Pearl Harbour
Pearl Harbor United States of America Hawian Islands December 7th 1941, Japan's attack on US.
Pearl Harbor
In the context of World War II, the naval station in the Hawaiian Islands of greatest importance would be Pearl Harbor. Located just west of Honolulu, this base was the site of a surprise-attack by Japanese air forces on December 7, 1941.
The Japanese attack on Hawaii in December of 1941 was focused on the island of Oahu. The Japanese air attack concentrated on warships and naval installations in Pearl Harbor and on other military targets in the vicinity.
Hawaii
The site of the surprise Japanese attack .
Pearl Harbor
because he was ordered to quell the dissenters before they became more organized.
Battleship Row, located at Pearl Harbor, was the site of a devastating surprise attack by the Japanese on December 7, 1941. Several battleships, including the USS Arizona and USS Oklahoma, were heavily damaged or sunk during the assault. The attack resulted in the loss of many lives and marked a pivotal moment that led the United States to enter World War II. Subsequently, the damaged ships were either repaired or salvaged, with some becoming symbols of American resilience.
A harbor and navy base near Honolulu, Hawaii. It was the site of the surprise Japanese attack on the US that forced the US to enter world War 2.
The date that Roosevelt gave the speech was December 18, 1941. The time he gave his speech I do not know. Sorry. : )You can listen to his speech on this web site www.americanrhetoric.com/top100speechesall.html.
General Gage planned a surprise attack on the ammunition storage site in Concord to seize military supplies that the American colonists had stockpiled, which he viewed as a threat to British authority. The goal was to disarm the colonial militias and prevent potential uprisings against British rule. This action was part of a broader strategy to maintain control over the increasingly rebellious colonies and to quell any resistance before it could escalate. The attack ultimately sparked the initial confrontations of the American Revolutionary War.