The Battle of Los Angeles — The Night California Believed It Was Under Japanese Attack

Searchlights scan the skies above Southern California in the early morning hours of Feb. 25, 1942. Air defences went on high alert as commanders believed Los Angeles was under attack by the Japanese.
Searchlights scan the skies above Southern California in the early morning hours of Feb. 25, 1942. Air defences went on high alert as commanders believed Los Angeles was under attack by the Japanese. Credit: L.A. Times.

“All winter, the population along the U.S. west coast feared they’d be in the enemy’s bombsights next. Could this be the attack Californians were dreading?”

JUST AFTER 3 A.M. on Feb. 25, 1942, the skies over Santa Monica, California shook to the thunder of anti-aircraft.

At six minutes after the hour, four batteries of the 37th Coastal Artillery Brigade opened fire on what spotters believed were enemy aircraft coming in from the Pacific.

Only weeks prior, the Japanese had struck the American naval base at Pearly Harbor. Since then, the population along the U.S. west coast feared they’d be in the enemy’s bombsights next. Could this be the attack Californians were dreading?

Earlier that evening, defenders had reported seeing a strange red light in the distance — perhaps a signal flare lit to guide enemy planes in to the darkened shoreline.

Shortly after 2:30 a.m., lookouts 30 miles to the south at Long Beach reported more than two-dozen aircraft heading inland towards the city of Los Angeles. The targets were travelling at an altitude of 12,000 feet. Radar crews were also tracking an unknown object, or group of objects, more than 100 miles out over the Pacific. The operators followed the signal as it moved towards the mainland and then vanished somewhere over southern California.

In 1942, many Californians were convinced Japanese warplanes might strike at any time.

The reports were quickly relayed to the Western Defense Command, which within minutes ordered a total blackout for L.A. All anti-aircraft batteries were brought to alert and air raid wardens fanned out across the city to enforce the ban on lights. Meanwhile, pilots of the 4th Interceptor Command at March Field were pulled from their bunks and briefed while crews readied their planes. To the commanders on the ground, the evidence seemed all too clear: California was moments away from being struck by the Japanese.

At 3:06 a.m., gunners at Santa Monica opened fire on what they believed were enemy aircraft. Their bursts were answered by gun emplacements farther inland. Soon more batteries joined in. For the next hour, the airspace over greater L.A. filled with the flashes and reports of more than 1,400 artillery shells. Air raid sirens pealed adding to the din, while searchlights swept the skies, their crews desperate to illuminate a formation of enemy bombers. City residents scrambled from their beds amid the cacophony; some seeking shelter from the maelstrom, others racing to their rooftops to watch the action. At least one civilian died of panic-induced heart failure; as many as four others were killed in traffic accidents.

Searchlights scanned the skies above Los Angeles on the night of Feb 25 looking for enemy raiders.
Searchlights scanned the skies above Los Angeles in the pre-dawn hours of Feb 25 looking for enemy raiders.

As the battle raged, reports (some of them quite hysterical) filtered in to the commanders. “Swarms” of planes had been spotted, said some observers; “several hundred” were overhead reported others. A number of eyewitnesses claimed that as many as four enemy aircraft had been blasted from the skies by the intense barrage — one had reportedly even slammed into a Hollywood street. Frustratingly, none of these reports could be verified.

Amid the torrent of chatter, little if any mention was made of bomb damage from the raiders. As far as commanders could determine, no targets had been struck — no ports, rail facilities, airfields or factories were ablaze.

After several deafening minutes, the tempo of fire tapered off. By 4:15 a.m., the all clear was sounded and a eerie calm descended onto the city. There were no signs of any Japanese aircraft. By sunrise the alert had been suspended. What became known as the Battle of Los Angeles was over.

The following day, the press and the rattled citizenry of Southern California searched for an explanation for the mysterious incident; the military scrambled to provide one.

Frank Knox, Secretary of the Navy, flatly denied that any enemy aircraft had been detected. He called the entire incident a “false alarm”.

