80 years ago this week, a fantastic series of photos of the late South Dakota-class battleship USS Indiana (BB 58) conducting a high-speed turn in Puget Sound, November 30, 1944.
BuShips photos via Navsource and the Indiana State Library collection.
How about this great shot showing off her 9 16″/45s, 20 5″/38s, 28 40mm/60 Bofors, and 35 20mm/80 Oerlikons.
Indiana, commissioned on 30 April 1942, had spent two years forward deployed in the Western Pacific, earning her stripes, before arriving at the Navy Yard at Bremerton on 23 October for a refit. She would remain there into early December before arriving at Pearl Harbor on New Year’s 1945. By 24 January 1945, her guns were ringing out against Iwo Jima and she would spend the rest of the war operational.
She traveled 180,000 nm during her war service, conducting six shore bombardment campaigns, bagging 15 Japanese planes, and earning nine battle stars in the process.
Decommissioned on 11 September 1947, she languished in mothballs for 15 years until stricken from the NVR and sold in 1963 for her value in scrap metal.
Her home state has an extensive collection of her relics at the War Memorial Museum in Indianapolis.
The Virginia-class fast-attack submarine USS Minnesota (SSN 783) arrived at her new homeport of Naval Base Guam, on 26 November as part of the U.S. Navy’s “strategic laydown plan for naval forces in the Indo-Pacific region.”
241126-N-VC599-1007 U.S. NAVAL BASE GUAM (Nov. 26, 2024) – The Virginia-class fast attack submarine USS Minnesota (SSN 783) arrives onboard U.S. Naval Base Guam, Nov 26. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Justin Wolpert)
“Regarded as apex predators of the sea, Guam’s fast-attack submarines serve at the tip of the spear, helping to reaffirm the submarine forces’ forward-deployed presence in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific,” says the Navy.
Joining a quartet of older Los Angeles-class fast-attack submarines of Polaris Point’s SubRon15, she is the first of her class to be forward deployed to Guam.
Official period caption. “80th Infantry Division. Near Faulquemont, France. 23 November, 1944. Three American infantrymen eat K Rations on Thanksgiving day in a dugout somewhere in France. They will be relieved later and will have Thanksgiving dinner in the evening with their unit.”
Photographer: Pfc. Howard E. James, 166th Signal Photo Co. SC 197157, U.S. National Archives. Digitized by Signal Corps Archive.
The soldiers are left to right: Sgt. Albert E. Burns, 1308 E. Gilbert Street, Muncie, Ind., Pfc. John K. Smith, Munderstar Route, Brookville PA., and Pvt. Robert H. Seymour, Newark, N.Y.
Nicknamed the “Blue Ridge Division,” the 80th was ordered activated on 15 July 1942. Arrived in England on 7 July 1944, they landed in France on D+58, 3 August 1944, then were in combat five days later.
In just 239 days on the line from Northern France to the Ardennes to the Rhineland and Central Europe, the outfit suffered 180.8 percent casualties (some 25,472 men killed, wounded, or missing).
Besides 4 MoHs, 33 DSCs, 671 Silver Stars, and 3,557 Bronze, the 80th’s biggest prize was probably the whopping 212,295 enemy prisoners they took on the push through Bavaria and Austria.
Remember to be Thankful for what’s in front of you, today, gents.
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Warship Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2024: Ron Three
French Navy image
Above we see the white-hulled U.S. Coast Guard Reliance-class cutter Valiant (WMEC 621), steaming alongside the French Navy’s surveillance frigate FS Ventose (F733) on 29 Sept. 2024, while underway in the Windward Passage. Valiant, built in the 1960s, originally carried a 3″/50 DP gun of the same sort they used to put on submarines in WWII, but since the 1990s has only carried a 25mm chain gun forward. Ventose, which is only marginally larger than the cutter, totes a 3.9″/55 DP gun in a CADAM turret recycled from the old carrier Clemenceau.
The French, in their design concept behind Ventose and her sisters, intended them for solo overseas constabulary service, roughly akin to what the USCG’s large cutters have done for over a century Sadly, the Coast Guard long ago landed their big guns and today just have 57mm pop guns on even their largest cutters.
It wasn’t always like that.
Coast Guard Squadron Three
Immediately after the Gulf of Tonkin Incident in 1964, the Navy got heavily involved in Southeast Asia. One rub of the situation was that road-poor Vietnam had a river and stream-dotted 12,000-mile coastline and a myriad of some 60,000 small craft in its littoral. That meant the only way you could halt and screen this shallow-water maritime traffic was by getting your own shallow-water assets and the saga of the “Brown Water Navy” and Operation Market Time was born.
By August 1965, TF 115 comprised eight large U.S. Navy vessels (primarily DERs augmented by MSOs and MSCs), 11 Coast Guard WPBs, 15 VNN Sea Force ships, and 215 junks. These were soon augmented by hundreds of the new 50-foot PCFs (Swiftboats), and the Navy sent more and more old destroyers and escorts into the near-shore zone for interdiction and naval gunfire support.
ADM Roy Johnson, Commander Pacific Fleet, forced in March 1967 to reassign Market Time DERs to a new interdiction campaign, known as Operation Sea Dragon, against lines of communication in North Vietnam, requested five Coast Guard high endurance cutters (WHECs) to replace the DERs in the Market Time barrier. Thus was born Commander, Task Unit (CTU) 70.8.6 (Coast Guard Squadron Three).
The Ships
In early 1967, the Coast Guard had 37 of what they termed at the time “high endurance cutters,” larger ocean-going vessels that were expected to be pressed into service as destroyer escorts/patrol frigates should WWIII start.
Between 4 May 1967 and 31 January 1972, no less than 31 HECs completed lengthy deployments to Vietnam, one of them twice. These weren’t short cruises. All were at least six months long while many were well past that to nine or ten months. Keep in mind this was while the agency was still part of the civilian U.S. Transportation Department (they have been part of Homeland Security since 2003) and not transferred wholesale to the Navy as in WWI and WWII.
These 31 ships included six of six 327-foot Treasury-class cutters that had seen convoy escort and amphibious landing operations in WWII; nine of 18 smaller and almost as well-traveled 311-foot Casco-class cutters (former WWII Navy Barnegat-class small seaplane tenders); nine of 13 stubby 255-foot Owasco-class cutters which entered service just after WWII, and the seven of nine brand-new 378-foot Hamilton-class cutters which included such modern features as helicopter hangars and gas turbine powerplants.
