‘We thought it would come sometime’
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Cindy Trane Christeson
Ted Hubert lived through the attack on Pearl Harbor 60 years ago, but
he is planning to relive the experience again by seeing the movie “Pearl
Harbor,” which hit the screens this weekend. Hubert, an executive officer
on board the minesweeper Reed Bird at the time, recalls the morning as if
it just happened.
“We thought it would come sometime, everybody was aware of the threat
of war,” the Newport Beach resident explained. “There were plenty of
fears. For about six months before that, we thought every day we’d be
bombed. But not on a Sunday morning.
“It was a sneak move, and they got away with it. We had patrols, but
they didn’t see anything. It’s a mighty big ocean out there.”
Hubert, an independent real estate broker, shared his memories and
photographs from his days in Pearl Harbor.
“Here’s where we tied up, at the end of Hickam field,” Hubert
explained, pointing to a well-worn map. “The entrance to Pearl Harbor had
a gate across it, and our job every morning was to open the gate, go out
and sweep. Actually two ships did.
“We’d go up and down, up and down to about a mile out. This was our
sweeping duty, and it took about three hours.”
When the Japanese attacked on Dec. 7, 1941, Hubert was having a day
off.
“Four of us were at a friend’s house on the beach about 10 miles away
when the blitz hit the fan,” Hubert said. “It was Sunday morning, a
little before eight o’clock when we heard yelling that we’d been
attacked. We looked out and saw planes dropping bombs nearby.
“Several planes with big red balls on their wings flew right over us.
I remember picking up a handful of sand and throwing it at them. That was
my first gesture towards them, but certainly not my last.”
Hubert remembers getting in the car and racing down the hill toward
the harbor at around 80 mph.
“All we could see was one big mass of smoke and fire gushing, just
gushing,” he said, his voice trailing off for a moment. “We couldn’t
believe it, even when we saw it. They strafed Hickam Field. They even
strafed the barracks and the hospital. We saw smoke and fire coming out
of the barracks, and you know there were people sleeping in there.”
At first, even experienced military personnel thought the attack was
just maneuvers that were getting rough, Hubert said. But then they took a
closer look.
“We finally started believing it when we realized what we were looking
at. There were guys screaming, trying to get out, and some of the ships
did make it out,” Hubert said. “When you see explosions, ships burning
up, turning over and sinking, you finally believe it.”
Hubert’s journal of those days is clearly written in his memory, and
he paused occasionally to flip through the pages.
“We got to our ship as quickly as we could and started shooting at
them. Three or four of them flew over us,” Hubert said. “I was too busy
to be scared. We never actually got shot at because they were finished.
They didn’t pay any attention to a little old mine sweeper.”
The battleships were the worst hit. The Arizona, Oklahoma, California
and West Virginia were sunk or destroyed.
“It was the worst massacre of service people, of the Army and Navy. We
lost about 2,300 people in about an hour that day,” Hubert said. “It was
a dastardly thing.”
Hubert, originally from Glendale, stayed in Hawaii for a year after
the attack.
“I loved the islands,” he said.
A year earlier he had graduated as an ensign in the United States
Naval Reserve, and was working at Columbia Studios, where he’d worked
during vacations. Among his pictures is one of Cary Grant shaking his
hand.
“He was a great guy,” Hubert said. “It was just a few days before
Christmas in December that year [1940] that I was told to report to San
Diego, which I did. I got my minesweeper, and took it to Hawaii. It took
13 days to get there.”
Hubert went on to get his wings in Pensacola, after going through dive
bombing training. Then, he became a military instructor in Daytona, Fla.,
before getting a call to go to Japan, where he served as the executive
officer of the fighting squadron aboard the carrier Shangri-La. Hubert
flew Corsairs.
“It was the best plane in the world,” he said, pointing to a picture
of one that hangs proudly behind his office desk. “We attacked all the
airfields up and down Japan. There can’t be many people in the world who
were in Pearl Harbor the day it was attacked and who were also in Japan
the day the warended.”
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