The army declared that most sightings were either based on hearsay or exaggerations, although in spite of the navy’s announcement, it wouldn’t rule out the possibility that at least one enemy aircraft could have penetrated California airspace.

Even the War Department speculated that Japanese planes might have been spotted over L.A. and if so they would have had to have been launched from enemy subs or even flown from secret airfields in Mexico or the California desert.

Reporters on scene, including none other than war correspondent Ernie Pyle himself, claimed to have seen a lot of fireworks that night, but no Japanese planes.

The Feb. 26 L.A. Times reported the disturbance.
The Feb. 25 L.A. Times reported the disturbance. Papers across the U.S. picked up the story.

Soon major daily newspapers were chalking the entire affair up to incompetence and jitters on the part of gun crews, air spotters and controllers. But to be fair, such anxiety was hardly unjustified. Only two days earlier, a Japanese submarine had surfaced off Ellwood, Calif., nearly 100 miles up the coast from L.A., and fired a dozen shells at an oil refinery causing light damage. Were local defences simply on a hair trigger after the recent bombardment?

Perhaps, but the lack of a definitive official explanation about the L.A. Incident spawned all manner of speculation.

Some surmised that the pre-dawn conflagration was touched off by nervous crews who had spotted a commercial flight.

One California congressman, Leland Ford, reportedly wondered aloud if the entire affair had simply been staged so as to facilitate the relocation of vital war production plants farther inland.

In subsequent years even more outlandish theories were posited.

UFO enthusiasts and conspiracy theorists alike have long maintained that coastal defences had actually unleashed a barrage on extraterrestrial visitors and that Washington had quickly moved in to suppress the whole story to stave off panic.

Yet, judging by the mass-hysteria that followed the 9/11 attacks, it was probably a mix of darkness, fatigue, frayed nerves and paranoia all brought to a head by something entirely mundane… like a stray weather balloon. At least that’s the conclusion of an official U.S. Air Force history of the incident written 40 years later.

“A careful study of the evidence suggests that meteorological balloons—known to have been released over Los Angeles—may well have caused the initial alarm,” wrote the authors of a 1983 military report on the Battle of Los Angeles.


Comedy of Errors: Hollywood Spoofs the L.A. Raid

John Belushi in the film 1941.
John Belushi in the film 1941.

The Battle of Los Angeles served as the backdrop to the little known Robert Zemeckis, Steven Spielberg comedy 1941. Set in the days the following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the film shows how panicky civilians and gung-ho soldiers unwittingly unleash bedlam into the streets of the L.A. amid mounting fears that the Japanese are poised to strike the city at any moment. Little do the characters realize, a real Japanese submarine is in fact cruising the waters off the coast looking for something (or rather anything) to attack. Despite the all-star cast and the state of the art special effects, 1941 did poorly at the box office. The complete film (with commercials) is available here on YouTube.

(FIRST PUBLISHED AUG. 26, 2013)

3 thoughts on “The Battle of Los Angeles — The Night California Believed It Was Under Japanese Attack

  1. My grandfather, Robert William Arbuthnot, WWI veteran and studio artist, was one of the men manning an anti-aircraft battery when ‘The Thing’ passed close to the roof on which he and several other civil defense were stationed. The Thing was going slow enough so it was impossible to miss at point blank range. So slow as a matter of fact, civilians were taking potshots at it with small arms of their own.
    My grandfather was buddied up with what we would call a studio SFX expert. He was a WWI veteran who was the master of the machine gun. He was the guy they called in to chew up the landscape with real bullets (remember that James Cagney gangster movie when he ducks behind a brick wall that’s obliterated a nanosecond later by machine gun fire?). The Maestro was giving The Thing all he got with no results! After a few moments, the AA battery ran out of ammunition and the official in charge emptied his pistol at it he was so frustrated,
    What’s never mentioned is that some people on rooftops were able to reach out and touch The Thing. My grandfather talked to some of those people and they said it felt like cool slick metal.

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