Not at all, but it is a rather odd subject to get wrapped up in (says the guy who goes off on interminable research tangents at the drop of a hat while ostensibly writing).
I might be wrong heavily but the "shallow water" torpedo idea from top down made everyone think the Japanese would not attack. Cause it was impossible. And the radar incident of B-17s.
Saturday morning was a regular work day for the Fleet. So essentially the enlisted men who had liberty were free to leave the ship for twelve hours on Saturday. They had to muster up at quarters on Sunday morning. The number of men available onboard any ship would have been enough to man the guns and get her underway if necessary. There's a story about one ship heading out to sea with her captain chasing behind in his gig. He didn't catch her before she sortied. Nelson's "blind eye to the telescope" came into play once again.
Captain Robert Smith of the destroyer Henley, along with his executive officer, pursued their ship in her whaleboat as she left the harbor. They eventually boarded the destroyer-minesweeper Trever which caught up with Henley out at sea later in the day. The incident inspired a scene in the movie In Harm's Way.
had hoped for some current news...just this: 'Security threat' that locked down Pearl Harbor base was bomb scare
BTW, Nevada's CO was on board. It was his decision to first ground her on Hospital Point and then back off and ground her on the other side of the Channel, Waipio Pt.
Captain Scanland was not aboard the Nevada when she got underway; he reached the ship and took charge after she first grounded on Hospital Point. The senior officer on board at the outset of the attack was Lcdr. Francis Thomas.
....thanks for the link .....very interesting that they joined [ ? ] the 2 bases???..as you know, I was stationed at Marine Barracks PH [aka MBHawaii.] --which consisted of 5 naval stations--PH being one of them --which some have been shutdown and/or no more USMC guards ....I'm guessing the joining is a good thing that might save $$$$$$ ..why call it Joint Base? why not just a standard name?
Politics. Everything is "joint" these days. A bomb is a Joint Direct Attack Munition. And they don't want to take away one service's name like Hickam Field, so it becomes hyphenated.