Military Veterans
Sid Rogers
Date of Birth
Date of Death
Brick Location
Panel Number
Biography
Enterprise entered World War II on the morning of December 7, 1941, when her scout planes encountered the Japanese squadrons attacking Pearl Harbor. Not until May 14, 1945, when a Kamikaze attack off Kyushu, Japan, left a gaping hole in her flight deck, was she forced to leave the war. Of the more than twenty major actions of the Pacific War, Enterprise engaged in all but two. Her planes and guns downed 911 enemy planes; her bombers sank 71 ships, and damaged or destroyed 192 more. Her presence inspired both pride and fear: pride in her still unmatched combat record, and fear in the knowledge that Enterprise and hard fighting were never far apart. The most decorated ship of the Second World War, Enterprise changed the very course of a war she seemed to have been expressly created for. |
Americans came to liberate, not to conquer, to restore freedom and to end tyranny.—Inscription at the World War II Memorial, Washington DC
Branch:
Years
World War II
Duty
USS Enterprise—South Pacific