|
Pacific Combat Zone
The Pacific Combat Zone is the latest and most illustrative exhibit
area of the Museum. Opening on December 7, 2001 amidst 30,000
visitors commemorating the sixtieth anniversary of the attack
on Pearl Harbor, the three-acre Zone, which is visited through
guided tour groups, is captivating old and young alike by transporting
them through various combat locations of the Pacific War. As you
sit on the hangar deck of an aircraft carrier, you watch a Movietone
News report of wartime events and then see an Avenger dive-bomber,
wings folded back, being readied for a strike. You next visit
a South Pacific PT boat base with the world's only combat proven
, restored, PT boat about to depart on a night mission. Then your
guide takes you to a landing area on the Pacific Island where
machine guns, mortars, and the sound of supporting aircraft convince
you of the terror of these operations. Finally, you visit an island
medical unit and hear the poignant report of casualties.
Until the addition of the new building abutting the George Bush Gallery is completed, several of the Pacific War relics that will eventually be
exhibited there can be found on display at the Pacific Combat Zone. Of particular interest is the casing that would have housed the third or fourth
atomic bomb had the Japanese Emperor not surrendered after the Nagasaki bombing.
We Inspire Our Youth by Honoring Our Heroes.
George Bush Gallery | Admiral Nimitz Museum | Plaza of Presidents | Memorial Courtyard
Japanese Garden of Peace | Pacific Combat Zone | The Pacific War Story

|