The Columbus Dispatch

U.S. declares war on Japan on Dec. 7, 1941

- Paul Souhrada Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

More than 2,300 U.S. troops died in the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941, an assault that pulled the country in World War II.

One veteran who survived that day and later resettled to Greater Columbus was Milton Mapou.

Mapou’s story was recounted more than once in The Dispatch.

He grew up in the Rockaway Beach neighborho­od of Queens and enlisted in the U.S. Navy as a boatswain’s mate in 1940. On the morning of the Pearl Harbor attack, he had just filled his breakfast tray when the sky filled with planes. He ran topside.

“I looked up, and I seen this plane coming,” he once told The Dispatch.

Mapou’s ship, the USS Detroit, was spared in the attack, and he was virtually unscathed – physically, anyway.

He was reassigned to the USS Pringle, a warship that was split into two and sunk on April 6, 1945, during the battle of Okinawa. Mapou was one of 258 who survived that attack – barely. His body was shattered, and he was left floating, nearly dead, until sailors from another ship plucked him from the water hours later.

Mapou eventually moved to Columbus’ South Side, where he almost always was seen

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