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During the Second World War, there were no direct land attacks
against the east coast of the United States by any of the Axis powers. Florida,
however, was prepared for just that possibility. In early 1941 the Florida
Legislature established the State Defense Council to organize civilian defense
throughout the state. Even earlier, in August 1940, Mr. Guy Allen of Tampa was
instrumental in establishing an unofficial "Florida Motorcycle Corps" to help
defend the area against possible attacks from German submarines. The Motorcycle
Corps later became part of the State Defense Council and escorted military
convoys. |
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Following the mobilization of the Florida National Guard in 1940 and 1941, a
Florida Defense Force, later known as the Florida State Guard, was established
to assume the duties of the departed National Guard. By 1943 the Florida Defense
Force numbered 2,100 men in 36 units. Other Floridians served as air raid
wardens, airplane spotters, and civil defense wardens. Civilian yachtsmen formed
coastal patrol organizations and others volunteered to help the Coast Guard
patrol the thousands of miles of unprotected beaches.
The state's vulnerable position became evident shortly after Pearl
Harbor. In early 1942 German submarines opened an offensive, code named
Operation Drumbeat, against the virtually-undefended Allied shipping lanes along
the east coast. Before the carnage was over, nearly 400 ships had been sunk, and
thousands of lives lost. Dozens of ships were torpedoed just off Florida's
Atlantic Coast, and others in the Gulf of Mexico. German submarine skippers used
the lights of coastal cities to silhouette their targets. Oil, debris and dead
bodies were mixed with the driftwood, seashells and tourists along Florida's
Atlantic Coast during that bloody first half of 1942. One of the more
spectacular sinkings occurred on April 11, 1942, when the SS Gulfamerica,
carrying 90,000 barrels of fuel oil from Port Arthur, Texas to New York was
torpedoed and exploded into flames just four miles off Jacksonville Beach. Oil
and debris drifted ashore from the sinking. Increased U.S. Navy escorting and
antisubmarine patrols eventually improved the situation off the east coast, but
sinkings remained fairly common until the end of the war.
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