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THIS WEEK IN SEABEE HISTORY (Week of Dec. 27)

Dec. 28, 2015 | By Seabee Magazine
Consolidated by Dr. Frank A. Blazich Jr., Historian, U.S. Navy Seabee Museum
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VIRIN: 151228-N-ZY182-1221
1943: Seabees of Construction Battalion Maintenance Unit (CBMU) 549 were told they were to erect a typical Seabee camp for a new Hollywood movie, The Fighting Seabees, starring John Wayne and Susan Hayward. The Seabees erected tents, showers, heads, electric generators and a refrigeration plant. At the end of the week, the camp was complete in all details including water system, roadways and street lights.
11222
VIRIN: 151228-N-ZY182-1222
The Fighting Seabees, starring John Wayne and Susan Hayward, premiered at several Seabee camps across the nation on Jan. 14, 1944. The movie, which was predominantly filmed on location at Camp Pendleton, Port Hueneme, and Naval Base San Diego, follows a fictionalized creation of the Seabees during World War II. (Photos courtesy of the U.S. Navy Seabee Museum)

December 27

1945: 10th Naval Construction Battalion (NCB) inactivated. 50th Naval Construction Regiment (NCR) inactivated. 19th, 27th and 78th NCBs inactivated on Okinawa. 30th and 133rd NCBs inactivated on Guam. 19th Special NCB inactivated at Samar, Philippines.

December 28

1941: In a letter to the Bureau of Navigation dated 28 December, the Chief of the Bureau of Yards and Docks wrote that construction work on advance bases in combat zones could be carried on satisfactorily only by the utilization of military personnel under direct military command. Adm. Moreell recommended that early steps should be taken toward the organization of such military construction forces if they are to be trained and available at the times their services will be required. Moreell pointed out in this letter that not less than 12 construction companies of 226 men each should be available for assignment to duty at locations outside the continental limits at an early date in order that the advance base construction program might be carried forward with all possible speed and vigor. He recommended that these companies be grouped into three battalions, with an additional headquarters unit of 168 men for each battalion. These latter units would be composed of cooks, bakers, pharmacist mates and all other ratings necessary to make the battalion a complete operating unit if thrown into the field on its own. A proposed personnel organization, drawn in detail, was submitted for approval. 1945: 36th Special NCB inactivated at Okinawa. 1967: One flight of the Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 53 advance party arrived on board Camp Adenir and 27 personnel of the NMCB 7 advance party departed for Davisville, Rhode Island. 1971: Underwater Construction Team (UCT) 1 departed Davisville, Rhode Island, for deployment to U.S. Navy Shipyard Norfolk/Portsmouth, Virginia.

December 29

1942: 59th NCB commissioned at Camp Bradford, Norfolk, Virginia. 1945: 72nd NCB inactivated at Sasebo, Japan. 139th NCB inactivated at Okinawa. 1967: Seabee Team 0910 returned to the main body at Da Nang, Republic of Vietnam (RVN), via Boeing 707 aircraft, from leave in the U.S. after completing a six-month deployment to Thailand in November. 1968: NMCB 1 s second advance party of 74 men deployed via aircraft to the West Coast Continental United States (CONUS).

December 30

1942: 62nd NCB commissioned at Camp Endicott, Davisville, Rhode Island. 1968: NMCB 5 s advance party arrived at Camp Hoover, Da Nang, RVN.

December 31

1942: 77th NCB formed at Camp Peary, Magruder, Virginia. 1943: The 96th NCB advance party arrived in the Azores. The main body arrived on Jan. 9, 1944. 140th NCB commissioned at Naval Construction Training Center (NCTC) Camp Peary, Magruder, Virginia. 145th NCB commissioned at NCTC Camp Endicott, Davisville, Rhode Island. 1945: Section II of 10th NCB inactivated at Samar, Philippines. Section I had inactivated at Manila, Luzon, Philippines on 15 November. 83rd NCB inactivated in Tangku, China. 91st NCB inactivated at Manicani Island. 100th NCB inactivated at Samar, Philippines. 1947: The organized construction battalion reserve was authorized by a Bureau of Personnel issued this date. It authorized the formation of 123 organized Seabee companies, each composed of five officers and 40 men. The full strength of the 123 companies, with authorized complements filled, was 615 officers and 4,920 men. 1947: 121st NCB inactivated on Saipan and redesignated at CBD 1504. 1970: While traveling by boat between Cho Moi and Binh Thuy in Vietnam, five Seabees of NMCB 74 s Detail Charlie were killed in action by Viet Cong forces. They were Builder 2nd Class Jerry B. Edmonds Jr.; Construction Electrician 3rd Class Harold E. Asher; Equipment Operator Constructionman Edger P. Beck; Constructionman Wayne Sterling Rushton; and Constructionman Frank Neubauer. The Seabees had been working on two projects at Cho Moi. The first project was the construction of a complete modern naval base which could support more advanced bases, and the second was the construction of concrete block housing for 80 families of RVN personnel. 1971: (Underwater Construction Team) UCT 1 returned from U.S. Naval Shipyard Norfolk/Portsmouth, Virginia.

