Wednesday, February 25, 1942
By Jeff Rense

Five years before Roswell, five years before pilot Kenneth Arnold‘s landmark sightings of “flying saucers” in the Pacific Northwest, 3 years before the Battle of the Bulge, two years before D-Day, and years before the so-called “modern UFO era” had officially begun, there was the Battle of Los Angeles, arguably the most sensational, dramatic UFO mass encounter on record.

Have you ever heard of the Battle of Los Angeles? Few have. Imagine a visiting spacecraft from another world, or dimension, hovering over a panicked and blacked-out LA in the middle of the night just weeks after Pearl Harbor at the height of WWII fear and paranoia. Imagine how this huge ship, assumed to be some unknown Japanese aircraft, was then attacked as it hung, nearly stationary, over Culver City and Santa Monica by dozens of Army anti-aircraft batteries firing nearly 2,000 rounds of 12 pound, high explosive shells in full view of hundreds of thousands of residents. Imagine all of that and you have an idea of what was the Battle of Los Angeles.

The sudden appearance of the enormous round object triggered all of LA and most of Southern California into an immediate wartime blackout with thousands of Air Raid Wardens scurrying all over the darkened city while the drama unfolded in the skies 
above… a drama which would result in the deaths of six people and the raining of shell fragments on homes, streets, and buildings for miles around.

Dozens of gun crews and searchlights of the Army’s 37th Coast Artillery Brigade easily targeted the huge ship which hung like a surreal magic lantern in the clear, dark winter sky over the City of the Angels. Few in the city were left asleep after the Coastal Defense gunners commenced firing hundreds and hundreds of rounds up toward the glowing ship which was apparently first sighted as it hovered above such west side landmarks as the MGM studios in Culver City. The thump of the batteries and the ignition of the aerial shells reverberated from one end of LA to the other as the gun crews easily landed scores of what many termed “direct hits”….all to no avail. Here now, is what the night skies of LA looked like at the height of the firing….

Pay close attention to the convergence of the searchlights and you will clearly see the shape of the visitor within the illuminated target area. It’s a BIG item and seemed completely oblivious to the hundreds of AA shells bursting on and adjacent to it which caused it no evident dismay. There were casualties, however…on the ground. At least 6 people died as a direct result of the Army’s attack on the UFO which slowly and leisurely made its way down to and then over Long Beach before finally moving off and disappearing.

========================================>>

In February, 1942, Katie was a young, beautiful, and highly-successful interior decorator and artist who worked with many of Hollywood’s most glamorous celebrities and film industry luminaries. She lived on the west side of Los Angeles, not far from Santa Monica. With the outbreak of the war with Japan and the rising fear of a Japanese air attack, or even invasion of the West Coast, thousands of residents volunteered for wartime duties on the home front. Katie volunteered to become an Air Raid Warden as did 12,000 other residents in the sprawling city of Los Angeles and surrounding communities.

In the early morning hours of February 25th, Katie’s phone rang. It was the Air Raid supervisor in her district notifying her of an alert and asking if she had seen the object in the sky very close to her home. She immediately walked to a window and looked up. “It was huge! It was just enormous! And it was practically right over my house. I had never seen anything like it in my life!” she said. “It was just hovering there in the sky and hardly moving  at all.” With the city blacked out, Katie, and hundreds of thousands of others, were able to see the eerie visitor with spectacular clarity. “It was a lovely pale orange and about the most beautiful thing you’ve ever seen. I could see it perfectly because it was very close. It was big!”

The U.S. Army anti-aircraft searchlights by this time had the object completely covered. “They sent fighter planes up (the Army denied any of its fighters were in action) and I watched them in groups approach it and then turn away. There were shooting at it but it didn’t seem to matter.” Katie is insistent about the use of planes in the attack on the object. The planes were apparently called off after several minutes and then the ground cannon opened up. “It was like the Fourth of July but much louder. They were firing like crazy but they couldn’t touch it.” The attack on the object lasted over half an hour before the visitor eventually disappeared from sight. Many eyewitnesses talked of numerous “direct hits” on the big craft but no damage was seen done to it. “I’ll never forget what a magnificent sight it was. Just marvelous. And what a gorgeous color!”, said Katie.

