[1/29]
Japanese Navy Type 99 Val carrier bombers prepare to take off from an aircraft carrier to attack Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941. The ship in the background is the carrier Soryu.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[2/29]
A chart identifying ship mooring locations and entitled (at upper left) "Report on positions of enemy fleet at anchorage", is seen after it was recovered from a Japanese aircraft that was downed during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
US Navy/National Archives[3/29]
An officer on the Japanese aircraft carrier Shokaku watches as planes take off to attack Pearl Harbor. The Kanji inscription at left is a commander order to pilots to do their duty to destroy (the enemy).
U.S. Navy/National Archivesトレンド写真
[4/29]
A Japanese Navy Type 97 Kate carrier attack plane takes off from the aircraft carrier Shokaku, en route to attack Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[5/29]
A Japanese bomber aircraft is seen in the foreground of an aerial photograph taken by a Japanese pilot during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
US Navy/NEA Services[6/29]
The forward superstructure of the sunken battleship USS Arizona burns after the attack.
U.S. Navy/U.S. Naval History and Heritage Commandトレンド記事
[7/29]
The forward magazine of the destroyer USS Shaw explodes during the second Japanese attack wave on Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command[8/29]
The forward magazines of the destroyer USS Shaw explode after a bombing attack by Japanese planes.
U.S. Navy/U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command[9/29]
The battleship USS Arizona burns, immediately following the explosion of her forward magazines. The still image is from a color motion picture taken on board the hospital ship USS Solace.
Eric Haakenson/U.S. Navy/National Archives[10/29]
Sailors stand amid wrecked planes at the Ford Island seaplane base, watching as the destroyer USS Shaw explodes in the center background.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[11/29]
The battleship USS Arizona burns on Battleship Row, beside Ford Island in an aerial photo taken from a Japanese aircraft during the attack. Ships seen are (L-R) USS Nevada, USS Arizona with USS Vestal moored outboard, USS Tennessee with USS West Virginia moored outboard and USS Maryland with USS Oklahoma capsized alongside.
U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command[12/29]
A Japanese Navy Type 99 Val carrier bomber is seen in action during the attack.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[13/29]
Flak bursts of anti-aircraft shells pepper the skyline above rising smoke from the battleship USS Arizona.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[14/29]
A Japanese Type 00 (Zero) carrier fighter trails smoke after it was hit by anti-aircraft fire during the attack.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[15/29]
The damaged battleship USS California, listing to port after being hit by Japanese aerial torpedoes and bombs, is seen off Ford Island during the attack.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[16/29]
The crew of the Japanese carrier Shokaku cry Banzai as a Type 97 Kate carrier attack plane takes off as the second wave attack is launched on Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[17/29]
U.S. Marines await the possible return of Japanese aircraft on the parade ground at the Pearl Harbor Marine Barracks.
U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command[18/29]
A Japanese Type 00 (Zero) fighter with markings from the carrier Akagi is seen after it crashed during the attack at Fort Kamehameha, near Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[19/29]
Gunners on board the minesweeper USS Avocet look for more Japanese planes, at about the time the air raid ended on Pearl Harbor.
U.S. Navy/National Archives[20/29]
An aerial photograph taken the year before the Japanese raid shows the East Loch and the the Fleet Air Base on Ford Island in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, May 3, 1940. Visible are the carrier Yorktown, ten battleships, seventeen cruisers, two light cruisers, and over thirty destroyers.
U.S. Navy/National Archivesスライドショーの他の写真
[21/29]Sailors in a motor launch rescue a survivor from the water alongside the sunken battleship USS West Virginia during or shortly after the Japanese air raid.
U.S. Navy/National Archives