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The Lone Bombing: The story of Nobuo Fujita and the bombing of Oregon

Nobuo Fujita was a Japanese naval aviator who, in 1942, piloted a floatplane called the “E14Y” (Allied code name “Glen”) on a bombing mission over the mainland United States. The mission took place on September 9, 1942, and the target was the Siskiyou National Forest in Oregon.

The mission was part of a more extensive operation called “Tora! Tora! Tora!” which was an attempt by Japan to bomb and destroy American military bases on the West Coast of the United States. Fujita’s mission was a reconnaissance mission intended to assess the damage caused by the bombing and to identify potential targets for future missions.

Fujita and his crew flew from a Japanese submarine, the I-25, which had been launched from the Kuril Islands. They flew over the Pacific Ocean, then over the coast of Oregon, and dropped incendiary bombs on the Siskiyou National Forest. The bombs caused a small fire, but it was quickly put out by local firefighters.

After the mission, Fujita’s plane flew back to the I-25, submerging and sailing away. Fujita’s mission was the only time that bombs were dropped on the mainland United States during World War II.

Fujita would later return to the United States as an emissary of peace, visiting the town of Brookings, Oregon, where the bombing occurred. He met with the mayor, gave a speech, and apologized for the bombing. He also presented the town with a traditional Japanese sword as a gesture of goodwill. He would die in 1997, never giving up his belief in the importance of peace.

#3 A shell crater on US soil put there by the Japanese.

#5 American servicemen inspecting a shell crater after the Japanese attack on Fort Stevens.

#9 Nobuo Fujita standing by his Yokosuka E14Y “Glen” seaplane.

#10 Japanese submarine I-26. The bulbous plane hangar and the catapult are visible forward of the conning tower.

#15 Nobuo Fujita places his sword in its ceremonial location at the Brookings library.

#18 Nobuo Fujita presents his family’s Samurai sword to Brookings, Oregon in 1962.

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Written by Benjamin Grayson

Former Bouquet seller now making a go with blogging and graphic designing. I love creating & composing history articles and lists.

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