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Bluejackets Remembered

Voices from the Pacific War: Bluejackets Remember

Petty’s valuable oral history contains 23 accounts from enlistee veterans of the U.S. Navy in World War II. Many had joined the navy before Pearl Harbor because of the Depression, and a fair number stayed in the navy after the war. One and all were proud to have served. Petty’s valuable oral history contains 23 accounts from enlistee veterans of the U.S. Navy in World War II. Many had joined the navy before Pearl Harbor because of the Depression, and a fair number stayed in the navy after the war. One and all were proud to have served. Their service took them along many different courses, however. One man, on Wake Island, and another, on Corregidor, became POWs of the Japanese. One survived the sinking of the Indianapolis, as harrowing an experience as anyone could suffer. Others spent the war in technical positions aboard battleships on which personality clashes, bad food, and shortages of spare parts did more mischief than the Japanese. One had enlisted at 14, two African Americans found even a segregated navy more tolerable than starving in the streets, and one WAVE met her husband of 55 years at Mare Island Naval Hospital, where he was recovering from wounds. One and all, the book’s subjects deserve commendation. Roland Green Review by Lt. Col. Richard Seaman, USMCR-Ret, Proceedings The voices collected in this book by Navy veteran Bruce Petty all report the adventures of young enlisted men who served during World War II. This is oral history at its most compelling, but its cumulative impact can leave a reader feeling as if he were looking into an album filled with personal snapshots. These sailors fought through almost all the Pacific battles, which are fast fading into history. What they saw and heard and suffered is seen again in narrow focus-not through the eyes of professional historians or journalists, but through the impressions and reactions of individuals from small towns, farms, and factories across the United States. Many of them were high-school dropouts, anxious to serve or to escape local draft boards that promised a ticket to the Army. “Seemingly ordinary people,” .says the author, “who might otherwise have lived seemingly ordinary lives did in fact have extraordinary experiences during wartime.” Those terrifying experiences began for many at Pearl Harbor and only ended with Japan’s surrender. The survivors who tell their tales here had their gripes, of course, and they still nourish them. They remember anecdotes, too, and black humor burnished with years of retelling. Whether they made the Navy a career or became civilians again as soon as they could, they recall their service with unalloyed pride. However young they were when they enlisted, they came home men. A few years ago, one such veteran who talked his way into uniform at 14 met an officer he had served under and asked “why they had put a juvenile like me in charge of a boat and a gun crew where hundreds of lives might be at risk. He said ‘At your age we felt you were too young to be scared and would act without giving too much thought to it.’ He may have been right.”
Author: Bruce M. Petty
Publication Date: October 21, 2023
Publisher: Naval Institute Press
Print Length: 244 pages
Book Dimensions: 6.25 x 1 x 9 inches
ISBN: 1591146631, 9781591146636
Book Type: Hard Cover