One of the biggest tourist spots on Oahu remains the USS Arizona Memorial. Located out near Pearl Harbor Naval Base, the memorial is to honor the fallen soldiers from the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbor in 1941. We went there a couple of weeks back, but have only really had time now to write about it.
The first thing you see when you walk in is that no bags of any kind are allowed into the visitors center area. There is a short path to an area where they keep the bags for a nominal fee. Once inside, the first thing to do was to go to the ticket line for the boat to the Arizona. The memorial itself is a small builfing which is stationed directly over the sunken Arizona. The reason it is the first stop is that they take no reservations for this boat ride, and it is entirely first come first served. We arrived shortly after 10 am, and our tickets were for a tour at 12:45 pm. We had some time, so we wandered the grounds.
They are in the process of finishing a new visitors center, and also have a gift shop to go along with 3 other paid tours that you can take. One is a tour of the USS Bowfin, a WW2 submarine. Another is of an air museum, and the third is a tour of the battleship Missouri. Also on the grounds they have displays which talk about how the attack occurred and a video discussing the results of the attack as well. In addition, there are smaller monuments listing all those who had perished on all ships that day.
After lunch we were finally on our boat ride to the memorial itself. They tell you on the boat that you need to not take pictures when you first get off the boat so that everyone can get off the boat quickly. Once inside, an eerie feeling comes over you as you are reminded that this is a graveyard. It is a fairly small area, but they still manage to have somewhere between 100 and 200 people in the memorial at any given time.
Inside they have a marble engraved wall which lists all of the sailors who parished that day on the Arizona. Something I was not aware of before getting there was that some of the survivors of the attacks who have since passed on have also been interred there with their shipmates. All in all it was a very somber setting, and an interesting reminder of the past.
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