Oral History of The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941
LT Warden
Related Resources:
The Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December
1941
Oral History of the Pearl Harbor Attack
Excerpt from Oral History of LT
Horace D. Warden, MC (Medical Corps), USN, Medical Officer Aboard
USS Breese (DM-18) on 7 December 1941.
[Courtesy of Historian, Bureau of Medicine and Surgery]
You hadn't been trained as a surgeon previously?
I was actually assigned to Mine Division Two. The USS Breese
(DM-18) was one of four destroyers in that division. The doctor
I relieved had died so I became the medical officer of Mine Division
Two, part of what they called the old "Pineapple Navy."
We would go and practice laying mines for 2 weeks and then be
in port for 2 weeks. I was riding on the Breese because
that was the ship that had a stateroom for the doctor. During
the 2 weeks we would be in port I would go to the Naval Hospital
to get some more surgical experience.
What kind of sick bay did you have on the Breese?
We had a small sick bay on those old four-pipers, not much space,
just enough for one hospital corpsmen to work in. It was very
cramped but adequate.
Were you on the Breese that Sunday morning when the
Japanese attacked?
Yes sir. On that Sunday morning we were moored to a buoy near
Pearl City. I happened to be aboard the previous night because
in those days they used to divide Pearl Harbor into three areas.
There was supposed to be a doctor assigned to each area all night
for medical coverage. It was my night to be aboard in Pearl City.
I was due to go off duty at 8:00 on Sunday morning. I had changed
into civilian clothes and was sitting on the deck for a whaleboat
to take me to my car so I could get to breakfast at home on the
far side of Honolulu. The Japanese hit at five minutes to eight
and I never got off the ship.
Did you see them coming?
No. The first thing I remember was the sound of firing and
then they called general quarters. We were not a large ship so
we were not immediately threatened. After the Japanese delivered
their bombs on the large ships they had to come up over us. That's
when we got one of them with what I think was a 3-inch gun.
Did you see that happen?
No. I didn't see the plane get hit.
When you went to general quarters, your station was in the
sick bay below decks?
Yes. But I didn't have time to get there. I remember one of
our food handlers was milling around very upset and crying, a
real basket case. We went to where we had the firearms stashed
away and we got a rifle and gave it to him. Once he started shooting
he was alright. The plane we had shot down landed right near us
in the water. The pilot was still alive so they got a whaleboat
to go rescue him. Apparently he made a move, put his hand under
his vest or something, and so they killed him and then didn't
have a live pilot to question. The sailor who shot him was told
that he was going to get court-martialed. But later that all was
quashed and there was no court martial.
We then tried to get underway and out of the harbor. Our ship
was ready because we had the duty the night before, but we were
tied to three other ships and they didn't have many people aboard
on Sunday morning. So we had to wait until enough crew members
arrived on these ships to get them out of the harbor.
Did you have any casualties to treat at this point?
None. After about an hour or an hour and a half we were out to
sea and started to patrol looking for miniature subs and dropped
depth charges. We stayed out about a week and then came back.
I can't remember whether we ran out of food or fuel.
Anyway, we came back in to Pearl Harbor. Then we could see all
the damage that had been done. Going out we couldn't see it because
of where we were. While we were out we kept wondering why the
big ships hadn't come out.
What did you think of all that damage?
It was just terrible. It was one of those things when you
think, what's the world coming to? What's going to happen to us
now? Everyone was all set to try to get even if we could, but
my family was on the other end of Oahu so the first thing I wanted
to do was get ashore and let them know that I was okay and find
out that they were okay. That was probably the worst week of the
war for me.
What did you do once you got back to Pearl?
We stayed there waiting for further orders. There was nothing
really to do. I then got permission to go to the Naval Hospital
to help out over there.
Did you still have a lot of casualties to deal with from the
attack?
Yes. We still had surgery to do. One of the Japanese planes
had crashed in the Naval Hospital yard and I have a piece of it.
Did you still go patrolling with the Breese?
Yes. We would go out for a few days patrolling looking for submarines
and then come back to Pearl. I remember that on Christmas Day
in 1941 we were tied right at Hospital Point, Meanwhile, my family
came out to the Naval Hospital to have Christmas dinner with me.
That was a wonderful occasion.
How long were you with Mine Division Two?
I was with that outfit for another year. We got to work laying
mines throughout the South Pacific.
