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It was a day that changed his life forever, a 91-year-old Enterprise veteran remembered Friday about Dec. 7, 1941. Chester Faulkner was a 23-year-old Army Infantry soldier stationed at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii when the Army post and nearby Navy base at Pearl Harbor were attacked that Sunday morning. “I was still in bed,” said Faulker, who was the squad’s leader at the time. “The windows started rattling so hard.” His squad members thought the intense sound and rattling was due to training operations nearby, he said. “When we looked out and saw that round red emblem on those planes flying overhead” is when the reality set in for the soldiers. More than 2,000 Americans were killed during the attack and more than 1,000 were injured, Faulkner said. The Americans also lost a large number of their battleships and nearly 200 aircraft that were stationed in the Pacific region. More than 60 Japanese servicemen were killed, injured or captured and the Japanese Navy also lost five midget subm
USS Enterprise (CV-6), colloquially referred to as the “Big E,” was the sixth aircraft carrier of the United States Navy and the seventh U.S. Navy ship to bear the name. Launched in 1936, she was a ship of the Yorktown class, and one of only three American carriers commissioned prior to World War II to survive the war (the others being Saratoga and Ranger). She participated in more major actions of the war against Japan than did any other US ship. These actions included the Battle of Midway, the Battle of the Eastern Solomons, the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands, various other air-sea engagements during the Guadalcanal campaign, the Battle of the Philippine Sea, and the Battle of Leyte Gulf, as well as the “Doolittle Raid” on Tokyo. On three separate occasions during the Pacific War, the Japanese announced that she had been sunk in battle. Enterprise earned 20 battle stars, the most for any U.S. warship in World War II. Some have labeled her the most glorious and honored ship in all o
It was a day that changed his life forever, a 91-year-old Enterprise veteran remembered Friday about Dec. 7, 1941. » Full Story on Enterprise Ledger Sources: http://us.lrd.yahoo.com/_ylt=Atk1KM1qEtp7ETmw6.l22qJ0fNdF/SIG=1372l9ir8/**http%3A//www2.eprisenow.
It was a day that changed his life forever, a 91-year-old Enterprise veteran remembered Friday about Dec. 7, 1941. Chester Faulkner was a 23-year-old Army Infantry soldier stationed at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii when the Army post and nearby Navy base at Pearl Harbor were attacked that Sunday morning. “I was still in bed,” said Faulker, who was the squad’s leader at the time. “The windows started rattling so hard.” His squad members thought the intense sound and rattling was due to training operations nearby, he said. “When we looked out and saw that round red emblem on those planes flying overhead” is when the reality set in for the soldiers. More than 2,000 Americans were killed during the attack and more than 1,000 were injured, Faulkner said. The Americans also lost a large number of their battleships and nearly 200 aircraft that were stationed in the Pacific region. More than 60 Japanese servicemen were killed, injured or captured and the Japanese Navy also lost five midget subm