Nine of the 18 311-foot Casco class cutters would serve in CGRON3 off Vietnam– and two of them would transfer to the RVNN at the end of their U.S. service (listing via the 1960 ed of Janes)
A big reason these were sent to Vietnam was that they had a relatively shallow draft (12.5 feet on the 311s and 327s, 17 on the 255s, and 15 on the 378s), allowing them to operate close to shore, surface search radar (SPS-23, augmented by SPS-29 air search), had a decent commo suite that allowed interfacing with Big Navy C4I assets, had crews familiar with sometimes sketchy coastwise interdiction in a littoral, and, most importantly, all carried a simple and easily supportable Mark 12 DP 5-inch gun (in enclosed Mk 30 single mountings with local Mk. 26 Fire Control) and knew how to use it.
The Deployments
In all, the 31 cutters sent to Vietnam steamed 1,292,094 combined miles on station, spending some 62.6 percent of their time underway conducting 205 Market Time patrols.
Five Casco class Barnegat class cutters 311 USCG Squadron Three, probably taken in Subic Bay on the way to Vietnam in 1967
CGRON3 headed to Vietnam in a column from Subic Bay
This was enabled by 1,153 underway replenishments and a smaller number of vertical replenishments.
At sea off Vietnam. Australian destroyer HMAS Hobart approaching a Mispillion class replenishment oiler USS Passumpsic (AO-107) as it is tanking a Coast Guard 311-foot HEC, likely CGC Pontchartrain. AWM Photo P01904.005 by Peter Michael Oleson.
The Coast Guard sent eight deployments of HECs to support CGRON3 with the first five each comprised of five high-endurance cutters. The sixth deployment included three high-endurance cutters, with two of the three turned over to the Vietnamese Navy at the end of the tour. The seventh and eighth deployments each consisted of just two cutters.
First Deployment
USCGC Barataria (WHEC 381) 4 May 67 — 25 Dec 67 (Casco) USCGC Half Moon (WHEC 378) 4 May 67 — 29 Dec 67 (Casco) USCGC Yakutat (WHEC 380) 4 May 67 — 1 Jan 68 (Casco) USCGC Gresham (WHEC 387) 4 May 67 — 28 Jan 68 (Casco) USCGC Bering Strait (WHEC 382) 4 May 67 — 18 Feb 68 (Casco)
Naval Base Subic Bay – USCG Squadron 3, first deployment, showing five freshly-painted Casco-class cutters alongside the repair ship USS Jason (AR-8) in late April before heading to Vietnam. Note this is before the Coast Guard adopting their now famous bow “racing stripe” 221206-G-G0000-120
A rusty and hard-serving USCGC Barataria (WHEC 381) off Vietnam in late 1967 showed a less than gleaming appearance. Note she doesn’t have a racing stripe yet and her 26-foot Monomoy is away. 230807-G-M0101-2004
Barataria set a fast pace of effectiveness during her deployment in Vietnam waters. Underway 83 percent of the time, the cutter cruised over 67,000 miles without a major mechanical or electrical failure. Keeping a close watch on all moving craft in her surveillance area, Barataria detected, inspected, or boarded nearly 1,000 steel-hulled vessels traversing her area, any one of which could have been a trawler trying to sneak supplies to the enemy. Barataria was called upon many times to use her main battery against shore-based enemy troops who were aggressively engaged with Allied forces. Representative of the high state of readiness and training of the cutter’s men is the fact that U.S. Army spotter planes reported all rounds on target, never once falling out of the target area. On one mission three direct hits were scored on point targets that had been spotted by aircraft. She returned to the US on 12 January 1968 and was reassigned to San Francisco.
Second Deployment
USCGC Androscoggin (WHEC 68) 4 Dec 67 — 4 Aug 68 (Owasco) USCGC Duane (WHEC 33) 4 Dec 67 — 28 Jul 68 (Treasury) USCGC Campbell (WHEC 32) 14 Dec 67 — 12 Aug 68 (Treasury) USCGC Minnetonka (WHEC 67) 5 Jan 68 — 29 Sep 68 (Owasco) USCGC Winona (WHEC 65) 25 Jan 68 — 17 Oct 68 (Owasco)
255-foot Owasco class USCGC Minnetonka (WHEC 67), Vietnam
Of the above, Winona noted in her history that:
She steamed 50,727 miles, spent 203 days at sea, treated 437 Vietnamese, sunk one enemy trawler, destroyed 50 sampans and damaged 44 more, destroyed 137 structures and damaged 254, destroyed 39 bunkers and damaged 27, destroyed two bridges and damaged another, destroyed 3 gun positions and killed 128 enemy personnel, expending a total of 3,291 five-inch shells.
“W O W . . . . . .The initials of these three high endurance cutters spell out that expression of surprise as they nest alongside Riviera Pier at the U.S. Naval Base, Subic Bay, R.P. The three, Winnebago, Owasco, and Winona, along with a fourth unit of Coast Guard Squadron Three, the Bibb, was in Subic Bay for inchop, outchop, and upkeep, marking the first time that this many ships of the five-cutter squadron had visited there since it was formed 18 months ago. The squadron is a part of the Seventh Fleet’s Cruiser Destroyer Group and the cutters serve on the Coastal Surveillance Force’s Operation Market Time in Vietnam.” COMCOGARDRONTHREE PHOTO NO. 101068-01; 18 October 1968; Dale Cross, JOC, USCG, photographer
Owasco’s history notes that on her Vietnam deployment:
By the end of her tour overseas, she had supplied logistical support to 86 Navy Swift boats and 47 Coast Guard 82-foot patrol boats. She had detected 2,596 junks and conducted 178 “actual boardings and 2,341 inspections,” exceeding the “results of any Squadron Three cutter thus far.” She conducted 17 Naval Gunfire Support Missions, firing 1,330 rounds of 5-inch ammunition.” She was officially credited with killing four enemy soldiers, destroying 18 bunkers, and damaging 10, destroying 11 “military structures” and damaging 17, destroying 550 meters of “Enemy Supply Trails,” destroying 1 sampan, 1 loading pier, and interdicting 3 “Enemy Troop Movements.” She carried out 49 underway replenishments while in theatre and her medical personnel carried out 7 medical and civil action programs (MEDCAP), treating 432 Vietnamese civilians.
