branches all
had a presence on the islands). Seven POW and internment camps were located on
Oahu, the big island, Maui, and Kauai.
Hawaii was forever changed as a result of WWII, and
many scholars feel the statehood that followed fourteen years later had a
direct correlation to the war.
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Estelle's Endeavor
Will a world at war destroy a second chance at love?
Estelle Johnson promised to wait for Aubry DeLuca, but then she receives word of his debilitating injuries. Does she have the strength to stand by him in his hour of need?
Aubry DeLuca storms the beaches at Normandy, then wakes up in the hospital, his eyes bandaged. Will he regain his sight? Will the only woman he’s ever loved welcome him home or is he destined to go through life blind and alone?
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