USS Arizona (BB 39) is the final resting place for many of the ship’s 1,177 crewmen who lost their lives on Dec. 7, 1941, in an attack by the Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service’s 1st Air Fleet on U.S. Navy’s Naval Station Pearl Harbor, headquarters of the Pacific Fleet.
Approximately 1,100 sailors and Marines remain entombed within the ship’s hull. The ship was officially decommissioned in 1942.
After the ship was sunk during the attack, significant portions were salvaged for re-use among the fleet during the war. Ammunition, armament, electric motors and large amounts of scrap metal were recovered. The final removal of material took place in 1961, in order to construct the memorial over the ship. This last portion removed came from the aft deckhouse superstructure of the ship and was brought to its final resting place on a quiet, remote parcel of land on Waipio Point located in Pearl Harbor.
The Arizona Superstructure Relic Program was developed by the Navy to address requests for pieces of USS Arizona stored on Waipio Point while it is still possible to retrieve them.
The Department of the Navy, recognizing the historical value in the superstructure, placed the removed pieces under the jurisdiction of the Naval Historical Center in Washington, D.C. — now Naval History and Heritage Command.
The Navy later notified Congress in 1994 that it intended to donate pieces of this deckhouse to qualifying organizations in accordance with federal law. To date over 150 relics pieces have been distributed through the United States as well as the Imperial War Museum in London.
Commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet, initiated a program to provide USS Arizona (BB 39) superstructure relic pieces to U.S. Pacific Fleet ships and submarines on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec. 7, 2021 in coordination with the NHHC ASRP, designed to reinforce the importance of the Navy’s history and heritage to naval personnel aboard ships, submarines, and other commands, signified in the Arizona relic piece.
The ASRP anticipates the demand for display relics will extend beyond the CPF, to potentially include requests from all USS ships, Navy commands, and the greater Department of Defense.
Courtesy Navy Region Hawaii Public Affairs Office