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World War II Imperial Japanese Navy Flag Returns to Pearl Harbor
14 October 2016
From Petty Officer 1st Class Corwin M. Colbert
PEARL HARBOR (NNS) -- A Imperial Japanese navy flag recovered from battleship Nagato by a Sailor assigned to high-speed transport USS Horace A. Bass (APD 124) in 1945 was donated to the National Park Service Oct. 13 at the Pearl Harbor Visitor Center.
Nagato was the flagship of Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto during the attack on Pearl Harbor.
The flag was donated by Dianne Hall and her siblings Betty Jo Eller, Sherry Bryant, Robert D. Hartman Jr., and Wanda Morris. The flag was given to Hall by her mother in memory of her father, Robert Hartman Sr., a World War II Navy ship's cook aboard Horace A. Bass and later an U.S. Army mess sergeant, after he passed away.
The flag has remained in her family since.
"My dad retrieved the flag during the war," said Hall. "It's been a part of our family for a long time. When we (siblings) were young, it would get cold at night so we would use it as a blanket. I remember complaining to my mother about how it irritated my skin because of the wool. As an adult, I realized the significance of the flag."
History is ingrained into her family. Her husband is also a Vietnam veteran and Hall is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
"Veterans are very special to me," she said. "One of my duties with the Daughters of the American Revolution is to serve coffee at a local restaurant. Each week is an opportunity to listen or just say 'thank you' to our former and current members of the service."
Roger Schiradelly, community liaison of Living Military Museum, convinced Hall to donate the flag. With the assistance of John Hedley, president of Living Military Museum, Hall was able to reach out to The National Park Service and Pearl Harbor Visitor Center.
"Roger expressed to me the proper way to honor the history and significance of the flag was to bring it to Pearl Harbor, and not at a local museum," said Hall. "With the assistance of John Hedley, I was able to connect and bring the flag here. I cannot express the deep gratitude I have for this moment."
Jacquelyn Ashwell, superintendent of World War II Valor in the Pacific National Monument, said the flag is a rare and special artifact.
"This is an amazing donation," Ashwell said. "Here at the museum we receive many wonderful tokens of history, but having such a relic from a high-profile ship as is the Nagato, the ship that was Admiral Yamamoto's flagship, is an extraordinary gift on behalf of the American people."
The flag will be properly preserved. No further plans for the flag are available at this time.
Japanese battleship Nagato was a super-dreadnought battleship built for the Imperial Japanese navy during the 1910s. The ship was modernized from 1934-36. Adm. Yamamoto famously issued the "Climb Mount Niitaka" orders which confirmed the fleet was attacking Pearl Harbor from the ship. Nagato provided long-range cover and screening for Japanese ships returning from Hawaiian waters. After the end of hostilities with Japan Aug. 15, 1945, Horace A. Bass remained off Japan with United States 3rd Fleet units until the ships triumphantly entered Tokyo Bay Aug. 27, 1945. Horace A. Bass took part in the occupation of the giant Yokosuka Naval Base and took possession of battleship Nagato, one of the very few major ships left to the Imperial Japanese navy.
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