Fourth Deployment
USCGC Spencer (WHEC 36) 11 Feb 69 — 30 Sep 69 (Treasury) USCGC Mendota (WHEC 69) 28 Feb 69 — 3 Nov 69 (Owasco) USCGC Sebago (WHEC 42) 2 Mar 69 — 16 Nov 69 (Owasco) USCGC Taney (WHEC 37) 14 May 69 — 31 Jan 70 (Treasury) USCGC Klamath (WHEC 66) 7 Jul 69 — 3 Apr 70 (Owasco)
Both Taney and Spencer had already seen much WWII service, with the former being at Pearl Harbor and the latter a bona fide U-boat slayer. Here, on April 17, 1943, USCGC Spencer sinks U-327. National Archives Identifier: 205574168 https://catalog.archives.gov/id/205574168
Fifth Deployment
USCGC Hamilton (WHEC 715) 1 Nov 69 — 25 May 70 (Hamilton) USCGC Dallas (WHEC 716) 3 Nov 69 — 19 Jun 70 (Hamilton) USCGC Chase (WHEC 718) 6 Dec 69 — 28 May 70 (Hamilton) USCGC Mellon (WHEC 717) 31 Mar 70 — 2 Jul 70 (Hamilton) USCGC Pontchartrain (WHEC 70) 2 Apr 1970 — 25 Oct 1970 (Owasco)
Sixth Deployment
USCGC Sherman (WHEC 720) 22 Apr 70 — 25 Dec 70 (Hamilton) USCGC Bering Strait (WHEC 382) 17 May 70 — 31 Dec 70 (Casco) USCGC Yakutat (WHEC 380) 17 May 70 — 31 Dec 70 (Casco)
USCGC Castle Rock (WHEC 383) 9 Jul 71 — 21 Dec 71 (Casco) USCGC Cook Inlet (WHEC 384) 2 Jul 71 — 21 Dec 71 (Casco)
Interdiction
The primary reason for these big cutters to be in Vietnamese waters was to sanitize them by combing out vessel traffic smuggling contraband, primarily small arms and munitions, to Viet Cong guerillas in the south. They did this in spades, closing with some 69,517 vessels in the five years that CGRON3 was part of Market Time. Of these, no less than 50,000 were inspected alongside, while 1,094 were boarded and searched.
At Sea – USCG Squadron 3, Vietnam. Note the 26-foot Mark V Motor Surf Boat, YAK2, likely from CGC Yakutat, dating the photo to 1970. The nine-man crew includes at least two M16s and five flak jackets, hinting at a five-man boarding team. 221206-G-G0000-119
CGC Winona on Market Time Patrol by JOC Dale E. Cross, USCG. Note the M16-armed Coastie on the lookout to the right while the flak-vest-equipped junior officer goes over a mariner’s papers. 231220-G-G0000-107
CGC Winona on Market Time Patrol by JOC Dale E. Cross, May 16, 1968. Release No. 36-68 231220-G-G0000-106
New armaments were fitted to assist with this type of seagoing asymmetric warfare. Cutters typically picked up at least two (later cutters carried as many as six) .50 caliber air-cooled M2 Brownings on pintel mounts.
Also new were pintel-mounted 81mm mortars which could be used either for launching illumination parachute rounds, in counter-ship operations, or in suppressing fire near-shore (out to 4,500 yards).
At Sea – USCG in Vietnam – Market Time – Squadron Three with a detainee on deck, one of at least 128 detained and handed over to local ARVN assets. Note the loaded M2 .50 cal to the left and the sidearm-equipped CPO on watch. 221206-G-G0000-121
CGC Klamath on Market Time, showing off her new 50 cal and mortar emplacement
The 81mm mortar was mounted on either side of the No. 1 (5-inch) mount
311-foot Casco (Barnegat) class cutter Half Moon firing the 5″/38 on NGFS in Vietnam. Note the two mortars on the base of the superstructure between the ship’s Hedgehog ASW device
Campbell’s mortar team
Campbell’s mortar team “hanging an 81” ashore
The circa early 1960s small arms lockers for HECs included 40 M1 rifles, five M1 carbines, 17 .45 caliber M1911s, two Thompson SMGs, and two M1919 .30-caliber LMGs. With Vietnam on the schedule, this was updated.
Clark’s Commandos: CGC Klamath’s Market Time boarding team. Note the M16s, flak vests, .45s, and shotguns
Campbell’s boarding team, casual in flak vests and cut-off dungaree shorts, complete with M16s
From Shots that Hit, a Study of USCG Marksmanship, 1790-1985 by William Wells:
The cutters exchanged their M1 rifles and Thompson SMGs for the M16 rifle. However, many Coast Guardsmen were exceptionally adept at procuring arms of any nature. The use of revolvers in many calibers and models was common, as were communist weapons of which the AK-47 was the favorite. In addition to the M16, the M79 grenade launcher and the M60 machine gun were added. As far as weapons on board the cutters, it was an anything-goes allowance.
Naval Gunfire Support
The large cutters of CGRON3 conducted no less than 1,368 combined NGFS missions, firing a staggering 77,036 5-inch shells ashore. Keep in mind that most of these cutters only carried about 300 rounds in their magazines, so you can look at that amount of ordnance expended being something like 250 ship-loads.
Minnetonka (WHEC-67) providing fire support during the Vietnam War. Note the loose uniform of the day
Minnetonka’s 5-inch “Iron Hoss” blistered after all-night fires
USCGC Wachusett (WHEC-44) NGFS Vietnam
CGC Waschusett At Sea with USCG Vietnam Squadron 3, logging gunfire missions, with the spades due to “digging dirt.” 221206-G-G0000-118
USCGC Cook Inlet conducts a fire support mission off the coast of Vietnam, in 1971
Color photograph of Cutter Duane performing gunfire support mission with its forward 5-inch gun off the coast of Vietnam. U.S. Coast Guard photo.
5/”38 from USCG Hamilton-class cutter providing NGFS off Vietnam
Powder and shell consumption was so high that some cutters would have to underway replenish or VERTREP 2-3 times a week while doing gun ops.
“Crewmen cart high explosive projectiles across the deck of the 311-foot U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Half Moon for the ship’s five-inch gun to hurl at a Viet Cong emplacement near a U.S. Special Forces Camp in the Song on Doc area, South Vietnam.” Coast Guard Photo Rel. No. 6215; 12/67;
To the casual observer, the all-white hulls of Market Time’s high-endurance cutters looked like angels of mercy, but the 5-inch 38-caliber gun mounts on these ships could let loose significant destructive power upon an unsuspecting enemy up to nine miles away. Nine men worked in the cramped confines of these turrets, enduring extreme heat and the ever-present smell of gun grease and cordite, to place ordnance on targets.
In built-up areas like Song On Doc, where the Viet Cong often sheltered in structures, the methodology for dislodging defenders was to set the initial rounds to burst in the air to kill anyone exposed outdoors. Assuming troops will then run for bunkers and slit trenches soon after a bombardment begins, the next shots would be set to hit the ground and explode. Gunners would then walk the rounds across a target area like a checkerboard so as to cover as much of the kill zone as possible. White phosphorus represented the grand finale. Since many Vietnamese structures were made of bamboo, it did not take many well-placed WP rounds to transform a small village or small settlement into smoldering ashes. Shards of white phosphorus extending outwards from an airburst shot literally created a rain of fire, igniting everything in a wide dispersal area.
