Monthly Archives: June 2014

US PUNITIVE EXPEDITION, 1916, uniforms

Click to big up

Click to big up

1st Lieutenant, 7th Cavalry Regiment

This figure wears a typical uniform for US officers during the border fighting. The M1911 “olive drab” Montana-peaked hat has officers’ black and gold cords with two acorn tassels. His wool pullover campaign shirt in a similar shade has four dark brown buttons on the placket, and bears his rank bars on the collar; he chooses not to wear the black necktie. His wool riding trousers are a rather darker “olive drab” shade. He is armed with a .45 cal Colt M1911 semi-automatic pistol in a cavalry-type swiveling russet brown holster with “US” embossed on the flap, and secured by a long khaki lanyard looped diagonally around his torso. The M1912 belt also supports a double pistol magazine pouch, and is itself supported by a pair of leather suspenders.

Dispatch rider, 1st Provisional Motorcycle Company

The motorcyclist wears an M1911 olive drab knit wool service sweater with two open hip pockets, worn over the soldier’s campaign shirt and cavalry-style wool trousers. Bandanas were often sported by American soldiers. His goggles are commercially manufactured – the US Army never issued them for Mexican border service. His equipment is limited to the M1910 cartridge belt, leather cavalry-style gloves, and cavalry brown leather leggings worn over the russet brown shoes. Slung across his back is his M1903 Springfield, and on his right hip a non-regulation early model dispatch case of olive drab canvas. His mount is an early Harley-Davidson; the Army began using motorcycles as early as 1913, and in 1916 the Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Company’s product became the vehicle of choice during the pursuit of Pancho Villa. By 1917 roughly one-third of all Harley-Davidsons produced were sold to the US military. In the background is a US/Mexican border marker.

Sergeant, 24th Infantry Regiment

This NCO from the African-American US 24th Infantry wears the M1911 Montana-peak hat with light blue infantry cords, a well-worn OD campaign shirt, wool trousers and laced khaki canvas leggings, with the M1910 pack, cartridge belt and first aid pouch. The bayonet for his M1903 Springfield is carried in a scabbard covered with canvas and a leather chape. He is drinking from his M1910 aluminum canteen. In the foreground is the M1909 Benet-Mercie machine rifle, which made its combat debut with the US Cavalry during Pancho Villa’s raid on Columbus, New Mexico.
-Hattip (Stephen Walsh)

1916 villa expedition

The long flying, hard landing, RAE Larynx

HMS_Stronghold_(1919)_IWM_SP_002497

Behold! The 276-foot, 1100-ton British S-class destroyer HMS Stronghold. Built by Scott’s, laid down March 1918, launched 6 May 1919, and completed 2 July 1919, she was used as a test-bed for an interesting bit of kit in the 1920s.

Larynx

Here she is fitted with the Royal Aircraft Establishment (RAE) Larynx. This designation was for the Long Range Gun with Lynx Engine, an inert unmanned missile on a cordite-fired catapult mounted aboard Stronghold. The picture was taken July 1927. The man on the box is Dr. George Gardner; later Director of RAE.

That year the device was tested three times. On the first, the craft, which could reach 200mph and was controlled by radio, crashed at sea. The second, it roared off, was spotted about 100 miles away (at sea) and then was never seen again. The third test, on October 15, 1927, flew some 112 miles and impacted some 5 miles from its intended target.

The catapult was removed from Stronghold after this test although a sister-ship, HMS Thanet, conducted two more launches in 1928 while a final two were done over British-occupied Iraq in 1929 with similar results.

HMS Stronghold herself was lost in action south of Java 4 March 1942, destroyed by (manned) warplanes of the Imperial Japanese Army.

100 Years ago today

_75828583_gavrilo-graffiti

Graffiti of Gavrilo Princip in Belgrade, Serbia. Text in Serbian reads: “Our ghosts will wander through Vienna, stroll around the palaces and scare the masters

 

princep

 

Scary to think that two pistol shots from a Browning .380ACP would cause 38 million casualties and sweep three empires into the dustbin of history.

