Oral History of The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941
Pharmacist's Mate Second Class Lee Soucy
Related Resources:
The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December
1941
Oral History of the Pearl Harbor Attack
Excerpt from Oral History of Pharmacist's Mate Second Class
Lee Soucy, crewman aboard USS Utah (AG-16) on 7 December
1941. I had just had breakfast and was looking out a porthole in sick
bay when someone said, "What the hell are all those planes
doing up there on a Sunday? " Someone else said, "It
must be those crazy Marines. They'd be the only ones out maneuvering
on a Sunday." When I looked up in the sky I saw five or six
planes starting their descent. Then when the first bombs dropped
on the hangers at Ford Island, I thought, "Those guys are
missing us by a mile." Inasmuch as practice bombing was a
daily occurrence to us, it was not too unusual for planes to drop
bombs, but the time and place were quite out of line. We could
not imagine bombing practice in port. It occurred to me and to
most of the others that someone had really goofed this time and
put live bombs on those planes by mistake. In any event, even after I saw a huge fireball and cloud of black
smoke rise from the hangers on Ford Island and heard explosions,
it did not occur to me that these were enemy planes. It was too
incredible! Simply beyond imagination! "What a SNAFU,"
I moaned.
[Source:Oral history provided courtesy
of the Historian, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery
As I watched the explosions on Ford
Island in amazement and disbelief, I felt the ship lurch. We didn't
know it then, but we were being bombed and torpedoed by planes
approaching from the opposite (port) side.
The bugler and bosun's mate were on the fantail ready to raise
the colors at 8 o'clock. In a matter of seconds, the bugler sounded
"General Quarters." I grabbed my first aid bag and headed
for my battle station amidship.
A number of the ship's tremors are vaguely imprinted in my mind,
but I remember one jolt quite vividly. As I was running down the
passageway toward my battle station, another torpedo or bomb hit
and shook the ship severely. I was knocked off balance and through
the log room door. I got up a little dazed and immediately darted
down the ladder below the armored deck. I forgot my first aid
kit.
By then the ship was already listing. There were a few men down
below who looked dumbfounded and wondered out loud, "What's
going on?" I felt around my shoulder in great alarm. No first
aid kit! Being out of uniform is one thing, but being at a battle
station without proper equipment is more than embarrassing.
After a minute or two below the armored deck, we heard another
bugle call, then the bosun's whistle followed by the boatswain's
chant, "Abandon ship...Abandon ship."
We scampered up the ladder. As I raced toward the open side of
the deck, an officer stood by a stack of life preservers and tossed
the jackets at us as we ran by. When I reached the open deck,
the ship was listing precipitously. I thought about the huge amount
of ammunition we had on board and that it would surely blow up
soon. I wanted to get away from the ship fast, so I discarded
my life jacket. I didn't want a Mae West slowing me down.
Another thing that jolted my memory was how rough the beach on
Ford Island was. The day previous, I had been part of a fire and
rescue party dispatched to fight a small fire on Ford Island.
The fire was out by the time we got there but I remember distinctly
the rugged beach, so I tied double knots in my shoes whereas just
about everyone else kicked their's off.
I was tensely poised for a running dive off the partially exposed
hull when the ship lunged again and threw me off balance. I ended
up with my bottom sliding across and down the barnacle encrusted
bottom of the ship.
When the ship had jolted, I thought we had been hit by another
bomb or torpedo, but later it was determined that the mooring
lines snapped which caused the 21,000-ton ship to jerk so violently
as she keeled over.
Nevertheless, after I bobbed up to the surface of the water to
get my bearings, I spotted a motor launch with a coxswain fishing
men out of the water with his boot hook. I started to swim toward
the launch. After a few strokes, a hail of bullets hit the water
a few feet in front of me in line with the launch. As the strafer
banked, I noticed the big red insignias on his wing tips. Until
then, I really had not known who attacked us. At some point, I
had heard someone shout, "Where did those Germans come from?"
I quickly decided that a boat full of men would be a more likely
strafing target than a lone swimmer, so I changed course and hightailed
it for Ford Island.
I reached the beach exhausted and as I tried to catch my breath,
another pharmacist's mate, Gordon Sumner, from the Utah,
stumbled out of the water. I remember how elated I was to see
him. There is no doubt in my mind that bewilderment, if not misery,
loves company. I remember I felt guilty that I had not made any
effort to recover my first aid kit. Sumner had his wrapped around
his shoulders.