Commander Herbert J. Lynch, who commanded Winona (WHEC-65) in early 1968, claims it was “nothing to fire 50 rounds of shoreside support. We did so much shooting we had to re-barrell the gun.”
The shallow draft of the cutters was key.
Again, Sherwood:
Although many of these rounds consisted of unspotted harassment and interdiction missions that did little more than tear up ground and knock down palm trees, when Coast Guard vessels were allowed to fire at actual targets, the results could be devastating. For instance, on 27 August, Half Moon conducted a gunfire mission against Viet Cong troops operating on the Ca Mau Peninsula in An Xuyen Province. Subsequent intelligence reports stated that 5-inch fire destroyed three enemy buildings and killed 11 Viet Cong.
On 26 September 1967, Yakutat (WHEC-380) destroyed or damaged 27 fortified enemy positions, four sampans, and an enemy canal blockade in a single gunfire support mission off the coast of An Xuyen Province.
The high endurance cutters, with their relatively shallow 22-foot draft, were the only ships with 5-inch guns capable of operating in the shallow waters of An Xuyen Province and much of the rest of the IV Corps area.
“Sometimes we would go into areas with only one or two feet clearance between the hull and sea floor,” recalled Captain Robert W. Durfey, who commanded Rush (WHEC-723) in 1970, but “fortunately the bottom was mostly mud.”
The Cutter Rush, working with an Australian destroyer, brought its guns to the aid of a small Special Forces camp in the village of Song Ong Doc. The village, located in the middle of Viet Cong-held territory, was being overrun. Gunfire from the two ships drove off the attackers and left 64 Viet Cong dead.
The results, as reported back by ground and air observers, included 2,612 structures destroyed, another 2,676 damaged, and body counts (Vietnam was big on body counts) including 529 enemy KIA and 243 enemy WIA.
Surface engagements
When it came to fighting often heavily-armed enemy cargo trawlers, several pitched sea fights, typically at night, are all but lost to history.
One such fight in March 1968, as told by Sherwood:
The Coast Guard cutter Androscoggin (WHEC-68) made radar contact with the infiltrator at 2047 local time and began maintaining covert surveillance. Early in the morning of 1 March, the trawler crossed into the 12-mile contiguous zone 22 miles from Cape Batangan, and Androscoggin soon challenged it by firing an illumination round. The trawler responded with machine gun fire, and Androscoggin returned fire with her 5-inch 38-caliber guns, hitting the trawler in the starboard quarter. Army helicopter gunships, Point Welcome, Point Grey, and PCFs -18 and -20 joined the attack as the trawler headed toward the beach. At 0210, the trawler beached itself and blew itself up in two attempts. During the battle, machine-gun rounds hit Androscoggin and other units but caused no casualties. Salvage crews later recovered a variety of military cargo from the scene, including 600 rifles, 41 submachine guns, and 11 light machine guns along with ammunition. Of the North Vietnamese crew, all that was recovered was a head and a full set of teeth.
Another fight on the same night saw Winona close to within 550 yards of an armed trawler that lit up the cutter with a mix of .50 caliber and .30 caliber machine guns, hitting the little 255-foot cutter at least 13 times and wounding three of her crew. Once Winona got her 5-incher into play, however, the trawler “disintegrated” with the entire fight lasting just two minutes.
From her history:
“We shadowed the trawler for six long hours into the night before it finally turned for the beach, our cue to intercept. Closing to 700 yards we illuminated and challenged them to stop when a running gun battle ensued. The effect in the night outfourthed the 4th of July. .50 cal. tracers, fiery red in the black, streaked both ways, punctuated by 5″ gun flashes, white with the intensity of burning magnesium. The ricochets whined off into the distance, or metal piercing rounds thwacked through steel. For seven minutes we fought until a 5” round found home at the base of the trawler’s deckhouse, and the night was day, and our ship rocked from the explosion that rained debris on our decks. For meritorious achievement that night, Captain Lynch was awarded the Bronze Star. Lt. Commander [J.A.] Atkinson, conning officer, Lt. [M.J.] Bujarski, gunnery officer, and BM3 “Audie” Slawson, director operator were awarded Navy Accommodation Medals. All four were authorized a Combat “V”.”
There were no enemy survivors. Enemy fire pierced Winona’s hull and deckhouse six times and also left several dents but she sustained no personnel casualties.
Capt. Paul Lutz describing the battle between the cutter Sherman and the large armed trawler SL3 at the mouth of the Mekong on the night of 21 November 1970:
“Sherman sinks armed enemy vessel, SL3, at Mekong River mouth, 21 November 1970” by John Wilinski
After the first round in direct fire with point detonating rounds, I saw an explosion and a bright illumination of the enemy vessel. I knew that prior enemy vessels had usually destroyed themselves when caught by allied forces and accordingly I thought it must be a self-destruct explosion. However, as our succeeding rounds showed as they hit there was the same marked explosion and a vivid illumination of the enemy vessel. Sherman was firing her forward 5″ 38 caliber gun at a maximum rate of fire (as I remember 18 rounds/minute) and every round hit and brilliantly illuminated the enemy. The rhythmic hit, hit, hit, etc. were synchronized with the firing of Sherman’s 5-inch gun and were awesome to observe. After about 8 to 10 rounds (and hits), taking about one half a minute the enemy ship was stopped and brightly burning.
Navy divers later found the trawler full of .60 caliber machine guns and recoilless rifles along “with enough ammunition and weapons to arm a division.”
Motherships
Operating between two and 20 miles offshore, these big cutters were often the closest thing to “The Fleet” that was available to the truly small boats that were running missions inshore.
They proved a home away from home for the growing fleet of CGRON1’s 82-foot patrol boats, of which ultimately 26 were deployed to Vietnam.
Point class cutter refueling from USCGC Dallas in Vietnam
Point class refueling from USCGC Dallas in Vietnam.
USCGC Point Lomas (WPB-82321) alongside the 327-foot USCGC Duane WHEC 33 1968 Vietnam
They also proved of vital support to Navy PCFs, with the small 50-foot Swiftboats typically having to swap out crews every 24 hours to remain on station. This meant lots of hot meals provided for these Brown Water sailors in the cutters’ mess, cold seawater showers, and a place to drop off mail and grab an (often warm) bunk. Then of course the boats would top off their fuel and water, and grab some snacks and ammo as a parting gift before motoring off with a rotated crew.