 

The Delaware Regiment, The Battle of Long Island — August 27, 1776

Deleware regiment at the battle of long island

This is a great portrayal, and take special notice of the uniforms, which became the first US Army standard, and the green-banner of the Regiment. However, remember this was late August, so you can imagine how hot these troopies are.

At the Battle of Long Island, the actions of the Delaware Regiment kept the American defeat from becoming a total, possibly war-ending, disaster. Indeed, the soldiers from tiny Delaware, fighting alongside the 1st Maryland Regiment, may well have prevented the capture of the majority of Washington’s army, an event that might have ended the colonial rebellion then and there.

The 1st Delaware Regiment was a relatively new force, raised in eight companies on 9 December 1775 for one year of voluntary service with the continental army under the command of Colonel John Haslet– an Irishman who had served as a Captain of militia during the French and Indian War and knew his business.

The unit was noteworthy from the start as the best uniformed and equipped regiment of the Continental Army. Their blue jackets with red facings and white waistcoat and breeches would later become the uniform for all the Continental troops.

During the Battle of Long Island, the Delaware and Maryland troops were positioned on the right of Washington’s line, defending the most direct route from the British landing site in south Brooklyn to the American fortifications in Brooklyn Heights.

Though they faced the fiercest fighting of the day, they held their ground, allowing the remainder of Washington’s army to retreat to the safety of the fortifications. When they in turn were outflanked and forced to retreat, the Delaware Regiment conducted an orderly retreat through marshland and across the Gowanus Creek carrying off with them 23 prisoners. Two nights later, Washington entrusted his Delaware and Maryland soldiers to be the rear guard as he secretly withdrew his army from Brooklyn to Manhattan.

The regiment, some 321 strong, would later survive the hard winter at Valley Forge then see action at the Trenton and Princeton (where Haslet was killed), Brandywine, Germantown and Guilford Court House. The regiment was furloughed on 17 January 1783 at Christiana Bridge, Delaware and disbanded on 15 November 1783. The unit would be reformed for the War of 1812, Civil War (where it covered itself with glory at Antietam and Gettysburg and later as part of the famed Gibraltar Brigade), WWI (Meuse-Argonne) and WWII (fighting in the Solomons).

Today, the 198th Signal Battalion, Delaware Army National Guard, perpetuates the proud lineage of the Delaware Regiment.

 

What the heck?

m4 with Regulated Emission Collimated Ocular Interruption Laser

See this hanging off the end of this M4/AR style platform? PEQ-15? Betamax? Burrito maker? Universal remote? Nope, its a Regulated Emission Collimated Ocular Interruption Laser of course.

Still clueless? Its a non-lethal laser that delivers a bright beam of light that produces a dazzling or glare effect on a closing target to warn and/or suppress potential threats through increasing levels of visual degradation. In short, if you have what may be a bad guy coming up on you and you want to warn them off without sending some 5.56 their way, you can use this to dazzle em.

If they aren’t impressed, well then you can always riddle them with bullets later.

Now you know

Guns of the Dirty Nickel

Sailors and Marines from the multipurpose amphibious assault ship USS Bataan participating in a swim call.

 

Sailors and Marines from the multipurpose amphibious assault ship USS Bataan, LHD-5,  (popularly known as the Dirty Nickel) participating in a swim call. June 14, 2014.

The image gives you a very nice view of the LHD’s stern, showing off part of her multi-layered self-defense suite. At the top left you see a CIWS 20mm (improved Block 1B) then, in the center, is an eight pack Mk-29 Guided Missile Launching System (Sea Sparrow) launcher over a stabilized and remotely operated (Typhoon Weapon System) Mk38 MOD2 25mm chaingun, and finally on the right is a 21-cell Mk 31 Guided Missile Weapon System (GMWS) launcher for Rolling Air Frame missiles.  All in all, not too shabby.

