December 7, 1941 (Sunday)
- Jill Johnson Tewsley
- Dec 7, 2021
- 3 min read
Edna, Alice, Helen and kiddos are involved in a car accident and the Japanese bomb Pearl Harbor

(Japs bombed Hawaiian Ils
today)
Cloudy, gloomy day
Morse, Red, Helen and Dean here for dinner.
Red had to go back to Middleville at 5 o'clock
to run the picture films
in the theater.
Helen, Dean and I went to Alice's a while this early
evening and came back with Alice in car and
as we were turning into our
drive way a car driven by
Max B[?] of Middleville
tried to pass by us and ran
into our front left fender and
shoved us beside our walnut
tree at side of of drive way.
Alice had a 1 1/2 puncture
in right leg just below knee.
Helen bump on fore head and I
have a sprained left wrist.
We all went to Dr. Wedel's office to receive treatment.
Could have been much much worse.
None of kiddos injured.

The first publication of the Lowell Ledger following the attack on Pearl Harbor was on December 11, 1941. The front page of that edition is without any major headlines regarding the bombing or that the United States was now at war.
It did feature an article entitled "President Makes Stirring Appeal: Nation United in Battle to Final Victory" and several news items calling citizens into action.
That edition of the Lowell Ledger also offered a brief account of the car accident that left Edna, Alice and Helen with minor injuries.

The attack on Pearl Harbor began at 7:55 AM Hawaiian time, nearly 1 PM in Michigan.
At 2:22 PM EST an Associated Press Newswire distribution detailed information from the White House about the bombing of Pearl Harbor by the Japanese.
It was around that same time that a reporter from an NBC station in Honolulu phoned their NBC affiliate in New York from the rooftop of an office building, with news of the attack.
TRANSCRIPT OF REPORT BY REPORTER IN HONOLULUReporter: Hello, NBC. Hello, NBC. This is KTU in Honolulu, Hawaii. I am speaking from the roof of the Advertiser Publishing Company Building. We have witnessed this morning the distant view a brief full battle of Pearl Harbor and the severe bombing of Pearl Harbor by enemy planes, undoubtedly Japanese. The city of Honolulu has also been attacked and considerable damage done. This battle has been going on for nearly three hours. One of the bombs dropped within fifty feet of KTU tower. It is no joke. It is a real war. The public of Honolulu has been advised to keep in their homes and away from the Army and Navy. There has been serious fighting going on in the air and in the sea. The heavy shooting seems to be . . . a little interruption. We cannot estimate just how much damage has been done, but it has been a very severe attack. The Navy and Army appear now to have the air and the sea under control.
Operator: Ah, just a minute. . . . This is the telephone company. This is the operator.
Reporter: Yes.
Operator: We have quite a big call, an emergency call.
Reporter: We’re talking to New York now.
Most newspapers had already gone to print when the attack occurred. The other main source for breaking news in 1941 was radio. But a 2001 Journal Times article said that most radio stations did not interrupt their regularly scheduled programming with news of the attack.
A broadcast of the Giants football game was interrupted at 2:25 PM EST with a brief announcement and at 1:50 PM CT (nearly 3 PM in Michigan), WGN in Chicago interrupted their broadcast of the Bears game to announce the attack on Pearl Harbor.
I am not sure when news of the attack finally made its way to Bowne Center.
December 7, 1941 was an eventful day for Edna. She needed to use the margins to fit all of the details into her daily entry. She noted the attack on Pearl Harbor in parenthesis at the top of the page. Edna typically starts her entries on the line beneath the date. While Edna needed to use the margins to fit in all of the details about her day I think it is likely that had she known about the attack when she started her journal entry she would have led with that information.
Located nearly 3,000 miles from California in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, to Edna, Pearl Harbor must have felt a world away. At home, in Bowne Center, she and several of her family members had been involved in a car accident.
"Could have been much much worse. None of kiddos injured."

















Comments