Diary of an attack
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Cindy Trane Christeson
The lives of 6-year-old little girls usually involve school, birthday
parties and playing with friends. But for 6-year-old Robin Randolph and
her 11-year-old sister, Glee, it involved blackouts, gas masks and
digging trenches.
Robin and her sister were 10 miles away from Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7,
1941, the day it was attacked. Their father, Ralph Randolph, was an
executive officer on board the USS Allen, a destroyer escort. Originally
from and stationed in San Diego,
Ralph Randolph was transferred to Honolulu, Hawaii, just four months
before the day that lives in infamy.
For the Corona del Mar women, that day not only lives on in memories,
it was recorded in a little black book by their mother, Maryedith
Randolph.
Robin Randolph, now Robin McDowell, recently discovered the diary in a
book case. Though mostly empty, the volume has brought the past back to
life for the sisters.
“I didn’t know mother kept a diary,” McDowell said.
The cover is faded black leather with the title “A Line A Day” in gold
writing.
The entire journal is empty except for the days from Dec. 7-12, 1941,
with just a few lines penned each day. But those lines are lifelines to
the past.
On Dec. 7, 1941, the entry is: “Japanese made surprise attack. Ralph
asleep. When I awakened him, he said, ‘Nuts I haven’t had a peaceful
Sunday since I got here.’ We’ve been sitting by the radio all day. It’s
still like a dream. If I don’t hear from Ralph, it will become reality.
This woman’s job of waiting.”
MEMORIES OF A LIFETIME
Both McDowell and Glee Randolph, now Glee Queen, remember
a lot of waiting and a lot of worrying during those days.
Theirmemories of the morning that forced the U.S. out of peace and into
world war are still sharp.
“Glee had spent the night with a girlfriend,” recalled McDowell, 66.
“Her friend’s parents were listening to the radio when the program was
interrupted with the announcement, and they sent her home. Mom was
getting me ready to go to church. We could hear planes in the distance,
but we didn’t pay any attention to it, since we were so close to Pearl
Harbor.
“Glee came in breathless that morning. We turned the radio on and
heard the call for all servicemen to return to their bases. Then came the
chilling words, ‘This is not a drill. This is not a drill.”’
The sisters remember that when their mother woke their father to tell
him the news, he didn’t believe it at first. But it didn’t take long for
him to spring out of bed and into his uniform.
“My mother insisted that my sister take me to church,” McDowell said.
“I think she stayed home to listen to the radio, and to worry. I don’t
think that church lasted very long that day.”
Queen remembers running to the school across the street, climbing up
on the roof and watching the planes.
“We took pictures of the planes. I was just a kid, and I was excited,”
said Queen, 71. “The planes were so low, we could see the pilot’s faces.
It felt like we could reach out and touch them. We could see the rising
sun on the wings.”
The next day, Dec. 8, the blackouts started.
“They continued for months,” Queen explained. “They put barbed wire on
all the beaches because they thought there would be a beach invasion. I
didn’t really start feeling scared until we had the blackouts, and they
started issuing gas masks in school. I know mom was terrified.”
THE JOURNAL ENTRIES
The entry for Dec. 8 says, “Another day of suspense -- terrific damage
done at Pearl Harbor, heard from Ralph, his ship got three planes. Laid
in as many supplies as possible.”
Dec. 9: “Ralph is here for a few minutes. Blackouts every night. The
President is now talking and an air raid has been sounded. Got off word
to our families today, they must be worried. Glued to the radio reports,
the need to stock up on provisions. I’m glad to see Ralph now and then.
Girls fine.”
Dec. 10: ‘It’s a rush to get everything done in the daytime and it
gets dark so fast.”
Dec. 11: “Have attempted to get in necessary supplies today. . . . We
are all very tired. Listening to radio reports. Blacked out kitchen, did
some Red Cross knitting tonight.”
Dec. 12: “Took the girls downtown for a little outing and Christmas
shopping. Had a call from Ralph this morning, hated to have him hang up
not knowing when he’ll call again. Will try to blackout the bedroom
tonight. I need sleep!”
The journal entries ended almost as quickly as they began.
“I just wish she’d written more,” McDowell said wistfully.
GETTING THE PICTURE
But what isn’t said in the journal can be brought back to life through
the family photographs the sisters have of those days. “This is how we
dressed to go to school,” Queen explained, pointing to a photo. “We were
barefoot, in dresses and had our gas masks in a bag slung over our
shoulders.”
There is also a picture of their mother with the gas mask on.
“My gas mask was a smaller version of what older people had. It was
called a Mickey Mouse mask,” McDowell said. “We also had to practice
holding our breath in case we didn’t have our masks with us. We dug
trenches, bomb shelters and victory gardens. I worked very hard and got a
ribbon for my victory gardens. I was much better at them than I was at
math.”
Queen has carefully kept the original edition of the Honolulu Star
Bulletin from that fateful day. It has browned a bit over the years, but
the words of war and destruction practically jump off the pages. A lot of
history lives in that newspaper, which is clearly worth far more than the
written price of 5 cents.
Both women recall being on edge after the attack.
“A month later a bomb was dropped near our house,” Queensaid. “They
missed Pearl Harbor, and it landed in the high school parking lot. It was
close enough to us that it really jarred our house, and the impact shot
me in my bed from one end of my room to the other.”
THE SOUND OF FEAR
The Randolphs were in Hawaii for about six more months, until they
were able to get passage home.
“We weren’t even there a year, but it sure seemed like longer,” Queen
said. “We went through a lot.”
McDowell said the whole experience really took a toll on their mother,
who became “plagued by fears and worries.”
McDowell has also found herself experiencing fears, finding it hard to
watch war movies.
“To this day, I can still hear the sound of those planes,” she said.
When they filmed “Tora! Tora! Tora!” -- a film about Pearl Harbor --
at El Toro several years ago, McDowell remembers being frightened at the
noise of the Japanese planes.
“I heard that same sound, and the hair on the back of my neck stood up
straight,” McDowell said. “I started crying.”
Queen nodded in agreement. “That was so spooky.”
The journey home to California was not easy for the women.
“I think we were all a little scared coming home,” Queen said. “We
were on a military transport ship with destroyer escorts for protection,
but one of our escorts was torpedoed and sunk by a Japanese submarine.”
The girls spent the summer of 1942 at their grandmother’s house in
Long Beach.
“It was still wartime, and for some reason I pushed the dresser in
front of the door at night,” McDowell said. “I’m not sure why I thought
that would protect me from a bomb, but that’s what I did.”
AFTER THE WAR
Their father made his career in the Navy, which meant the sisters
traveled some. After the war, they spent two years living in Guam.
“There were Japanese living in the caves who didn’t know the war
ended,” Queen said.
McDowell remembers going with her father to the trial of a Japanese
medical colonel who was accused of torturing and experimenting on
American Marines.
“It gave me the chills,” McDowell said.
Today, the sisters live only three blocks apart in Corona del Mar with
their spouses, Bill McDowell and Tom Queen.
“It’s great to know she’s right nearby,” McDowell said.
Both have returned to Pearl Harbor as adults.
“It was very emotional when I took our children to see it,” McDowell
said. “It brought everything back to me.”
Queen said that visiting the memorial of the USS Arizona, which sank
during the attack, gave her the chills.
“It’s really sad to think of all those lost lives,” she said.
With this weekend’s release of the movie “Pearl Harbor,” the sisters
must decide whether or not to relive that day once again.
“I’m not sure I really want to see the movie, but I’m sure I will,”
McDowell said. ‘My curiosity will be too much.”
“Maybe we can get our husbands to go with us and hold our hands,”
Queen added.
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