The Coast Guard on canvas: 2014 Art Program

The USCG announced the latest installments in their incredibly moving, yet little-known Art Program.

In this work from the U.S. Coast Guard Art Program 2014 Collection, "Search Light" ID# 201414, An Air Station Miami MH-65 Dolphin flies low over a small boat station crew in turbulent waters of Biscayne Bay to conduct search and rescue training exercises. In order to be prepared for emergencies occurring at any time, crew members routinely complicate training exercises by performing them at night. (U.S. Coast Guard Art Program work by Karen Loew)

In this work from the U.S. Coast Guard Art Program 2014 Collection, “Search Light” ID# 201414, An Air Station Miami MH-65 Dolphin flies low over a small boat station crew in turbulent waters of Biscayne Bay to conduct search and rescue training exercises. In order to be prepared for emergencies occurring at any time, crew members routinely complicate training exercises by performing them at night. (U.S. Coast Guard Art Program work by Karen Loew)

 

In this work from the U.S. Coast Guard Art Program 2014 Collection, “Above the Seneca,” Coast Guard Cutter Seneca patrols in the Straits of Florida. (U.S. Coast Guard Art Program work by James Consor)

In this work from the U.S. Coast Guard Art Program 2014 Collection, “Above the Seneca,” Coast Guard Cutter Seneca patrols in the Straits of Florida. (U.S. Coast Guard Art Program work by James Consor)

 

 

For more information click here

And you thought you had a bad day at work….

Republic of Korea minesweeper YMS-516 is blown up by a magnetic mine

Republic of Korea minesweeper Gongju (YMS 516) is blown up by a magnetic mine, most likely a Soviet made M08, during sweeping operations west of Kalma Pando, Wonsan harbor, on 18 October 1950.

Built at Western Boat Building Co., Tacoma, WA as the U.S. Navy’s YMS-148, she was one of legions of YMS-1 class auxiliary motor minesweepers. These hardy 270-ton, 136-foot long vessels were manned by a 32-man crew and could make 15-knots at a full clip with everything wide open. YMS-148 never actually served in the US active fleet, being transferred to the Royal Navy 15 May 1943 and reclassified first HMS J-948, then HMS BYMS-2148.

Serving in India and Ceylon on the lookout for Japanese mines, she was returned to Uncle in 1946 and laid up before being transferred in 1949 to the young and fledgling South Korean Navy.

(Source: history.navy.mil)

Warship Wednesday June 25, The Fighting Swenson

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday June 25, The Fighting Swenson

1945 in the Pacific, photographed from DD-745. Courtesy Robert Baumbrucker, NHC NH 89376. Ed Zajkowski

1945 in the Pacific, photographed from DD-745. Courtesy Robert Baumbrucker, NHC NH 89376. Ed Zajkowski

Here we see USS Lyman K. Swenson (DD-729), an Allen M. Sumner-class destroyer, in all of her World War Two glory pounding it out on the high seas. She is the only ship named for naval hero Lyman Knute Swenson (USNA 1916).

One of those rare early 20th century officers who did everything, from battleships to submarines to destroyers, he was the wartime commander of the hard-luck light cruiser USS Juneau (CL-52). Twice torpedoed during the Battle of Guadalcanal, in what historian S. E. Morison called the “wildest most desperate sea fight since Jutland,” Juneau sank rapidly, taking under Swenson and most of her crew, including the five Sullivan brothers. This battle prevented the Japanese from landing reinforcements on Guadalcanal and Swenson was awarded the Navy Cross for his actions.

A warbaby, the destroyer that carried his name was laid down September 11th, 1943 at Bath Iron Works in Maine with his daughter sponsoring the vessel. Commissioned in Boston 2 May 1944, she was rushed off to war.