CGC Bibb in Vietnamese waters with a six-pack of nursing Swiftboats 200227-G-G0000-1003
The cutters also served as a floating hospital, with the ship’s corpsmen and public health service doctors ready to do what they could.
Wounded Swiftboat personnel being transferred to USCGC Campbell
As told by Mendota, who was only a 255-footer herself, a good 30 feet smaller than any cramped destroyer escort fielded in WWII!:
Mendota was not only home to the 160 men who were permanently assigned as her crew. She also served as a mother ship to U.S. Navy Swift boats and their crews, and to a lesser degree the Coast Guard 82-foot patrol boats, which operated in the inner barrier closer to shore. Mendota serviced the 82-footers 40 times during her stay while the Swift boats received logistic support daily, and the crews alternated being on board Mendota every other day. The medical staff also aided 51 men who had been wounded in action.
In all, CGRON3 logged 1,516 small craft replenishments over its five-year history.
Medcaps
As part of the “winning hearts and minds” concept, these big cutters were also active in humanitarian initiatives during lulls in combat. Ongoing Medical Civil Action Program, or MEDCAP, services saw the cutters land their medical personnel ashore to provide public health aid to locals.
This is well-told by Chief Hospital Corpsman Joseph “Doc” White, who served on CGC Bering Strait in 1970 and had to race ashore to respond to an attack on Song Ong Doc village.
Chief Joe White providing medical care to local Vietnamese and their children during a visit to a village in South Vietnam. (Via Mrs. Misa White, USCG photo 201218-G-G0000-1003)
“Doc” White providing medical care to wounded Vietnamese villagers. (Via Mrs. Misa White, USCG photo 201218-G-G0000-1005)
Besides the MEDCAPs, the cutter’s crews were also involved in assorted Civic Action Projects that ranged from installing playground equipment at a village school to passing the hat for enough donations for a refrigerator for the Saigon School for Blind Girls.
She was assigned to Coast Guard Squadron Three, Vietnam, serving in theatre from 2 March to 16 November 1969, while under the command of CDR Dudley C. Goodwin, USCG. She was assigned to support Operation Market Time, including the interdiction of enemy supplies heading south by water and naval gunfire support [NGS] of units ashore. By July 1968, she had conducted 12 NGS missions, destroying 31 structures, 15 bunkers, 2 sampans, and 3 enemy “huts.”
Combat duties were not all the cutter did. The Sebago’s medical staff, including the cutter’s doctor, Public Health Service LT Lewis J. Wyatt, conducted humanitarian missions in Vietnam, treating over 400 villagers “for a variety of ills.” The crew visited the village of Co Luy, 80 miles south of Da Nang, and built an 18-foot extension to a waterfront pier for the villagers. She also served as a supply ship for Coast Guard and Navy patrol boats serving in Vietnamese coastal waters.
The crew of Mendota also participated in humanitarian missions while serving in Vietnam. These missions were concentrated on the village of Song Ong Doc, on the Gulf of Thailand. The medical team conducted MEDCAPS (Medical Care of the Civilian Population), treating over 800 Vietnamese for every variety of medical malady during 14 visits to the village. The crew also helped rebuild a small dispensary. In addition, assistance was rendered to Vietnamese and Thai fishermen who were injured while fishing. U.S. and South Vietnamese forces were also treated by the medical personnel.
Being the Coast Guard, the big cutters took a break from walking their Market Time beat to respond to numerous calls for assistance from mariners in distress.
This included Bibb responding to the Thai M/V Daktachi and her shop crafting her a new drive shaft for her broken fuel pump, Campbell aiding the Filipino vessel Carmelita which had a broken propeller shaft and was drifting in the San Bernadino Strait, Morgenthau rescuing 23 survivors from the sinking merchant ship Joy Taylor, and Owasco pulling off the crew of the SS Foh Hong and towing the flooded vessel to safety. One cutter, Winnebago, chalked up three different maritime rescues, going to the assistance of the swamped Vietnamese coastal freighter Thuan Hing, pulling 35 people from the distressed M/V Fair Philippine Anchorage, and responding to an SOS from SS Aginar.
Endgame
As part of Vietnamization, the Coast Guard did a lot of out-building for the South Vietnamese Navy. The 26 Point class cutters of CGRON1 were all handed over in warm transfers by 1971. Of the 18 311-foot Casco-class cutters operated by the USCG, seven– Absecon, Chincoteague, Castle Rock, Cook Inlet, Yakutat, and Bering Strait — were transferred to South Vietnam in 1971 and 1972.
The last two, Bering Strait and Yakutat, were selected to be used by the Vietnamese Navy as offshore patrol units and operated hybrid mixed crews for the last half of 1970. This earned Bering Strait a haze-grey scheme.
Profile photograph of High-Endurance Cutter Bering Strait in a rare paint scheme of haze gray with Coast Guard “Racing Stripe.” Mackinaw. (Mrs. Misa White)
As detailed by Tulich:
They arrived in Subic Bay in June 1970 with a small cadre of Vietnamese on board, which was supplemented by another contingent at Subic. The VNN personnel were taught the operations of the ship and soon took over important positions in CIC boarding parties, NGFS details, and repair crews. The VNN also performed the external functions of the ship, especially boardings. The VNN officers soon became underway and in-port OODs. Teams assumed engineering watches, navigated, piloted, and provided all the control and most other positions in the NGFS teams. Their training became apparent when a combined USCG/VNN rescue and assistance party from Yakutat extinguished a serious fire and performed damage control on a USN landing ship.
The transfer of Bering Strait and Yakutat at the end of their 1970 deployment, in full color (but silent):
CGRON3 was formally disestablished on 31 January 1972, leaving three shore establishments– the Con Son and Tan My LORAN stations and the USCG Merchant Marine Detachment in Saigon– as the last remnants of the service’s efforts in Vietnam. Even those would be gone by 5 May 1973 when the final Coast Guard personnel departed the country.
Ingham returning from Vietnam in 1969
USCGC Duane (WHEC-33) returning from Vietnam, 1968
Between 1965 and 1973, the USCG sent some 8,000 men to Vietnam– nearly a quarter of its active force– with the bulk of these, more than 6,000, being those afloat with CGRON3.
Of the seven large cutters handed over to the VNN in 1971-72, six escaped to the Philippines after the fall of Saigon in 1975 and went on to be used to varying degrees by the Filipino Navy for another decade. The seventh ship, the former CGC Absecon, was captured and bore a red flag as part of the Vietnam People’s Navy into the 1990s.
The Coast Guard eventually whittled down its remaining Vietnam Veteran cutters with two, Taney and Ingham, preserved as floating museums in Maryland and Florida, respectively.