The ONLY description in the LA Times of the UFO, and a sense of the energy and emotion of that night, was found in this small sidebar article written by Times staff writer the day after the event:

Chilly Throng Watches Shells Bursting In Sky
By Marvin Miles

Explosions stabbing the darkness like tiny bursting stars… Searchlight beams poking long crisscross fingers across the night sky…Yells of wardens and the whistles of police
and deputy sheriffs…The brief on-and-off flick of lights, telephone calls, snatches of conversation: ‘Get dirty…’ That was Los Angeles under the rumble of gunfire yesterday.

RESIDENTS AWAKENED

Sleepy householders awoke to the dull thud of explosions… “Thunder? Can’t be!” 

Then: “Air Raid! Come here quick! Look over there…those searchlights. They’ve got something…they are blasting in with anti-aircraft!” Father, mother, children all gathered 
on the front porch, congregated in small clusters in the blacked out streets — against 
orders. Babies cried, dogs barked, doors slammed. But the object in the sky slowly 
moved on, caught in the center of the lights like the hub of a bicycle wheel surrounded 
by gleaming spokes.

SPECULATION RIFE

Speculation fell like rain. “It’s a whole squadron.” “No, it’s a blimp. It must be because 
it’s moving so slowly.” “I hear planes.” “No, you don’t. That’s a truck up the street.” 

“Where are the planes then?” “Dunno. They must be up there though.” “Wonder why 
they picked such a clear night for a raid?” “They’re probably from a carrier.” “Naw, I’ll 
bet they are from a secret airbase down south somewhere.” Still, the firing continued.

Like lethal firecrackers, the anti-aircraft rounds blasted above, below, seemingly right on the target fixed in the tenacious beams. Other shots fell short, exploding halfway up the long climb. Tracers sparked upward like roman candles. Metal fell. It fell in chunks, large and small; not enemy metal, but the whistling fragments of bursting ack-ack shells.

The menacing thud and clank on streets and rooftops drove many spectators to shelter.

WARDENS DO GOOD JOB

Wardens were on the job, doing a good job of it. “Turn off your lights, please. Pullover to the curb and stop. Don’t use your telephone. Take shelter. Take shelter.” On every street brief glares of hooded flashlights cut the darkness, warning creeping drivers to stop. Police watched at main intersections. Sirens wailed en route to and from blackout accidents. There came lulls in the firing. The searchlights went out. (To allow the fighter planes to attack?). Angelinos breathed deeply and said, “I guess it’s all over.” But before they could tell their neighbors good night, the guns were blasting again, sighting up the long blue beams of the lights.

WATCHERS SHIVER

The fire seemed to burst in rings all around the target. But the eager watchers, shivering in the early morning cold, weren’t rewarded by the sight of a falling plane. Nor were there any bombs dropped. “Maybe it’s just a test,” someone remarked. “Test, hell!” was the answer. “You don’t throw that much metal in the air unless you’re fixing on knocking something down.” Still, the firing continued, muttering angrily off toward the west like a distant thunderstorm. The targeted object inched along high, flanked by the cherry red explosions. And the householders shivered in their robes, their faces set, watching the awesome scene.

The following are excerpts from the primary front-page story of the LA Times on February 26th. Note that there is not a SINGLE description of the object even though it was clearly locked in the focus of dozens of searchlights for well over half an hour and seen by hundreds of thousands of people:

See also  1947: Nazi UFOs

Army Says Alarm Real
Roaring Guns Mark Blackout

Identity of Aircraft Veiled in Mystery; No Bombs Dropped and No Enemy Craft Hit; Civilians Reports Seeing Planes and Balloon

Overshadowing a nation-wide maelstrom of rumors and conflicting reports, the Army’s Western Defense Command insisted that Los Angeles’ early morning blackout and anti-aircraft action were the result of unidentified aircraft sighted over the beach area. In two official statements, issued while Secretary of the Navy Knox in Washington was attributing the activity to a false alarm and “jittery nerves,” the command in San Francisco confirmed and reconfirmed the presence over the Southland of unidentified planes.

Relayed by the Southern California sector office in Pasadena, the second statement read: “The aircraft which caused the blackout in the Los Angeles area for several hours this a.m. have not been identified.” Insistence from official quarters that the alarm was real came as hundreds of thousands of citizens who heard and saw the activity spread countless varying stories of the episode. The spectacular anti-aircraft barrage came after the 14th Interceptor Command ordered the blackout when strange craft was reported over the coastline.