While we both tried to get our wind back, a jeep came speeding
by and came to a screeching halt. One of the two officers in the
vehicle had spotted our Red Cross brassards and hailed us aboard.
They took us to a two- or three-story concrete BOQ (bachelor officer's
quarters) facing Battleship Row to set up an emergency treatment
station for several oil-covered casualties strewn across the concrete
floor. Most of them were from the capsized or flaming battleships.
It did not take long to exhaust the supplies in Sumner's bag.
A line officer came by to inquire how we were getting along. We
told him that we had run out of everything and were in urgent
need of bandages and some kind of solvent or alcohol to cleanse
wounds. He ordered some one to strip the beds and make rolls of
bandages with the sheets. Then he turned to us and said, "Alcohol?
Alcohol?," he repeated. "Will whiskey do?"
Before we could mull it over, he took off and in a few minutes
he returned and plunked a case of scotch at our feet. Another
person who accompanied him had an armful of bottles of a variety
of liquors. I am sure denatured alcohol could not have served
our purpose better for washing off the sticky oil, as well as
providing some antiseptic effect for a variety of wounds and burns.
Despite the confusion, pain, and suffering, there was some gusty
humor amidst the pathos and chaos. At one point, an exhausted
swimmer, covered with a gooey film of black oil, saw me walking
around with a washcloth in one hand and a bottle of booze in the
other. He hollered, "Hey Doc, could I have a shot of that
medicine?" I handed him the bottle of whichever medicine
I had at the time. He took a hefty swig. He had no sooner swallowed
the "medicine" then he spewed it out along with black
mucoidal globs of oil. He lay back a minute after he stopped vomiting,
then said, "Doc, I lost that medicine. How about another
dose?"
Perhaps my internal as well as external application of booze was
not accepted medical practice, but it sure made me popular with
the old salts. Actually, it probably was a good medical procedure
if it induced vomiting. Retaining contaminated water and oil in
one's stomach was not good for one's health.
I remember another incident. A low flying enemy pilot was strafing
toward our concrete haven while I was on my knees trying to determine
what to do for a prostrate casualty. Although the sailor, or marine,
was in bad shape, he raised his head feebly when he saw the plane
approach and shouted, "Open the doors and let the sonafabitch
in."
Events which occurred in seconds take minutes to recount. During
the lull, regular medical personnel from Ford Island Dispensary
arrived with proper supplies and equipment and released Sumner
and me so we could rejoin other Utah survivors for reassignment.
When the supplies ran out at our first aid station, I suggested
to Sumner that he volunteer to go to the Naval Dispensary for
some more. When he returned, he mentioned that he had a close
call. A bomb landed in the patio while he was at the dispensary.
He didn't mention any injury so I shrugged it off. After all,
under the circumstances, what was one bomb more or less. That
afternoon, while we were both walking along a lanai (screened
porch) at the dispensary, he pointed to a crater in the patio.
"That's where the bomb hit I told you about." "Where
were you?", I asked. He pointed to a spot not far away. I
said, "Come on, if you had been that close, you'd have been
killed." To which he replied, "Oh, it didn't go off.
I fled the area in a hurry."
Sometime after dark, a squadron of scout planes from the carrier
Enterprise (two hundred or so miles out at sea), their
fuel nearly depleted, came in for a landing on Ford Island. All
hell broke loose and the sky lit up from tracer bullets from numerous
antiaircraft guns. As the Enterprise planes approached
some understandably trigger-happy gunners opened fire; then all
gunners followed suit and shot down all but one of our planes.
At least, that's what I was told. Earlier that evening, many of
the Utah survivors had been taken to the USS Argonne
(AP-4), a transport. Gunners manning .50 caliber machine guns
on the partially submerged USS California directly across
from the Argonne hit the ship while shooting at the planes.
A stray, armor-piercing bullet penetrated Argonne's thin
bulkhead, went through a Utah survivor's arm, and spent
itself in another sailor's heart. He died instantly.
The name Price has been stored in my memory bank for a long time
as this fatality but, at a recent reunion of Utah survivors,
another ex-shipmate, Gilbert Meyer, insisted that Price was not
the one killed. I didn't argue too long because I recalled meeting
two men at the Pearl Harbor Naval Hospital several weeks after
the raid who walked around with their own obituaries in their
wallets--clippings from hometown newspapers.