The 58-ship Sumner-class were large and heavily armed when compared to the old flush-deck destroyers that preceded them. Sandwiched between the svelte Fletcher-class and the follow-on Gearing-class (which were nothing but modified Sumners), these boats cost some $8 mill a pop (although Bath contracted for $5.1 million for Swenson) and Uncle Sugar got a swell deal from them, with most of the class serving into the 1970s.

At 3500-tons full load and 376-feet long, these bruisers packed a half-dozen 5-inch/38 DP guns (in twin mounts) as well as a dozen 40mm Bofors, another dozen 20mm guns, a brace of 10 torpedo tubes to take on Japanese cruisers, plus depth charges to bust enemy subs with. As such, they had much more kick than the Fletcher-class that preceded them, while still being able to float in as little as 16 feet of water (at a light load) and make 34-knots when needed. Capable of carrying more than 500 tons of fuel oil for her boilers, these ships had long legs, and could run 6000-nm on a full load, more than three times early pre-war built destroyers– which was important in the far-flung pacific.

DD729d

Swenson arrived in the Philippines as part of the screen of Carrier Task Group 38.4 in October, 1944. There, off Samar on 30 October, she was the first US ship to fire on the first Japanese Kamikaze suicide planes. She went on to sail with Task Group 38.1 on the epic 3800-mile raid around the Pacific rim in January 1945, participated in the daring nighttime anti-shipping run thorough the entrance of Tokyo Bay with DESRON 61 on 22/23 July, helping to sink two freighters with her 5-inch guns, and witnessed the surrender of Japan that September.

All in all she had a very successful and lucky war, putting some 200,000 miles on her hull in just over a year.

USS Swenson in heavy swells alongside USS Wasp, January 1945. Photo 80G 301572 by John Chiquoine

USS Swenson in heavy swells alongside USS Wasp, January 1945. Photo 80G 301572 by John Chiquoine

She spent the next five years in quiet peacetime operations around the Pacific, finding herself stationed in Japan when the balloon went up in Korea in 1950. Pressed into service as a transport, she transported the US Army’s 560th MP company to Pusan then sent the next several months in plane guard and shore bombardment missions.

USS Lyman K. Swenson 10

 

She fired no less than 1700 rounds of 5″ shells into the forces attacking the Pusan perimeter, exploded floating mines with her 40mm guns at Inchon, and traded shots with North Korean shore batteries on the island of Wolmi-Do. In covering the landings at Inchon she fired another 1400 rounds of 5″ and three thousand rounds of 40-mm. For this action Swenson and the five other destroyers with her were awarded the Navy Unit Commendation and the Korean Presidential Unit Citation.

A Chaplain reads the Last Rites service as Lieutenant (JG) David H. Swensen is buried at sea from USS Toledo, off Inchon, where he had been transferred for his wounds. The Lieutenant had been struck by shrapnel from North Korean shore-based artillery while his ship, USS Lyman K. Swenson was bombarding enemy positions on Wolmi-do island, Inchon, on 13 September 1950. The USS Swenson is seen observing the service in the distance.

A Chaplain reads the Last Rites service as Lieutenant (JG) David H. Swensen is buried at sea from USS Toledo, off Inchon, where he had been transferred for his wounds. The Lieutenant had been struck by shrapnel from North Korean shore-based artillery while his ship, USS Lyman K. Swenson was bombarding enemy positions on Wolmi-do island, Inchon, on 13 September 1950. The USS Swenson is seen observing the service in the distance.

After stateside refit in 1951 where she received up to date radars and electronics, as well as new barrels for her shot-out five inchers, she returned to Korean waters where she landed troops behind enemy lines, rescued downed fliers, and pummeled North Korean railway yards and trains, being one of the few members of the club of naval ships that have sent locomotives cartwheeling through the air.

Following the cessation of hostilities there, came more peacetime service.

