| 
Clark
Simmons, Survivor, USS Utah Excerpted
from interviews taken for the National Geographic program, Pearl Harbor: Legacy
of Attack, on the National Geographic Channel.
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Photo: Courtesy of
Clark Simmons | I
came from a family my mother & four of us
I was the only boy.
I had three sisters, and I was the oldest. My father was killed at a very young
age, and so I thought
by joining the navy Id be able to help my family
Well, I really didnt understand the depths of the segregation that
went on in the navy...when I first went in. In training there were World War I
stewards and cooks who were our instructors
and they instructed us as to
what our duties would be once we got aboard ship or in the station
and they
instructed us (as to) what it would be to work with officers-or work for officers
rather than with them. And it was a very intimate situation between the
officers and the steward mates of the mess attendants at that time, because you
took care of all of their personal needs: their shoes, their bedding, their laundry.
You made sure of their food and, and all of those things. And you knew everything
there was to know after a while
[When
you joined the navy] there was only one branch
open to you, and that was
serving the officers. You
started off as a mess attendant, and if you were
fortunate, you worked up to be a steward, or a cook, officers steward or
officers cook
Well, we went through the training and
they
outlined that our job was essential, because if the officers were happy, then
the rest of the crew were happy. So
it was just a job
and as odd as
it may seem, it was a lot of white sailors who would have loved to have been able
to
serve in that capacity. I
had been aboard the Utah a little better than 2 years
and...we used to run
a 6-week cycle of training. We drew personnel from the fleet and trained them
in gunnery, flag control
We also were a mobile target, and there
were planes that would do night bombing on us and daylight bombing
and bombs
would physically drop on the ship. And once that 6-week cycle was over, we would
come into port, discharge those men back to their ship, replenish the ship, repair
it for all the damages that was done during the bombing, and wed start a
new class. (The weekend
of December 7)
we had just finished the 6-week cycle. We came in early afternoon
on Friday, and we went into what we call Fox 11, which is on the west side of
Ford Island. The Lexington, the carrier Lexington, had moved out that morning
and we moved into the berth where they were originally. So apparently when the,
the reconnaissance plane for the Japanese had taken that picture that Saturday,
they had penned in carriers
on the west side of Ford Island, which was the
Lexington. So
that Friday, I had gone out from the ship, tied up
gone
to the beach to Honolulu, did some shopping for the officers, shopping for myself,
came back; and Saturday morning I did the same thing and then came back and then
went back on the beach for that Saturday evening. We had what we called Cinderella
Liberty, which meant that we had to be aboard ship by 12:00 that night. So I came
in about 11:30
and went to sleep. That
morning
a black man who was on duty came down
and said that something
was happening and we were under attack. And he thought the ship in front of us
had blew up. But what really had happened was the Japanese had made a run on us,
and the first torpedo that they had sent into the Utah had gone through the bulkhead
and ran up onto the beach. And
when this young man came down
there were several of us in the compartment.
I looked out
on the port side, toward Pearl City
and as I looked out
the port, I saw a plane making a run on the Utah. And as she dropped her, the
torpedo, the wing dipped and then straightened up, and the torpedo headed for
the Utah. And another one right behind it did the same thing. And
as it hit the ship we felt the jar, but the torpedoes did not explode. They went
right into the hull of the ship and let water in. And at that time the bugler
sound man your battle stations, which our battle station was below deck.
[We] went down, and there was water coming through the ship. It was knee deep. When
I first went down to what they call a battle station, we all were frightened.
We didnt know what was going on. But we knew the ship was taking water in
and there was no way to close the water tight doors...it was just a matter of
time before the ship was going to sink. And actually it took 8 minutes
(in)
8 minutes the ship was history... The
next command was abandon ship
And...the engineer officer, the communications
officer, and my self, we hit the captains cabin about the same time. And
luckily, they had
3 ports
about 18 inches in diameter. And just by design,
each one of us picked one of the port holes. And fortunate thing was that neither
one of us-I dont know, just a sixth sense- we did not put the life
jackets on
And so we just threw them on the deck in the cabin, and at that
time the furniture was beginning to break loose. So we went through the ports...
And theres a walkway outside of the
captains cabin, and we got
to that.
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got to the rail of the ship
And as we did that, the lines were beginning
to part because the ship was listing to the port, that by then was 40-45 degree
list. She was turning over, and as we got to this walkway and went to the railing,
the lines were beginning to part and snap back into the ship. And we just went
over the side into the water and (swam) for Ford Island, where the rest of our
crew who had gotten off ...from other parts of the ship were at that time.
its
just as vivid in my mind today as it was that day
I was hit either in the
water or as I got on the beach. I dont know whether its shrapnel or
a gun wound. I was hit in the head, the shoulder and the leg. And one of the corpsmen,
which is like a nurse aboard the ship, he noticed I was bleeding and...he began
to patch me up a little. And he said, We better get you to the hospital.
So I went to the 1st aid station on Ford Island and from there they transferred
me to the submarine base hospital. I
think my worst moment was when I woke up in the hospital and I listened to the
radio and they were saying what had really happened here. That was my first realization
as to what impact that day had really meant. I knew that I had been hurt but I
didnt realize, you know, what had happened to the rest of the fleet
and the rest of the people. I didnt realize the ship was completely lost.
I saw it turn over
it all hadnt sank
in until that Wednesday. Dorie
Miller and I were classmates in swimming in Norfolk, Virginia. And this was a
big gentleman. He was a huge man, about 62, 225 - 235 pounds - but
the nicest guy that you ever want to meet. And we socialized a lot, even in Honolulu
when Id run across him on the beach and we would still
talk
Dorie Miller was a mess
attendant and he went to the West Virginia, and he left Norfolk before I did.
I stayed back in Norfolk for a while, and he came out and was assigned to West
Virginia. [The
Japanese] wanted to put the battleships out of commission. And when the West Virginia
was hit, the captain and the
executive officer
were on the bridge
.Dorie
Miller went up and physically picked up the captain and brought him down to a
first aid station, and then he went back and manned a 50-caliber machine gun which
he had not been trained on
This
was a very courageous young man, and its always believed that he should
have gotten the Congressional Medal of Honor, although he got the Navy Cross
. He
exemplified a hero
in what he did that day. Dorie Miller got the Navy Cross,
and he was the first black during World War II to get that
he didnt
[get] the Congressional Medal because he was black. And
the navy, being what
it was at that time, didnt want to set that kind of a standard.
More Pearl Harbor and
World War II Stories Excerpted from interviews
taken for the National Geographic program, Pearl Harbor: Legacy of Attack, on
the National Geographic Channel. |