December

1917: The 12th Regiment (Public Works) was established at Great Lakes Naval Training Station, Illinois, to build and maintain naval facilities. The Naval Construction Force (NCF) detachments which built naval facilities in France in 1918, remained in the minds of planners during the interwar period and stimulated development in 1941-42 of the first naval construction battalions, the Seabees. 1942: Pontoon Assembly Attachment 1 commissioned. 32nd NCB commissioned. 45th NCB commissioned at Camp Peary, Magruder, Virginia. CBD 1003, 1004 commissioned. 1943: Seabees of Construction Battalion Maintenance Unit (CBMU) 549 were told they were to erect a typical Seabee camp for a new Hollywood movie, The Fighting Seabees, starring John Wayne and Susan Hayward. The Seabees were delighted that they would be seeing all the stars. They saw stars all right only they were the overhead kind visible from sunset to dawn. The men of CBMU 549, set for the luxuries of the film darlings, got the shock of their life when the first three days on their new job they worked around the clock, 24 hours a day. After arriving on location, the men were immediately put to work erecting tents, showers, heads, electric generators and a refrigeration plant. At the end of the week, the camp was complete in all details including water system, roadways and street lights. 1943: CBMU 533, 572, 573, 574, 575, 576, 577, 583 commissioned. CBMU 551 inactivated. Pontoon Assembly Attachment 2 commissioned. 19th Special NCB commissioned at NCTC Camp Peary, Magruder, Virginia. CBD 1001, 1002, 1034 inactivated. CBD 1035, 1037, 1038, 1039, 1043 commissioned. 1944: Aviation, Construction, Ordnance, Repair, Navy (ACORN) 34 arrived at Clark Field, Luzon. CBMU 556, 576 inactivated. Pontoon Assembly Attachment 5 commissioned. 21st Special NCB commissioned at NCTC Camp Peary, Magruder, Virginia. Construction Battalion Detachment (CBD) 1018, 1023 inactivated. CBD 1078 commissioned. (In World War II, Navy ACORN units, composed of Seabees and other components such as aircraft maintenance units, etc., were put together to design, construct, operate and maintain forward landplane and seaplane bases and operational facilities.) 1945: CBMU 506, 509, 510, 575, 585, 590, 591, 595, 596, 601, 603, 606, 608, 612, 624, 631, 636 inactivated. 25th NCR inactivated. 34th NCB inactivated on Okinawa. 20th Special NCB inactivated at Manus. CBD 1010, 1067, 1082, 1092, 1101 inactivated. 1946: CBD 1102, 1103, 1104, 1105, 1106, 1107, 1108, 1109, 1159 inactivated. CBD 1503, 1504 activated. 1947: Although the Seabees had operated from early 1942 as an NCF, it was not until this time that the Seabee Reserves were organized. At their inception, the Seabee Reserves were organized into divisions under the Naval District in which they were located. Each division usually represented a city, although in the larger cities there sometimes were several divisions. By 1949, the number of active duty Seabees had dwindled to 3,300. Then in June 1950 when the armies of North Korea invaded South Korea, it was the Seabee Reserves that enabled the NCF to quickly expand to over 14,000 for the emergency. 1947: CBD 1151, 1152, 1504, 1512 inactivated. CBD 1511 activated. 1957: 30th NCR inactivated. 1965: NMCB 10, the first full battalion to arrive in Vietnam, was relieved by NMCB 4 at Camp Shields, Chu Lai, RVN. NMCB 7 returned to Davisville, Rhode Island, from Rota, Spain. 1965: Direct Procurement Petty Officers Program was instituted. 1973: The talents of the men of Amphibious Construction Battalion (ACB) 2 were called upon during an emergency beach salvage operation in the Chesapeake Bay after three barges broke loose from a civilian tug. Together with the Coast Guard, ACB 2 struggled in turbulent weather to secure the barges and, as a result, successfully prevented damage to the bay s bridges and the threat of a severe navigational hazard. 2006: For the first time ever, naval intelligence specialists were directly assigned to Seabee units beginning this month.

January 1

1943: According to the history of Camp Endicott, receiving barracks transferred to the Advance Base Depot. Evidence within the history points out that the barracks had formerly been a unit of NCTC, Davisville. 1946: The Advance Base Depot, NCTC, Davisville, Rhode Island is inactivated. Concurrently, the Naval Supply Depot, Newport, Davisville Annex was established. 1946: 41st NCR inactivated. 1959: The homeport of NMCB 10 was officially changed from Guam, Marianas Islands to Port Hueneme, CA. 1962: Two teams for special operations, one in each fleet, were established. Sea, Air, Land (SEAL) Teams were composed of specially trained underwater demolition team personnel. Their mission was to conduct unconventional warfare operations at sea, in restricted waters, rivers, and lakes. 1967: NMCB 4 s advance party departed Port Hueneme, CA for Da Nang, RVN. 1968: Seabee Team 0602 graduated from Seabee Team Training and was assigned to Officer in Charge, Construction Battalions, Pacific Detachment, RVN, deploying to Phouc Le. Jan. 1-7, 1968: Seabee Team 0511 redeployed to Go Dau Ha Village, RVN. 1972: The armed forces of the United States started using the Social Security number as the military personnel identification number. 1972: Seabee Team 7411 deployed to Tan An, RVN.

January 2

1942: Manila and Cavite, Philippine Islands, fell to the Japanese. 1946: 141st NCB inactivated at Kwajalein.    

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