First Lieutenant Harold Zahl had one
burning
worry. "Had our early-warning radar failed?" He was a
physicist
and for years, under great secrecy, was part of a group working to
prevent
such a surprise attack. How could the Japanese Empire achieve
complete
surprise? After a Japanese flyer radioed the now famous
Tora-Tora-Tora,
two thousand Americans were killed and the American Pacific fleet was
heavily
damaged. Six of America's best early warning radar sets, each
capable
of detecting bombers 150 miles away, had been sent to the Hawaiian
Islands
to protect the Navy Base.
"If our radar had not given warning because
of break down, or just ineffectiveness, surely part of the finger of
blame
would point at our group."
Colonel Blair, Harold Zahl and the visionaries of Fort Monmouth
realized
at the close of WWI that the next war would not come from the sea, but
from the air. The days in which America was protected by the
vastness
of the oceans were ending. As aircraft technology improved, they
would be able to reach America. A way had to be found to detect
enemy
aircraft and send planes to destroy the attackers.
The development
work was difficult. There was no funding. Command did
not
realize the advances in aircraft development would accelerate.
Also,
the electronics industry was new, and components were not available for
this unique challenge. After working for many years at Fort
Monmouth,
the work was moved to isolated Sandy Hook. German spies were
suspected
of observing the work at main post.
Everything had to be developed from scratch. Harold Zahl even
hand made the first 100 special radar tubes he designed for the new
radar
sets. Had one of his tubes failed?
For days there was no word of what had gone
wrong in Hawaii. Harold Zahl waited for "the damning words which
might say that our new early-warning system had not worked and the
Japanese
had sneaked in while Signal Corps electronics had failed in its great
hour
of test and crisis."
Finally, a call from Washington from Rodger
B. Colton would bring an end to the worry. The new radar had
worked!
Harold Zahl and the radar engineers were elated, "we cheered,
vigorously
shook hands and slapped backs." Two Signalmen, Joe Lockard
and George Elliott, operating a SCR-270 radar set, had seen the
Japanese
planes approaching as early as 7:02A.M. They checked their
equipment. They had not seen such a large signal before. At 7:20
A.M. they telephoned the sighting to the Information Center. The
information was not acted upon and the first bombs fell at 7:55
A.M.
Over fifty minutes were lost to prepare to meet the enemy with guns
ready.
Victory could have been taken from the attackers and American ships
protected.
A Japanese flyer would not have yelled Tora-Tora-Tora.
The
worry
that the new radar had failed was over and unfounded. If the
enemy
can attack Hawaii would they now attack the Panama Canal, Washington or
the West Coast? Camp Evans personnel were sent immediately to
make
sure the Panama Canal and other key locations were protected.
Months
before the Pearl Harbor attack the radar group even relocated their
laboratory
from Sandy Hook to the old Marconi Wireless Station in Wall to be safe
from Nazi submarine attacks.
The war years would bring many challenges.
The radar sets sent to Hawaii would be improved and updated to prevent
enemy jamming and to work with new weapon systems. The next
generation radar sets were in development. The Camp Evans
engineers
were working with MIT to get the prototype ready to meet battle
conditions
the very week the Japanese attacked. The radar would be called
upon
to help destroy a new Nazi weapon later used in Europe, the V-2 rocket.
At the end of W.W. II the secret radar was
given as a "major reason of victory".
The radar visionaries who realized
radar was needed long before a war arrived now saw the new threat for
America,
the rocket. Just as at the end of W.W. I the plane had
limited
abilities, at the end of W.W. II rocket technology was just
beginning.
Rockets could reach beyond the ionosphere and radar could not. In
1945 rockets could not cross the oceans, but the day would come when
they
could, carrying the new atomic bomb. Just as after W.W. I
the
Camp Evans radar engineers did not wait for orders and began preparing
to protect America with advanced technology.
See how these engineers who developed cutting
edge electronics to protect our nation, in the 1930s-1940s, opened
space
age communications and gave birth to the science of radar astronomy
with
Project
Diana.
Page updated September 19,
2006
Page created December 2, 2001
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