Powerful searchlights from countless stations stabbed the sky with brilliant probing fingers while anti-aircraft batteries dotted the heavens with beautiful if sinister, orange bursts of shrapnel.

City Blacked Out For Hours

The city was blacked out from 2:25 to 7:21 am after an earlier yellow alert at 7:18 pm was called off at 10:23 pm. The blackout was in effect from here to the Mexican border and inland to the San Joaquin Valley. No bombs were dropped and no airplanes shot down and, miraculously in terms of the tons of missiles hurled aloft, only two persons were reported wounded by falling shell fragments. Countless thousands of Southland residents, many of whom were late to work because of the traffic tie-up during the blackout, rubbed their eyes sleepily yesterday and agreed that regardless of the question of how “real” the air raid alarm may have been, it was “a great show” and “well worth losing a few hours’ sleep.” The blackout was not without its casualties, however. A State Guardsman died of a heart attack while driving an ammunition truck, heart failure also accounted for the death of an air raid warden on duty, a woman was killed in a car-truck collision in Arcadia, and a Long Beach policeman was killed in a traffic crash en route to duty. Much of the firing appeared to come from the vicinity of aircraft plants along the coastal area of Santa Monica, Inglewood, Southwest Los Angeles, and Long Beach.

=============================================>>

In its front page editorial, the Times said: “In view of the considerable public excitement and confusion caused by yesterday morning’s supposed enemy air raid over this area and its spectacular official accompaniments, it seems to The Times that more specific public information should be forthcoming from government sources on the subject if only to clarify their own conflicting statements about it.”

“According to the Associated Press, Secretary Knox intimated that reports of enemy air activity in the Pacific Coastal Region might be due largely to ‘jittery nerves.’ Whose nerves, Mr. Knox? The public’s or the Army’s?”

===========================================>>

The following is an excerpt of an article appearing in Fate Magazine. Our special thanks to Bill Oliver of UFO*BC for transcribing and bringing it to our attention.

WORLD WAR II UFO SCARE
By Paul T. Collins
Fate Magazine July, 1987

On Wednesday, February 25, 1942, as war raged in Europe and Asia, at least a million Southern Californians awoke to the scream of air-raid sirens as Los Angeles County cities blacked out at 2:25 AM. Many dozed off again while 12,000 air raid wardens reported faithfully to their posts, most of them expecting nothing more than a dress rehearsal for a possible future event – an invasion of the United States by Japan. At 3:36, however, they were shocked and their slumbering families rudely roused again, this time by sounds unfamiliar to most Americans outside the military services.

The roar of the 37th Coast Artillery Brigade’s antiaircraft batteries jolted them out of bed and before they could get to the windows the flashing 12.8 pound shells were detonating with a heavy, ominous boomp – boomp – boomp and the steel was already raining down. All radio stations had been ordered off the air at 3:08. But the news was being written with fingers of light three miles high on a clear star-studded blackboard 30 miles long.

The firing continued intermittently until 4:14. Unexploded shells destroyed pavement,
homes and public buildings, three persons were killed and three died of heart attacks
directly attributable to the one hour barrage. Several persons were injured by shrapnel.
A dairy herd was hit but only a few cows were casualties.

The blackout was lifted and sirens screamed all clear at 7:21. The shooting stopped but
the shouting had hardly begun. Military men who never flinched at the roar of rifles now
shook at the prospect of facing the press. While they probably could not be blamed for
what had happened, they did have some reason for distress. The thing they had been
shooting at could not be identified.

Caught by the searchlights and captured in photographs, was an object big enough to
dwarf an apartment house. Experienced lighter-than-air (dirigible) specialists doubted
it could be a Japanese blimp because the Japanese had no known source of helium,
and hydrogen was much too dangerous to use under combat conditions.

Whatever it was, it was a sitting duck for the guns of the 37th. Photographs showed
shells bursting all around it. A Los Angeles Herald Express staffer said he was sure many
shells hit it directly. He was amazed it had not been shot down.

