

Memories
of Pearl Harbor
Memories
of Pearl Harbor Day - Dec 07, 1941
"Dedicated to my beloved Grandson, Ryan
Roye,"
Written Dec. 07, 1997
My
name is Melvin Sepulvado. I am a native of Louisiana having
been born in Zwoiie, Louisiana, Sabine Parish. I was raised
in Natchitoches Paris and finished high school in Marthaville,
Louisiana. This is my eye witness and survivor account of the
bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 07, 1941, by the Japanese
Navy.
After
finishing high school in 1939, I enrolled in a trade school
in Natchitoches, Louisiana, studying to be an electrician. It
was a two-year course. I attended this school for fourteen months.
I became discouraged since I had no money, nor did my parents,
so I quit the trade school and took a job with a local electrical
company. I worked as a helper at $.25 an hour, and I had to
pay one dollar a day for room and board. This might be hard
to believe, but this was in 1941 before the war started, and
jobs were hard to come by.
I
became discouraged again, so I applied for a Civil Service jog
as an electrician's helper. Within three week, I received a
telegram from New Orleans, Louisiana, informing me that they
could place me on a job in Hawaii, at Pearl Harbor Navy Yard
as a shipfitter's helper at $.75 an hour. I had never heard
of Pearl Harbor, nor had many other people, at this time, in
1941 before the war started. I was ecstatic since this was three
times what I was making as an electrician's helper. I did not
know what a shipfitter was. I had not even seen a ship. I had
never been out of the state of Louisiana, and I had never ridden
a train, the principle mode of transportation at the time. In
all of my enthusiasm I rushed to respond to the job offer. I
sent them a telegram, advising them that I would accept the
job. I was then 20 years old. Within three hours I received
travel orders and a train ticket about a foot long, to San Francisco,
California. I boarded the train in Natchitoches and began my
journey to the West Coast where I was supposed to board a troop
ship for the voyage to Hawaii. I was terrified that I would
get lost or get on the wrong train, since there were transfers
and stopovers along the way.
When we got to Fort Worth, Texas, we had a stopover, and I met
a boy from South Carolina. He was also going to Pearl Harbor
to work and was an experienced traveler. We stayed together,
became good friends, and I felt so relieved that I was not going
to get lost.
I
arrived in Hawaii in August, 1941, and started working at Pearl
Harbor. I was just overcome with the beauty of the island; everything
was so peaceful and the climate was really nice. This was the
most beautiful place I had ever seen.
The
Navy had a welding school in the Navy yard and I became fascinated
with the welding trade, so I enrolled in the school and became
a welder, a trade that followed until I retired in 1982 from
Dow Chemical Company in Freeport, Texas. I was working six days
a week at first, so on the Sunday morning of December 07, 1941,
at 7:55, I was in my bunk asleep when I heard the zooming of
airplanes overhead, and deafening sounds from explosions and
concussions. I rolled out of my bunk and walked to the door
at the end of my barracks. I opened the door and looked up and
there was a Japanese Zero fighter plane about 100 feet flying
overhead, firing its two guns - one in the nose of the plane
and one in the tail. At this time it was strafing the planes,
which were on the ground at Hickam Field, just a short distance
from my barracks. Well, we knew at this time that we were under
attack by the Japanese.
Very
shortly, Martial Law was declared, and all the men in our reservation
were ordered to go down into the Navy Yard where the Japanese
were bombing and torpedoing or warships. We were ordered to
take shelter in our respective shops while the air raid was
in progress. We tried to get the military to give us some army
rifles, so we could defend ourselves and w could probably have
shot at an d killed some of those Japanese pilots, since they
were flying so low, but they would not let us have any. I never
have understood why they ordered us right into the line of fire,
without any way to defend ourselves. We all would have been
killed instantly if the Japs had hit our shop with a bomb.
The
Japanese were attacking with dive-bombers, fighter planes, horizontal
bombers, and torpedo planes. The fighter planes were used to
strafe our planes on the ground where most of our planes were
that Sunday morning. The horizontal bombers and torpedo planes
were used to damage and sink the large warships.
Within
less than three hours, 130 ships had been heavily damaged or
sunk. The smoking ships that were hit started burning, since
they had a lot of oil in their huge tanks. The smoke was so
black and dense that I just covered the whole area of the Navy
Yard, and it looked like twilight. It was such an eerie sight.
There was so much confusion; no one seemed to know what to do.
There were so many injured military personnel, who were being
transported to the hospitals, that they did not have enough
ambulances, so they just used any kind of vehicle that was available.
After
the raid was over, we were ordered out to the repair basins
to start repairing the damaged ships. We had to start working
twelve and fourteen hours a day, seven days a week, for about
three years. After the raid we could only work, eat, and sleep.
We could not go anywhere since Martial Law was in effect, and
there was a total blackout for several months. Martial Law continued
for three years.
As
soon as the war started, our supervisors advised us that they
would rather we would keep working to help repair the damaged
ships, and the ones which were sunk and raised. They told us
if we would agree to do that, they would give us a deferral
from Military Duty, so this is what I did. (More about this
later).
I
worked at Pearl Harbor during the entire war (forty-seven months,
to be exact) helping to repair the ships which were damaged
or sunk during the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 07, 1941.
Also, we had to repair a lot of the ships which were damaged
during the Pacific Naval battles with the Japanese, taking back
all the islands the Japs had taken during the war: Guadalcanal,
the Philippines, Wake Island, Guam, Okinawa, and others.
In
November 1945, after the war ended, I was reclassified 1-A and
recommended for military duty, while still there in Pearl Harbor,
working for the Navy. I was ready to perform my duty in the
military, but it was obvious to me hat the Navy had kept me
there working at Pearl Harbor for four years, and they did not
need me anymore, so they turned me over to the army. My contention
then, and still is, that I would have much rather gone into
the military service while the war was going on.
I
entered the army, there in Hawaii, in November 1945, and took
my basic training at Schofield Barracks. After finishing my
basic training, I was shipped to New Caledonia for occupation
duty there. I served a year, then was shipped back to Californian
where I was honorably discharged at Camp Peal in January, 1947.
Before
leaving Pearl Harbor, I was awarded a "Certificate of Honorable
Service" from the Navy for my part in helping to win the
war. I am very proud of this award, as I worked very had over
there and under some of the most horrible working conditions
you could imagine, working on and repairing the ships, which
had been sunk and were raised, and on all of the ships which
were damaged during all the Naval battles the Navy had with
the Japanese throughout the war.
Your
Grandfather,
Melvin Sepulvado (signature)
Footnote:
Melvin's grandson, Ryan Roye is the son of Mack L. Roye's nephew
and serves in the USMC reserves while attending the University
of North Texas. He will graduate from UNT in the spring of 2005.
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