She was FRAMM’d in 1960. This removed most of her WWII era AAA armament, added facilities for the nifty Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH) UAV (yes, they had them back then!) replaced her 21-inch torpedo tubes with two triple Mark 32 tubes for the Mark 44 ASW torpedo, and added Variable Depth Sonar (VDS). She also got her first ECM gear and modern sonars and radar, effectively making her as effective as a contemporary new destroyer at a fraction of the cost.

DASH drone on USS Swenson. Photo by Curt Helmer, DD729  website

DASH drone on USS Swenson. Photo by Curt Helmer, DD729 website

As soon as Vietnam got hot she was there, participating in naval gunnery support missions along the I Corps area during 15 days in October 1964, she fired no less than 2966 rounds of 5″ ammunition.

 

swenson vietnam

Follow-on tours in 1967, 68, 69, well you get the idea, saw more gunfire support with her miniature drone deck being just large enough to accommodate the occasional Huey. She also played plane guard on Yankee station during this time between participating in the Mekong Yacht Club.

USS Swenson in 1969 Vietnam coastal waters. Image courtesy of Earl Faubion, DD729 website

USS Swenson in 1969 Vietnam coastal waters. Image courtesy of Earl Faubion, DD729 website

With the looming wrap up of the Vietnam conflict (at least for the Americans) her days were numbered. The Navy was pushing for a new fleet of huge 7000-ton Spruance class destroyers, twice as large as the Sumners, and room had to be made.

The old fighting Swenson was decommissioned and struck from the Naval List 1 February 1974, just shy of her 30th birthday.

In addition to the Navy Unit Commendation, the ship earned the following awards: American Campaign, Asiatic-Pacific Campaign (with 5 battle stars), World War II Victory, Navy Occupation Service, China Service, National Defense Service, Korean Service (with 6 battle stars), Armed Forces Expeditionary, Vietnam Service (with 10 stars), United Nations Service, Philippine Liberation (with one star), Korean Presidential Unit Citation, and Republic of Vietnam Campaign.

A dozen of the Sumner-class destroyers were sold to the Republic of China (Taiwan) between 1969-1974, with Swenson being one of the last to go. She was never recommissioned into the ROC navy, being used as a floating source of spare parts.

Finally by the 1990s she was scrapped. However there are undoubtedly parts from her that still remain afloat on the USS Taussig, which since 1970 served Taiwan as the as Lo Yang (DD-14). Since 2000, that hardy old tin can, the last of her class still in military service, has been semi-preserved as a floating museum at Cijin Port, Kaohsiung City, Taiwan.

The only Sumner class destroyer in the U.S is the USS Laffey DD-724. Known as the “Ship that would not die” Laffey survived a swarm of 22 kamikazes during WWII and served alongside Swenson at Inchon in 1950. She is preserved as memorial and berthed at Patriot’s Point, Charleston, South Carolina.

Please visit her when you get a chance.

The former crew-members of the might Swenson have their own reunion site and at http://www.dd729.com/ which supplied many of the images here.

 

Specs:

(Off Mare Island 1945)

(Off Mare Island 1945)

(As built)
Displacement: 2,200 tons (3500-fl)
Length: 376 ft 6 in (114.8 m)
Beam: 40 ft (12.2 m)
Draft: 15 ft 8 in (4.8 m)
Propulsion: 60,000 shp (45 MW);
2 propellers
Speed: 34 knots (63 km/h)
Range: 6500 nmi. (12,000 km) @ 15 kt
Complement: 336
Armament: 6 × 5 in./38 guns (12 cm),
12 × 40mm AA guns,
11 × 20mm AA guns,
10 × 21 in. torpedo tubes,
6 × depth charge projectors,
2 × depth charge tracks

After FRAM II: (1960)
6 × 5 in/38 cal guns (127 mm) (in 3 × 2 Mk 38 DP mounts)
2 × triple Mark 32 torpedo tubes for Mark 44 torpedoes
1 × Drone Anti-Submarine Helicopter (DASH)
Variable Depth Sonar (VDS), ALR-1 EW suite
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