The object that triggered the air raid alarm had drawn 1430 rounds of ammunition from
the coast artillery, to no effect. When it moved at all, the object had proceeded at a
leisurely pace over the coastal cities between Santa Monica and Long Beach, taking
about 30 minutes of actual flight time to move 20 miles; then it disappeared from view.

You can well imagine with what chagrin public information officers answered press
queries. The Pasadena Office of the Southern California Sector of the Army Western
Defense Command simply announced that no enemy aircraft had been identified; no
craft was shot down; no bombs were dropped; none of our interceptors left the ground
to pursue the intruder.

Soon thereafter US Navy Secretary Frank Knox announced that no planes had been
sighted. The coastal firing had been triggered, he said, by a false alarm and jittery nerves.
He also suggested that some war industries along the coast might have to be moved
inland to points invulnerable to attacks from enemy submarines and carrier-based planes.

The press responded with scathing editorials, many on page one, calling attention to
the loss of life and denouncing the use of the coast artillery to fire at phantoms. The
Los Angeles Times demanded a full explanation from Washington. The Long Beach
Telegram complained that government officials who all along had wanted to move the
industries were manipulating the affair for propaganda purposes. And the Long Beach
Independent charged: “There is a mysterious reticence about the whole affair and it
appears some form of censorship is trying to halt discussion of the matter. Although it
was red-hot news not one national radio commentator gave it more than passing
mention. This is the kind of reticence that is making the American people gravely suspect
the motives and the competence of those whom they have charged with the conduct
of the war.”

The Independent had good reason to question the competence of some of the personnel
responsible for our coastal defense operations as well as the integrity and motives of
our highest government officials. Only 36 hours before the Long Beach air raid, a gigantic
Japanese submarine had surfaced close to shore 12 miles north of Santa Barbara and in
25 minutes of unchallenged firing lobbed 25 five-inch shells at the petroleum refinery in
the Ellwood oil field. The Fourth Interceptor Command, although aware of the sub’s attack,
ordered a blackout from Ventura to Goleta but sent no planes out to sink it. Not one shot
was fired at the sub.

After the Ellwood incident had alerted all the West Coast defense posts to possible repeat
attacks, these units were sensitive to anticipated invasion attempts. By Wednesday
morning in the Los Angeles area they were ready to open fire on a boy’s kite if it in any
way resembled a plane or a balloon. Secretary of War Henry Stimson praised the 37th
Cost Artillery for this attitude. It is better to be a little too alert than not alert enough, he
said. At the same time he delicately suggested that it might have been a good idea to send
some of our planes up to identify the invading aircraft before shooting at them.

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Planes of the Fourth Interceptor Command were, in fact, warming up on the runways
waiting for orders to go up and interview the unknown intruders. Why, everybody was
asking, were they not ordered to go into action during the 51-minute period between
the first air-raid alert at 2:25 AM and the first artillery firing at 3:16?

Against this background of embarrassing indecision and confusion, Army Western Defense
Command obviously had to say something fast. Spokesmen told reporters that from one
to 50 planes had been sighted, thus giving themselves ample latitude in which to adjust
future stories to fit whatever propaganda requirements might arise in the next few days.

When eyewitness reports from thousands searching the skies with binoculars under the
bright lights of the coast artillery verified the presence of one enormous, unidentifiable,
indestructible object – but not the presence of large numbers of planes – the press
releases were gradually scaled downward. A week later Gen. Mark Clark acknowledged
that army listening posts had detected what they thought were five light planes
approaching the coast on the night of the air raid. No interceptors, he said, had been sent
out to engage them because there had been no mass attack.

Believing an aerial bombardment was in progress, some people thought they saw
formations of warplanes, dogfights between enemy craft and our fighter planes and
other things that they assumed were evidence of such an attack. Obviously there were
no dogfights because none of our interceptors were in the air. Tracer bullets were fired
from military ground stations and some people mistook the fire pattern made by these
projectiles for aerial combat. Other observers reported lighted objects which were
variously described as red-and-white flares in groups of three red and three white, fired
alternately, or chainlike strings of red lights looking something like an illuminated kite.

People suggested that some of these lights were caused by Japanese-Americans signaling approaching
Japanese aircraft with flares to guide them to selected targets, but because
no bombs were dropped, the theory was quickly abandoned. In any case, such charges
fitted in perfectly with a hysterical press campaign to round up all citizens of Japanese
descent and put them in concentration camps.

