My grandfather had just moved to Hawaii to work in Pearl Harbor. In fact his first day on the job was Dec 2, 1941. He had moved first and my grandmother was going to follow shortly after. After the attack a total black out went down and she didn’t hear a thing from him for many months, didn’t know if he was dead or alive. After about 6 months she got a letter in the mail from him which was almost completely blacked out. Basically all they allowed through was “Dear Rose … I love you … Max.” He never talked about what went down that day.
My Scoutmaster back in the 80s was a young scout at the time. He was probably 12 or 13. A lot of US fire directed at the Japanese missed and fell back down on Honolulu. And naturally there were lots of panic in the streets. His scout troop (which was to become my troop as well) lent their boypower to the police and helped direct traffic on McCully street and did other duties around the area. He didn’t come home for three days.
I was seated at my desk in school and the teacher said today we’ll learn about WWII. Is even half the US population old enough to remember events from that day?
Let’s say one had to be at least 5 years old to remember it personally. That means, this year, you’d have to be at least 72 years old. Turning to U.S. poulation data, it appears that about 8 million U.S. residents are 70+. Since there are about 300 million U.S. residents, that works out to 2.7%.
Or, to answer your question, Harmonius, No.
Disclaimer: these stats were pulled off of the 'net in a hurried fashion and may not be strictly accurate.