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Keeping the Memory Alive: The 75th Anniversary of Pearl Harbor

Thomas Haigley, an army doctor, who was stationed at Pearl Harbor during the attack on December 7, 1041.
Courtesy of Brien Haigley and Rich Polt
Thomas Haigley, an army doctor, who was stationed at Pearl Harbor during the attack on December 7, 1041.

  

Thomas Haigley, an army doctor, who was stationed at Pearl Harbor during the attack on December 7, 1041.
Credit Courtesy of Brien Haigley and Rich Polt
Thomas Haigley, an army doctor, who was stationed at Pearl Harbor during the attack on December 7, 1041.

75 years ago, December 7, 1941, Americans were stunned by a Japanese aerial attack on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. More than 2,400 Americans were killed. The next day, December 8, the United States declared war on Japan, propelling America into World War II. We’ll hear from two men who lived through it - one a boy who lived near the naval station, one a young man in Baltimore. And we hear from the son of a World War II soldier who has made it his mission to keep survivors’ stories alive.

Brien Haigley's story was produced by Rich Polt of Acknowledge Media

Paul Travers, son of a survivor of the Pearl Harbor attack, has compiled a book of oral histories titled Eyewitness to Infamy, an Oral History of Pearl Harbor, December 7th 1941.

Gil Sandler, the man behind WYPR’s Baltimore Stories, is the author of Home Front Baltimore: An Album of Stories from World War II.

The memorial ceremony aboard the US Coast Guard Cutter Taney at noon is free and open to the public, at the Inner Harbor, Pier 5, 701 E Pratt Street.

Copyright 2016 WYPR - 88.1 FM

Sheilah Kast is the host of On The Record, Monday-Friday, 9:30-10:00 am. Originally, she hostedWYPR's Dupont-Columbia University award-winning Maryland Morning with Sheilah Kast from 2006 - October2015. She began her career at The Washington Star, where she covered the Maryland and Virginia legislatures, utilities, energy and taxes, as well as financial and banking regulation. She learned the craft of broadcasting at ABC News; as a Washington correspondent for fifteen years, she covered the White House, Congress, and the 1991 Moscow coup that signaled the end of the Soviet empire. Sheilahhas been a substitute host on NPR’s Weekend Edition Sunday and The DianeRehmShow. She has launched and hosted two weekly interview shows on public TV, one about business and one about challenges facing older people.
Maureen Harvie is a producer for Midday with Dan Rodricks. She began her career at WYPR as an intern for the newsroom, where she covered issues ranging from medical marijuana to off-shore wind energy.