During the week of the Japanese submarine attack on the Ellwood oil field and the air
raid on Los Angeles County, the press took full advantage of the made-to-order situation.
Arrests of suspects were quickly made and the FBI was called in, but the Long Beach
Press Telegram stated all investigations indicated nobody was signaling the enemy from
the ground.

Santa Barbara’s Ellwood
Oil Field Submarine Attack

Just a few days before the “Battle of LA” a Japanese submarine had surfaced at
night and fired its deck gun into the Ellwood oil field located 12 miles northwest
of Santa Barbara. The LA Times:

“From Santa Barbara, area of the submarine attack Monday night, District Attorney
Percy Heckendorf said he would appeal to Lt. Gen. John L. DeWitt, commanding
officer of the Western Defense Command, to make Santa Barbara County a restricted
area for enemy nationals and American-born Japanese as well. “There is convincing
proof,” Heckendorf asserted, “that there were shore signals flashed to the enemy.”
Heckendorf said the people will hold Gen. DeWitt responsible if he failed to act. Army
ordinance officers, meanwhile, were studying more than 200 pounds of shell fragments
from missiles fired by the submarine, which caused only $500 damage in the Ellwood
oil field near Santa Barbara.”

It is said by some locals that the skipper or one of the officers on the Japanese sub
had worked in the Ellwood oil field some years prior to the outbreak of the war. The
story claims that the man had been mistreated by some of his co-workers during that
time, had returned to Japan before the war began, and had then subsequently helped
lead the submarine back to the area to make it’s attack.

The following are excerpts from the primary front page story of the LA Times on February 26th. Note that there is not a SINGLE description of the object even though is was clearly locked in the focus of dozens of searchlights for well over half an hour and seen by hundreds of thousands of people:

Army Says Alarm Real
Roaring Guns Mark Blackout

Identity of Aircraft Veiled in Mystery; No Bombs Dropped and No Enemy Craft Hit; Civilians Reports Seeing Planes and Balloon

Overshadowing a nation-wide maelstrom of rumors and conflicting reports, the
Army’s Western Defense Command insisted that Los Angeles’ early morning blackout
and anti-aircraft action were the result of unidentified aircraft sighted over the beach
area. In two official statements, issued while Secretary of the Navy Knox in Washington
was attributing the activity to a false alarm and “jittery nerves,” the command in San
Francisco confirmed and reconfirmed the presence over the Southland of unidentified
planes. Relayed by the Southern California sector office in Pasadena, the second
statement read: “The aircraft which caused the blackout in the Los Angeles area for
several hours this a.m. have not been identified.” Insistence from official quarters that
the alarm was real came as hundreds of thousands of citizens who heard and saw the
activity spread countless varying stories of the episode. The spectacular anti-aircraft
barrage came after the 14th Interceptor Command ordered the blackout when strange
craft were reported over the coastline. Powerful searchlights from countless stations
stabbed the sky with brilliant probing fingers while anti-aircraft batteries dotted the
heavens with beautiful, if sinister, orange bursts of shrapnel.

City Blacked Out For Hours

The city was blacked out from 2:25 to 7:21 am after an earlier yellow alert at 7:18 pm was called off at 10:23 pm. The blackout was in effect from here to the Mexican border and inland to the San Joaquin Valley. No bombs were dropped and no airplanes shot down and, miraculously in terms of the tons of missiles hurled aloft, only two persons were reported wounded by falling shell fragments. Countless thousands of Southland residents, many of whom were late to work because of the traffic tie-up during the blackout, rubbed their eyes sleepily yesterday and agreed that regardless of the question of how “real” the air raid alarm may have been, it was “a great show” and “well worth losing a few hours’ sleep.”

The blackout was not without its casualties, however. A State Guardsman died of a heart attack while driving an ammunition truck, heart failure also accounted for the death of an air raid warden on duty, a woman was killed in a car-truck collision in Arcadia, and a Long Beach policeman was killed in a traffic crash en route to duty. Much of the firing appeared to come from the vicinity of aircraft plants along the coastal area of Santa Monica, Inglewood, Southwest Los Angeles, and Long Beach.

