From Naval History and Heritage Command Public Affairs
WASHINGTON (NNS) -- The Naval War College Library in
Newport, R.I. will publicly unveil online the 4,000-page "Gray Book"
collection of Fleet Adm. Chester Nimitz communications that started in the wake
of the Pearl Harbor attack and ran right up until the closing days of the war.
The event will be held Monday, Feb. 24 at 6:30 p.m. Eastern.
The event, held on the anniversary of Nimitz' 129th
birthday, will be streamed live on the Navy Live Blog
(http://navylive.dodlive.mil/). It will feature a lecture discussing the Gray
Book as well as a question & answer session with U.S. Naval Academy Professor
of History Emeritus Craig L. Symonds, PhD, author of numerous books including
"The Battle of Midway," in which he recounts the pivotal role played
by Nimitz in what was the turning point of the war in the Pacific.
Viewers of the live stream will be able to submit questions
via an interactive chat.
"There's perhaps no greater champion of freedom in the
history of the United States Navy than Chester Nimitz and his leadership of the
Pacific Fleet during World War II," said Naval War College President Rear
Adm. Walter E. "Ted" Carter, Jr.
Naval History and Heritage Command's (NHHC) Operational
Archives, which possesses the physical collection, provided expertise and
support to the Naval War College effort to publish the high-quality digital
version of the documents.
The WWII historic treasure, named for the color of its
original cover, is a daily record of the combat situation in the Pacific
Theater and responses of the Commander in Chief, Pacific, and Pacific Ocean
Areas (Nimitz) throughout the War. Staff-member Capt. James Steele began it on
the day Pearl Harbor was attacked and ended it on Aug. 31, 1945, just two days
before the formal end of the war.
"I've seen the collection and it's really a national
treasure," said Capt. Henry Hendrix, Ph.D., director of the Naval History
and Heritage Command. "They clearly reveal what Nimitz thought was
important, which gives the reader a great deal of insight into how his
experiences both operationally and at the Naval War College informed and
influenced his prosecution of the war. I'm extremely pleased we can now share
it with researchers, the American public, and Sailors past and present. I'm
eager to see the collection discussed and to demonstrate the continued
relevance of leveraging history in the decision making process."
Nimitz was assigned to relieve Adm. Husband Kimmel, and
arrived in Pearl Harbor on Christmas Day, 1941. Nearly three years later, he
was advanced to the newly created rank of Fleet Admiral - five stars. Less than
a year later, Sept. 2, 1945, he signed the instrument of the Japanese surrender
aboard the battleship USS Missouri (BB 63) in Tokyo Bay.
"You're getting the whole picture, from the South
Pacific to the Aleutians, and picking up on the progress of the war," said
Robert Cressman, a historian at NHHC.
Including records from individual ships, readers can see how
each piece fit into the larger whole - while the war was raging around them.
The physical collection consists of 4,030 single-sided pages filling 28 bankers
boxes held at the Operational Archives at the Washington Navy Yard in
Washington, D.C. The size and complexity of the document reflects the magnitude
of the job Nimitz undertook commanding the Pacific fleet controlling the
expanse of the Pacific Theater, which now comprises more than 100 million
square miles and more than half the Earth's surface.
It is "the most authoritative source on the Pacific War
available anywhere," said Naval War College Historian Douglas Smith.
"Making the document public allows for a better understanding and context of
the unique value and consequence of the U.S. Navy, and Nimitz's approach in
directing the Pacific campaign."
Its pages fragile after decades of storage, the collection
would largely be inaccessible. The digitization, conducted gingerly, makes the
holding available worldwide to researchers, naval history enthusiasts, and
Sailors interested in their naval heritage. As the Navy continues to rebalance
toward the Asia-Pacific region in accordance with the Defense Strategic
Guidance, the Gray Book offers unique insight into this pivotal operational
period.
"I think it's immensely valuable for people to see how
it was done," said Cressman. "You're getting a fly-on-the-wall
approach to how decisions were made and how the war was fought."
The Naval War College Foundation funded the endeavor, which
started in August 2012. The documents have been scanned before, but the higher
quality scans will offer researchers, scholars and enthusiasts a better way to
search through the tome. The Naval History and Heritage Command (NHHC) directly
supported the digitization effort, and is currently actively remediating its
archival holdings and facilities in order to both safeguard them, and
ultimately to make them safely accessible to improve future naval understanding
and decision-making.
The Gray Book was declassified in 1972.
The Naval History and Heritage Command, located at the
Washington Navy Yard, is responsible for the preservation, analysis, and
dissemination of U.S. Naval history and heritage. It is composed of many activities
including the Navy Department Library, the Navy Archives, the Navy art and
artifact collections, underwater archaeology, Navy history, nine museums, USS
Constitution repair facility and the historic ship Nautilus.
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