USCGC Ingham, both a WWII and Vietnam Vet, retired in 1988, is well-preserved in Key West (Photo: Chris Eger)
The last cutter in service that had fired shots into Vietnam in anger, CGC Mellon, only decommissioned on 20 August 2020, capping a 54-year career.
Ironically, Mellon is slated to be transferred to the Vietnam People’s Coast Guard at some point in the future, where she will join former CGRON3 sister Morgenthau, which has been flying a red flag since 2017.
The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.
With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.
PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships you should belong.
These recent shots of Army SF and Marines doing the small boat/frogman thing, complete with Dräger LAR rebreathers and CRRCs. (Components of images have often been blurred for Persec).
U.S. Army Special Forces, from the 7th Special Forces Group, perform an amphibious assault demonstration during the Hyundai Air and Sea Show and U.S. Army SaluteFest, Miami Beach, Fla., May 26, 2024. The events, were held throughout Memorial Day Weekend, (U.S. Army Photos by Master Sgt. Justin P. Morelli).
Coming in hot! Of course, almost any operational landing would be at oh-dark-30, and would be weapons secure until the last possible minute, but you have to show off for the crowds
The 7th SFG’s Area of Responsibility (AOR) includes Latin America, the Caribbean, the Gulf of Mexico, and parts of the Atlantic Ocean
Note the Gen 3 Glock in the Safariland holster of the SF M240 man
Yup, Gen 3 Glock. Probably a G19, which were always popular in SF
Meanwhile, he’s rocking a SIG M17– you can tell by the distinctive spare mags. Also, note the blank firing device faux suppressor
Another Glock, third-gen judging by the finger grooves on the grip
Soldiers with the 2nd Battalion, 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) conduct underwater operations in Key West, FL from Nov. 12-19, 2024. The training was a chance to rehearse realistic missions in a maritime environment using a specialty infiltration technique.
Remember, folks each of the 12 companies within each of the five active Special Forces Groups mans, trains, equips, and deploys a full 12-man Special Forces Underwater Operations (SFUWO) ODA, meaning there are supposed to be something on the order of 60 dive-rated “A teams.”
The 5th Special Forces Group (Airborne) (5th SFG (A)) is responsible for the Middle and Near East.
A swim with an M240 has to be a chore
Marines with 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, train to conduct small boat raids as part of a course hosted by Expeditionary Warfare Training Group, Pacific (EWTGPAC) at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, California. U.S. Marine Corps photos by Cpl. Kyle Chan
U.S. Marines with 1st Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, pilot combat rubber raiding craft during an infantry company small boat raid course hosted by Expeditionary Warfare Training Group Pacific at Naval Amphibious Base Coronado, California, Nov. 14, 2024. During the course, Marines trained to plan and execute swimmer reconnaissance for a small boat raid company in preparation for deployment. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Kyle Chan)
That view, though.
And in related news, how about this deep dive into a Recon Marine’s VBSS kit.
With that, how about a short look at the 20th Century U.S. Army Indian Scouts program?
While the Army used native troops going back to the Revolution, the colonials had native allies as far back as the Pequot War in 1634, and four regiments of Indian Home Guard– recruited in Kansas– were raised in the Civil War, Congress only authorized active recruitment and enlistment of native soldiers– up to 1,000– in 1866, to act as scouts, with detachments in each active regiment, designated “Troop L” in each of 10 cavalry regiments and “Company I” in each of 25 infantry regiments, although generally not of full troop of company strength.
In addition to their role as scouts, they often proved invaluable as interpreters during negotiations, particularly with the Apache.
1870s. A group of Apache Scouts drills with rifles at Fort Wingate, New Mexico. U.S. Army Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-87797. NARA Identifier 530918
The service was not easy, and many perished while on orders. This list is just of those killed on relatively quiet “Northern” service (e.g the Dakotas, Montana, Oklahoma, and northern Texas):
At least a dozen (some sources cite as many as 16) Scouts are listed as having earned a Medal of Honor, all during the Plains Wars in the late 19th Century.
Alchesay. Sergeant, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Entry of service date unknown. Entered service at Camp Verde, Arizona. Born: 1853, Arizona Territory. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Blanquet. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Chiquito. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1871-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Co-Rux-Te-Chod-Ish (Mad Bear). Sergeant, Pawnee Scouts, U.S. Army. Place and date: At Republican River, Kansas, 8 July 1869. Birth: Nebraska. Date of issue: 24 August 1869. Citation: Ran out from the command in pursuit of a dismounted Indian; was shot down and badly wounded by a bullet from his own command.
Elsatsoosu. Corporal, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Jim. Sergeant, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Winter of 1871-73. Birth: Arizona Territory. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Kelsay. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Kosoha. Indian Scout. Place and date: Winter of 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Machol. Private, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Arizona, 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during the campaign and engagements with the Apache.
Nannasaddie. Indian Scout. Place and date: 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Nantaje (Nantahe). Indian Scout. Place and date: 1872-73. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 12 April 1875. Citation: Gallant conduct during campaigns and engagements with the Apache.
Rowdy. Sergeant, Company A, Indian Scouts. Place and date: Arizona, 7 March 1890. Birth: Arizona. Date of issue: 15 May 1890. Citation: Bravery in action with Apache Indians.
Sgt Rowdy, standing, with his MoH loaned to a comrade, was a member of Co A, Indian Scouts, & received the Medal of Honor for a March 7, 1890, action, during the Cherry Creek Campaign in the Arizona Territory. His citation reads, “Bravery in action with Apache Indians.” He was the last of 16 Scouts who earned the MoH. He passed in 1893 and is buried in Sante Fe National Cemetery in New Mexico.
After Geronimo laid down his arms in 1886 and the Cherry Creek Campaign in 1890, the Scouts’ active use declined, and they were withdrawn from other districts to the Arizona Territory.
Authorized at no more than 275 men in 1889, this was trimmed to 150 in 1891 and just 75 Army-wide by 1898.
Patrolling the Huachuca Mountains for trespassers, typically smugglers coming up from Mexico, they also constructed fire trails and breaks. They further cared for the post’s livestock and performed odd carpentry and blacksmithing duties, helping to maintain some 60 miles of post fencing.
Of note, their quarters were off-limits to non-native personnel.
From Huachuca, at least some Scouts were utilized as “trailers” in the tense border region during the Mexican Revolution and Civil War, followed by the 1916-17 Punitive Expedition against Pancho Villa.