=============================================>>

In its front-page editorial, the Times said: “In view of the considerable public excitement and confusion caused by yesterday morning’s supposed enemy air raid over this area and its spectacular official accompaniments, it seems to The Times that more specific public information should be forthcoming from government sources on the subject if only to clarify their own conflicting statements about it.”

“According to the Associated Press, Secretary Knox intimated that reports of enemy air activity in the Pacific Coastal Region might be due largely to ‘jittery nerves.’ Whose nerves, Mr. Knox? The public’s or the Army’s?”

=============================================>>

The following is an excerpt of an article appearing in Fate Magazine.
Our special thanks to Bill Oliver of UFO*BC for transcribing and bringing it to our attention.

WORLD WAR II UFO SCARE
By Paul T. Collins
Fate Magazine July, 1987

On Wednesday, February 25, 1942, as war raged in Europe and Asia, at least a million
Southern Californians awoke to the scream of air-raid sirens as Los Angeles County
cities blacked out at 2:25 AM. Many dozed off again while 12,000 air raid wardens
reported faithfully to their posts, most of them expecting nothing more than a dress
rehearsal for a possible future event – an invasion of the United States by Japan. At 3:36,
however, they were shocked and their slumbering families rudely roused again, this time
by sounds unfamiliar to most Americans outside the military services.

The roar of the 37th Coast Artillery Brigade’s antiaircraft batteries jolted them out of
bed and before they could get to the windows the flashing 12.8 pound shells were
detonating with a heavy, ominous boomp – boomp – boomp and the steel was already
raining down. All radio stations had been ordered off the air at 3:08. But the news was
being written with fingers of light three miles high on a clear star-studded blackboard 30
miles long.

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The firing continued intermittently until 4:14. Unexploded shells destroyed pavement,
homes and public buildings, three persons were killed and three died of heart attacks
directly attributable to the one hour barrage. Several persons were injured by shrapnel.
A dairy herd was hit but only a few cows were casualties.

The blackout was lifted and sirens screamed all clear at 7:21. The shooting stopped but
the shouting had hardly begun. Military men who never flinched at the roar of rifles now
shook at the prospect of facing the press. While they probably could not be blamed for
what had happened, they did have some reason for distress. The thing they had been
shooting at could not be identified.

Caught by the searchlights and captured in photographs, was an object big enough to
dwarf an apartment house. Experienced lighter-than-air (dirigible) specialists doubted
it could be a Japanese blimp because the Japanese had no known source of helium,
and hydrogen was much too dangerous to use under combat conditions.

Whatever it was, it was a sitting duck for the guns of the 37th. Photographs showed
shells bursting all around it. A Los Angeles Herald Express staffer said he was sure many
shells hit it directly. He was amazed it had not been shot down.

The object that triggered the air raid alarm had drawn 1430 rounds of ammunition from
the coast artillery, to no effect. When it moved at all, the object had proceeded at a
leisurely pace over the coastal cities between Santa Monica and Long Beach, taking
about 30 minutes of actual flight time to move 20 miles; then it disappeared from view.

You can well imagine with what chagrin public information officers answered press
queries. The Pasadena Office of the Southern California Sector of the Army Western
Defense Command simply announced that no enemy aircraft had been identified; no
craft was shot down; no bombs were dropped; none of our interceptors left the ground
to pursue the intruder.

Soon thereafter US Navy Secretary Frank Knox announced that no planes had been
sighted. The coastal firing had been triggered, he said, by a false alarm and jittery nerves.
He also suggested that some war industries along the coast might have to be moved
inland to points invulnerable to attacks from enemy submarines and carrier-based planes.

The press responded with scathing editorials, many on page one, calling attention to
the loss of life and denouncing the use of the coast artillery to fire at phantoms. The
Los Angeles Times demanded a full explanation from Washington. The Long Beach
Telegram complained that government officials who all along had wanted to move the
industries were manipulating the affair for propaganda purposes. And the Long Beach
Independent charged: “There is a mysterious reticence about the whole affair and it
appears some form of censorship is trying to halt discussion of the matter. Although it
was red-hot news not one national radio commentator gave it more than passing
mention. This is the kind of reticence that is making the American people gravely suspect
the motives and the competence of those whom they have charged with the conduct
of the war.”

