This poem captures the horror of Pearl Harbor...
Two days after attack, Fremont Sawade sat down to write his first, and only, poem.
There are actually two copies of the wooden plaque. The first is hanged in the memorial museum and the second hangs on a wall in Sawade’s house, right next to his favorite chair. The poem is etched into the wood. Even though he can’t read the words, he can feel them.
This poem captures the horror of Pearl Harbor...
Two days after attack, Fremont Sawade sat down to write his first, and only, poem.
There are actually two copies of the wooden plaque. The first is hanged in the memorial museum and the second hangs on a wall in Sawade’s house, right next to his favorite chair. The poem is etched into the wood. Even though he can’t read the words, he can feel them.