Apache members of the U.S. Scouts assigned to the Punitive Expedition in 1916
Photograph of Apache Scout, Mexican Punitive Expedition, May 13, 1916. Note the traditional head and footgear, relaxed grooming standards, and regular GI blouse, trousers, and web gear. 111-SC-102733. NARA 329589935
On 3 June 1916, the Scouts were folded into the Army proper, with their members carried on the rolls as regulars and not auxiliaries.
From muster rolls in the National Archives, the Jan. 31, 1920 roster for the Detachment of Indian Scouts at Huachuca lists a 1SG, Eskehnadestah, two corporals, and 18 privates. An 1893 enlistment, Eskehnadestah retired to Whiteriver, where he lived to the age of 95, dying on February 3, 1955.
Follow the names on these rosters, and you will quickly see this small detachment would endure for years.
Fort Apache was deemed surplus to requirements in October 1922, and the few remaining Scouts were consolidated at the Huachuca det, the unit’s last home. At the same time, recruitment of new Scouts was discontinued, but those in good standing and of good health could continue to reenlist until they reached the mandatory retirement age.
This bumped the Huachuca force from 21 to 23 by August 1924, led by SGT Askeldelinney, who was listed as a private on the 1920 roster.
Note this September 1924 roster with eight scouts, a corporal, and seven privates, detached for maneuvers with the 10th Cavalry.
In early 1925, a retired Kiowa Scout, 1SG Tahbonemah (I-See-O), who had logged at least 42 years in the service, mostly with the Seventh Cav, visited the White House with a tribal delegation in uniform, complete with four long service stripes on his left sleeve, where he met the Secretary of War and President Coolidge.
SECWAR John Weeks is seen on the left, and Coolidge to the right
By October 1931, there were only 12 Scouts, a sergeant (the long-serving Charles Bones, seen in the roster as a private in both 1920 and 1924), two corporals, and nine privates.
Around this time, the Scouts and their families, who had lived in tents and traditional dwellings at a camp near the Old Post, were moved to new-built adobe structures at Apache Flats. Wired for electricity and furnished with Army cots, tables, and desks, each dwelling consisted of two rooms– a large living room and a smaller sleeping room in the back.
The move met with mixed results.
As related by Colonel Allen C. Miller, former Huachuca commander:
The scouts remained rugged individualists to the end. Only one of the last twelve scouts spoke English. All were very large, well-built men. Not only were they excellent horsemen, but foot marches of up to 85 miles in a single day are recorded. Individually and as a unit they were fine soldiers, but they never gave up many of their tribal ways. Until the mid-thirties, they lived with their families in tepees which were located in an area of the garrison some distance apart from the other troops. When the WPA (Works Projects Administration) offered to improve their housing conditions, the post commander at Fort Huachuca enthusiastically set about building adobe houses for the Indians. An impressive dedication was held to celebrate the movement of the Indian families into their new quarters. Great was his consternation to find soon thereafter that all the families had moved back into tepees and that the scouts’ horses were the only occupants in the new quarters
The Army also deeded them other land, in small parcels.
Indian Scout Cemetery in North Dakota 75-FB-603
By 31 December 1939, with the war on the horizon, the Scouts numbered only eight men: SGT Riley Luke Sinew, two corporals (one on furlough), and five privates. Sinew, a 1921 enlistment, is shown as a private in the 1924 rosters above and seen again as a corporal on the 1931 roster.
Carl Gaston, working with the Army Signal Corps, ventured to Huachuca in April 1942 and took a series of images of the last of the Scouts. Their age is apparent, as the Army ceased recruiting new scouts 20 years prior.
Note that the quoted captions are period captions, not mine.
SC131140 – “Sgt. Sinew L. Riley is receiving reports on the activities of the day from his scouts.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #16 by Carl Gaston
SC131141 – “Private William Major and Private Andrew Paxson patrol the southern border from a peak of the Huachuca Mountains.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #17 by Carl Gaston
SC131142 – “Sergeant Sinew L. Riley is serving his 21st year as a scout in the Army and is the 3rd generation of his family to serve as such. Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942).” Note the “USS” device on his cap. Riley died of appendicitis in 1958, and the Army later named an enlisted barracks at Huachuca in his honor. Signal Corps Photo #18 by Carl Gaston
SC131143 – “Sergeant Sinew L Riley is teaching his son, Larrie H., Indian wood lore.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #19 by Carl Gaston
SC131144 – “These Indian scouts are shown filing up the side of a mountain on patrol.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #20 by Carl Gaston
SC131145 – “Private Andrew Paxon is shown scaling a peak for a better view.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942). Note the slung M1903 Springfield. Signal Corps Photo #21 by Carl Gaston
SC131146 – “These grizzled Indian features make a very interesting picture.” L to R: Corporal Jim Lane, John Rope, and Kassey Y-32.Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #28 by Carl Gaston
SC131147 – “Private Andrew Paxson is shown leaving his Army tent on outpost to start his scout duties.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #50 by Carl Gaston
SC131150 – “Corporal Jim Lane is shown here after having quenched his thirst from a spring.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #76 by Carl Gaston
SC131151 – “Sergeant Sinew Riley, US Army scout, listens to John Rope, (Black Larriet) retired US Army scout, relates the many battles he fought as an Army scout.” Ft. Huachuca, Arizona (April 1, 1942) Signal Corps Photo #37 by Carl Gaston
The Scouts remained activated, dwindling in number until only four remained, and the detachment was deactivated in 1947, when they were honorably retired.
In the end, only a single member of the final contingent of seven Scouts, a Private Kessay (Y-32), had served less than 25 years in uniform– having just 24 on his file. Two other privates, Jim Lane and Jess Billy, had 32 and 33 years on the books. Riley, Cpl. Antonio Ivan and Pvt. Andrew Paxson all had 26. Pvt. William Major had 25.
Coinciding with the drawdown of U.S. ground troops from South Vietnam in 1969, the Nixon administration, with Kissinger in the seat, introduced the policy of “Vietnamization,” a program designed to shift the responsibility of the war from the U.S. to the RVN.
As noted by the State Department, “Although this process was not successful, the United States negotiated a peace agreement in 1973 and withdrew from South Vietnam, which soon fell to the communist regime in the north.”
The hardware transferred in 1972 alone included 234 F-5A and A-37 jet fighter planes, 32 C-130 transports, 277 UH-1H Hueys, 72 M48A3 tanks, 117 M113 armored personnel carriers, and 1,726 trucks in addition to boatloads of artillery pieces, small arms, radios, etc– most of which would be sampled by Moscow post-1975 after the Saigon government fell.
Carrying red and gold Vietnam People’s Air Force roundels and standard 4-digit MiG style numbers, many of these aircraft saw lots of service with the VPAF over Cambodia and against the Chinese in the 1970s and early 1980s.
