Lookout Air Raids | |||||||
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Part of the American theater and Pacific theater of World War II | |||||||
Lookout air raid schema | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
United States | Japan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Keith V. Johnson |
Tagami Akiji Nobuo Fujita | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1 patrol of fire lookouts |
Sea: 1 submarine Air: 1 aircraft |
The Lookout Air Raids were minor but historic Japanese air raids that occurred in the mountains of Oregon, several miles outside Brookings during World War II.[1]
On September 9, 1942, a Japanese Yokosuka E14Y Glen floatplane, launched from a Japanese submarine, dropped two incendiary bombs with the intention of starting a forest fire. However, with the efforts of a patrol of fire lookouts[2] and weather conditions not amenable to a fire, the damage done by the attack was minor.[3] The attack was the first time the contiguous United States was bombed by an enemy aircraft.[a] It was also the second time the continental United States was attacked by enemy aircraft during World War II, the first being the bombing of Dutch Harbor three months earlier.
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