The Independent had good reason to question the competence of some of the personnel
responsible for our coastal defense operations as well as the integrity and motives of
our highest government officials. Only 36 hours before the Long Beach air raid, a gigantic
Japanese submarine had surfaced close to shore 12 miles north of Santa Barbara and in
25 minutes of unchallenged firing lobbed 25 five-inch shells at the petroleum refinery in
the Ellwood oil field. The Fourth Interceptor Command, although aware of the sub’s attack,
ordered a blackout from Ventura to Goleta but sent no planes out to sink it. Not one shot
was fired at the sub.

After the Ellwood incident had alerted all the West Coast defense posts to possible repeat
attacks, these units were sensitive to anticipated invasion attempts. By Wednesday
morning in the Los Angeles area they were ready to open fire on a boy’s kite if it in any
way resembled a plane or a balloon. Secretary of War Henry Stimson praised the 37th
Cost Artillery for this attitude. It is better to be a little too alert than not alert enough, he
said. At the same time he delicately suggested that it might have been a good idea to send
some of our planes up to identify the invading aircraft before shooting at them.

Planes of the Fourth Interceptor Command were, in fact, warming up on the runways
waiting for orders to go up and interview the unknown intruders. Why, everybody was
asking, were they not ordered to go into action during the 51-minute period between
the first air-raid alert at 2:25 AM and the first artillery firing at 3:16?

Against this background of embarrassing indecision and confusion, Army Western Defense
Command obviously had to say something fast. Spokesmen told reporters that from one
to 50 planes had been sighted, thus giving themselves ample latitude in which to adjust
future stories to fit whatever propaganda requirements might arise in the next few days.

When eyewitness reports from thousands searching the skies with binoculars under the
bright lights of the coast artillery verified the presence of one enormous, unidentifiable,
indestructible object – but not the presence of large numbers of planes – the press
releases were gradually scaled downward. A week later Gen. Mark Clark acknowledged
that army listening posts had detected what they thought were five light planes
approaching the coast on the night of the air raid. No interceptors, he said, had been sent
out to engage them because there had been no mass attack.

Believing an aerial bombardment was in progress, some people thought they saw
formations of warplanes, dogfights between enemy craft and our fighter planes and
other things that they assumed were evidence of such an attack. Obviously there were
no dogfights because none of our interceptors were in the air. Tracer bullets were fired
from military ground stations and some people mistook the fire pattern made by these
projectiles for aerial combat. Other observers reported lighted objects which were
variously described as red-and-white flares in groups of three red and three white, fired
alternately, or chainlike strings of red lights looking something like an illuminated kite.

People suggested that some of these lights were caused by Japanese-Americans signaling approaching Japanese aircraft with flares to guide them to selected targets, but because no bombs were dropped, the theory was quickly abandoned. In any case, such charges fitted in perfectly with a hysterical press campaign to round up all citizens of Japanese descent and put them in concentration camps.

During the week of the Japanese submarine attack on the Ellwood oil field and the air raid on Los Angeles County, the press took full advantage of the made-to-order situation.
Arrests of suspects were quickly made and the FBI was called in, but the Long Beach Press-Telegram stated all investigations indicated nobody was signaling the enemy from the ground.

Santa Barbara’s Ellwood
Oil Field Submarine Attack

Just a few days before the “Battle of LA” a Japanese submarine had surfaced at night and fired its deck gun into the Ellwood oil field located 12 miles northwest of Santa Barbara. The LA Times:

“From Santa Barbara, area of the submarine attack Monday night, District Attorney Percy Heckendorf said he would appeal to Lt. Gen. John L. DeWitt, commanding officer of the Western Defense Command, to make Santa Barbara County a restricted area for enemy nationals and American-born Japanese as well. “There is convincing proof,” Heckendorf asserted, “that there were shore signals flashed to the enemy.”

Heckendorf said the people will hold Gen. DeWitt responsible if he failed to act. Army ordinance officers, meanwhile, were studying more than 200 pounds of shell fragments from missiles fired by the submarine, which caused only $500 damage in the Ellwood oil field near Santa Barbara.”

It is said by some locals that the skipper or one of the officers on the Japanese sub had worked in the Ellwood oil field some years prior to the outbreak of the war. The story claims that the man had been mistreated by some of his co-workers during that time, had returned to Japan before the war began, and had then subsequently helped lead the submarine back to the area to make its attack.

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