Because nobody ever reads the history books, “Afghanization” likewise copied the same play with the same outcome in 2020, because possibly, just possibly, propping up corrupt regimes during a civil war in which 90 percent of the population has checked out from either side, just doesn’t work no matter how much cash and guns you leave behind.
But history is cyclical, of course, and everything comes back around.
The delivery signifies a milestone for the U.S. Air Force and the Vietnam ADAF, with the full complement of 12 T-6Cs scheduled for delivery by 2025.
The released photos make pains to have folks standing in front of the red and gold communist national flashes on the aircraft.
U.S. PACAF Commander Gen. Kevin Schneider and a T6-C pilot disembark a T6-C training aircraft in Phan Thiet, Vietnam, on Nov. 20, 2024. General Schneider landed the first of five T6-C aircraft. Seven more training aircraft will be delivered to the Vietnamese Air Defence Air Force by 2025.
U.S. PACAF Commander Gen. Kevin Schneider, Lieutenant General Nguyen Van Hien, Commander of the Vietnam Air Defence Air Force, and U.S. Ambassador to Vietnam Marc Knapper stand by a T6-C training aircraft in Phan Thiet, Vietnam, on Nov. 20, 2024. The Vietnamese Air Defence Air Force will use these training aircraft for pilot training.
Ex-U.S. Coast Guard Cutter John Midgett leaving Puget Sound as Vietnam Coast Guard 8021, June 5 2021
I say, since we are passing on scratch and dent gear to the Vietnamese once again, that they give back some of the old stuff we gave them in the 1960s and 70s for use as gate guards, museum pieces, and CMP surplus rifle assets.
All these seen in Vietnamese stores in the past few years:
Throwback some 35 years to November 1989 when the “Fleet’s Finest Carrier,”USS Midway (CV 41) pulled alongside F Berth, Victoria Quay, Freemantle, on a historic visit as the first U.S. Navy carrier to pull pier side in the Western Australian port.
Photo via Fremantle Ports.
Her 5 August to 11 December 1989 West Pacific cruise—her amazing 53rd deployment to the region, which included six combat tours off Vietnam—saw her carry her familiar Carrier Air Wing Five (CVW-5) again, a wing she had deployed with since 1965.
Photo via Fremantle Ports.
This group at the time included three F-18A squadrons (VFA-151, VFA-192, and VFA-195) due to the fact her class was deemed too small for extended F-14 operations, as well as two A-6E/KA-6D Intruder squadrons (VA-115 and VA-185), some EA-6B Prowlers from VAQ-136, a Hawkeye det from VAW-115, and some SH-3H Sea Kings from HS-12.
Photo via Fremantle Ports.
Photo via Fremantle Ports.
Photo via Fremantle Ports.
Midway still had a few tricks left, including Desert Shield/Storm 1990 in the Persian Gulf following Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait, and the evacuation of Clark AFBase in the Philippines following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo. In that final mission, she brought off 1,823 personnel and dependents, along with a menagerie of 23 cats, 68 dogs, and one lizard.
Decommissioned in San Diego in April 1992 after a 47-year career that included over 325,000 landings, she languished mothballs at Bremerton until 2003, when she was entrusted to the San Diego Aircraft Carrier Museum.
Opened to the public in June 2004, she has proven extremely popular, clearing over 5 million visitors in her first six years in operation alone.
With JFK consigned to the scrappers, and future CVNs off limits due to their recycling processes, Midway will likely be the largest warship ever preserved (at 64,000 tons and 1,001 feet oal compared to the four preserved 57,000-ton/887-foot Iowas and four preserved Essexes at 40,000-tons/888 feet).
Kimber originally started as a rifle brand and pivoted to making M1911-style pistols in 1994, debuting at SHOT ’95. Basic math shows that to be at least a 30-year run in the field. Along the way, they learned a thing or two.
With a new state-of-the-art facility in Troy, Alabama at their fingertips, and a couple of generations of hard-earned tribal knowledge in how to make a 1911, the company is now ready to run in the double-stack/wide-body 1911 game – after a warm-up with the slightly downsized KDS9c – and this week introduced the new 2K11.
Using an aluminum alloy grip module over an SST steel sub-frame, the slide is made of stainless steel, featuring an external extractor, front and rear slide serrations, and a factory optics cut in the RMR footprint. Running TAG Precision FiberLok 2 front sights with a suppressor-height serrated rear sight, under the hood is a beast of a deep crowned, fluted bull barrel.
You’ve also got a great GT aluminum trigger, ambi safety levers, an innovative tool-less guide rod/spring assembly, and common (2011 pattern) magazine compatibility.
I went to Kimber’s facility in Alabama over the summer to try out some early production guns and they ran, and ran, and ran.
My target at the sneak peek event this summer. That’s about 400 rounds just dumped methodically from 15 yards, standing, firing offhand, alternating left and right, often in rapid-fire mag dumps. I promise that Delta isn’t mine.
I’ve also been working on a test gun for evaluation for the past two months and it has done much the same.
My T&E gun, even with fixed sights, continued the trend, delivering boring hits on 3/4 reduced USPSA steel at 15 offhand. Full-sized targets were no problem at 25. Pushing to the 50 and working from a sitting barricade and bag position while applying some concentration in slow fire brought the above. Adding a red dot on this gun is something of a cheat code.
You can almost feel the sea spray on your eyelashes in this one.
U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro (WMSL 755) crews interdict a vessel suspected of smuggling drugs in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, October 2024. Munro is the sixth Legend-class national security cutter homeported in Alameda, California. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo.
U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Munro (WMSL 755) crews interdict a vessel suspected of smuggling drugs in international waters of the Eastern Pacific Ocean, October 2024. Munro is the sixth Legend-class national security cutter homeported in Alameda, California. U.S. Coast Guard courtesy photo.
Of note, Munro just offloaded 29,000 pounds of cocaine, with an estimated value of $335.8 million, Tuesday in San Diego.
The nose candy came from a series of nine separate suspected drug smuggling vessel interdictions or events off the coasts of Mexico and Central and South America by Munro, USCGC Vigorous, USCGC Hamilton, and the USS St. Louis (LCS-19), during September and October– the mix showing you just how crowded it is getting in 4th Fleet (USNAVSOUTH) in the East Pac, and how much of a white hull operation it is.
Speaking of recruiting, the USCG just established its first Hawaii-based JROTC, the 14th in the nation. Enrollment nationwide is expected to be 1,200 cadets.
Coast Guard JROTC instructors are hired and employed by the school district and certified by the service. Instructors must be Coast Guard retired, selected reserve, or qualified veterans with at least eight years of service.