Ketchikan During World War II - History Story
http://www.sitnews.us/Kiffer/WWII_Ketchikan/081620_WWII_Ketchikan.html
World War II in Ketchikan
War years were ones of uncertainty, change in the First City
Seventy-five years ago this month, the defining event of the 20th Century, World War II, came to an end.
Approximately
850 Ketchikan residents, out of the population of slightly more than
5,000 enlisted in the conflict which involved the United States from
1941-45.
Five
residents of the First City - Irvin Thompson, Jerome Rice, Ragnar
Myking, Robert Henderson and Awen Anderson - were killed during the war.
Many others were wounded. All came
back different than when they left.
(See "Not All Came Back" SITNEWS, June, 26, 2020 and "Sincerely, Igloo," SITNEWS, December 7, 2011)
Like
many American communities, life in Ketchikan during the war was one of
sacrificing for the war effort. Food and important supplies were
rationed and the newspapers were filled
with stories of the combat in Europe and Pacific.
But
unlike most American communities, there was also fear of invasion.
particularly after Japan invaded Attu and Kiska islands in the Aleutian
in 1942. After the War, the US learned
the Japanese had only attacked the Aleutians to draw US resources north
and had no intention of advancing further on US territory, but for most
of the War, Ketchikan residents remained concerned that the Japanese
Army would advance further into Alaska. There
were local air raid drills, plans were made to evacuate people and
supplies inland and blackouts were maintained in the community at night.
People
who lived in Ketchikan those years, remembered decades later the
uncertainty. They remembered stockpiling supplies. They remembered a
palpable fear that swept the community
- and all of coastal Alaska.
Not
long after the Pearl Harbor attack, a ski cabin high on Deer Mountain
burned down and many in the community thought the fire was a sign to
Japanese forces lurking offshore.
During
the War, the Ketchikan Coast Guard base expanded dramatically and there
were also Canadian servicemen in town frequently, as the Canadian Air
Force was involved in flying
patrols from the Annette Island Airfield after it opened.
(See "Over Here" SITNEWS, March 11, 2018)
There
was another tangible example of the War, the presence of nearly 200
Aleut refugees at the old Civilian Conservation Camp at Ward Lake. Many
of the Aleuts worked in Ketchikan
businesses during their time here. often replacing residents who had
been called elsewhere for the War effort. Several chose to remain in
Ketchikan after the War.
(See "A Sad Chapter of World War II" SITNEWS, June 23, 2007)
Besides
the Ketchikan residents who went off to fight in the War, the community
was also feeling the loss of the more than 50 Japanese American
residents of the community who were
interned - mostly in Idaho - along with all the other Japanese residents
of the West Coast. Many of the Japanese that were taken away declined
to come back after the War, including several who joined the war effort
despite seeing their families sent to internment
camps
(See "Pat Hagiwara dies at 91, SITNEWS, July 7, 2010)
Besides the conflict itself, the war years brought significant changes to the community.
The
faltering salmon canning industry received a brief boost when millions
of cases were purchased to support the war effort. The use of timber in
the war effort also put pressure
on existing sources in the Lower 48 and led the US government to support
opening up millions of acres in the Tongass National Forest for
harvest.
Alaska's
position as an American territory and the relatively brief Japanese
incursion into the Aleutians led the federal government to seek ways to
improve access to the Last Frontier.
As a result, the Alaskan Highway was built to connect the territory to
the Canadian road system. The Alcan Highway significantly spurred the
growth of the tourism industry in Alaska.
But
even more important for Ketchikan was the construction of a large
military airport on Annette Island, 20 miles south of Ketchikan. While
it was not exactly what Ketchikan wanted
- which was an airport closer to town - it did allow for larger land
planes to arrive in the area from Seattle. Passengers would then
transfer to smaller float or amphibious planes to fly from Annette to
Ketchikan.
No
longer would a trip from Seattle to Ketchikan entail a week-long ocean
voyage. Now, people could travel from Seattle to Ketchikan in a matter
of hours. The First City truly began
to be more connected to the Lower 48. Within a decade more people were
arriving in Ketchikan via plane than by steamship.
The
military infrastructure - and Alaska's crucial location as a bulwark in
the post-World War II "Cold War" between the United States and the
Soviet Union - also helped build support
for Statehood for Alaska. The end of the war, and the continued
decreasing of the influence of the salmon canning industry also helped
move Ketchikan firmly into the pro-statehood camp. Prior to the war, the
canning industry had fought statehood because it
preferred to deal with the federal government rather than a state
government that would be openly opposed to the fish traps that supported
the canneries. With so many Ketchikan residents spending their first
significant time away from the community, the realization
of the potential benefits of statehood began to take hold.
(See "Ketchikan Supported Statehood, Eventually" SITNEWS, January 3, 2009)
The
end of the war also brought other benefits. A significant portion of
the Ketchikan fishing fleet had remained in town during the war because
the production of salmon was considered
a national priority, in the same way that farm production in the Lower
48 was considered essential.
But
with a significant boost in manpower needed for an expected invasion of
the Japanese Home Islands, many of the salmon fishing exemptions were
cancelled and local fishermen -
like my father - had been told to expect to be called up in the fall of
1945. Small boat operators were in especially short supply and were
expected to be needed for the invasion. When the war ended, with the
dropping of the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
those plans were cancelled and those fishermen stayed home.
When
the hundreds of Ketchikan residents returned when the War was over,
they came back to a small town that was much the same as when they left.
But they now had seen much more
of the world than before the war. And they would lead the change of
Ketchikan from a declining salmon canning community into a timber
metropolis.
In
1947, the Tongass Timber Act established the long-term timber sales
that allowed the pulp paper industry to take hold in Southeast Alaska
and dominate the local economy for the
next half century.
Comments
Post a Comment