Posted on Jul 12, 2015
50 years ago today, July 12, in sunny Vietnam-land - Where were you?
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The 2nd Brigade of the U.S. 1st Infantry Division began to arrive in South Vietnam.
The brigade was initially responsible for providing security for Bien Hoa Air Base near Saigon.
The troops embarked on the Navy transport General W.H. Gordon, with three other ships moving the brigade's equipment.
The Gordon departed on 25 June.
Once under way the men were officially informed of what they had long suspected: They were en route to Vietnam.
The brigade's destination and mission in Vietnam changed a week before its arrival.
Instead of establishing and maintaining defenses for port and supply facilities under construction at Qui Nhon in northern II Corps two of the unit's infantry battalions, the 2d of the 16th and the 2d of the 18th, were to go to Bien Hoa to assist in securing the air base, while the third battalion, the 1st of the 18th, and an artillery battery proceeded to Cam Ranh Bay, about two hundred kilometers south of Qui Nhon, to provide security for the new port being built there.
The Gordon reached Cam Ranh on 12 July, stopping just long enough for the infantry and artillery to disembark.
Continuing south, the ship arrived at Vung Tau on the fourteenth.
Over the next two days the troops made their way to the Vung Tau airfield, where they enplaned for Bien Hoa Air Base.
Upon arrival, they moved by truck to their prospective base camp, about three kilometers southeast of the airfield, a site chosen because it lay astride a line of approach into the air base. There, for the first few days in Vietnam, Colonel Simmons' force came under the command of MACV [U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam], but on the nineteenth the 173d Airborne Brigade assumed operational control.
The arrangement lasted until the 1st Division headquarters reached Vietnam in October.
The change of station from Qui Nhon to Bien Hoa created supply problems.
Food stores and ammunition earmarked for the brigade and prepositioned at Qui Nhon were now unavailable, and could not be easily replaced out of the Army warehouses scattered about Saigon, which were having trouble supporting the American buildup. For the rest of the summer Simmons' brigade lived hand to mouth, and only the presence of a Navy commissary not far from downtown Saigon kept the men from subsisting on field rations for weeks at a time.
Even then, ammunition became so scarce at one point during the summer's operations that the brigade had to borrow artillery rounds from the South Vietnamese
The brigade was initially responsible for providing security for Bien Hoa Air Base near Saigon.
The troops embarked on the Navy transport General W.H. Gordon, with three other ships moving the brigade's equipment.
The Gordon departed on 25 June.
Once under way the men were officially informed of what they had long suspected: They were en route to Vietnam.
The brigade's destination and mission in Vietnam changed a week before its arrival.
Instead of establishing and maintaining defenses for port and supply facilities under construction at Qui Nhon in northern II Corps two of the unit's infantry battalions, the 2d of the 16th and the 2d of the 18th, were to go to Bien Hoa to assist in securing the air base, while the third battalion, the 1st of the 18th, and an artillery battery proceeded to Cam Ranh Bay, about two hundred kilometers south of Qui Nhon, to provide security for the new port being built there.
The Gordon reached Cam Ranh on 12 July, stopping just long enough for the infantry and artillery to disembark.
Continuing south, the ship arrived at Vung Tau on the fourteenth.
Over the next two days the troops made their way to the Vung Tau airfield, where they enplaned for Bien Hoa Air Base.
Upon arrival, they moved by truck to their prospective base camp, about three kilometers southeast of the airfield, a site chosen because it lay astride a line of approach into the air base. There, for the first few days in Vietnam, Colonel Simmons' force came under the command of MACV [U.S. Military Assistance Command, Vietnam], but on the nineteenth the 173d Airborne Brigade assumed operational control.
The arrangement lasted until the 1st Division headquarters reached Vietnam in October.
The change of station from Qui Nhon to Bien Hoa created supply problems.
Food stores and ammunition earmarked for the brigade and prepositioned at Qui Nhon were now unavailable, and could not be easily replaced out of the Army warehouses scattered about Saigon, which were having trouble supporting the American buildup. For the rest of the summer Simmons' brigade lived hand to mouth, and only the presence of a Navy commissary not far from downtown Saigon kept the men from subsisting on field rations for weeks at a time.
Even then, ammunition became so scarce at one point during the summer's operations that the brigade had to borrow artillery rounds from the South Vietnamese
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 11
I was on the Gordon and disembarked with the majority of the 2nd Brigade at Vung Tau.
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CW4 John Karl T.
I was deployed with the rest of the division in October and disembarked at Vung Tau from the MSTS Blatchford.
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CW4 John Karl T.
CW4 John Karl T. - I was assigned to B Co, 1st Avn Bn as helicopter pilot. I got on the boat as a WO1 and got off as a CW2. Drank my bars from a canteen cup full of assorted booze and had them blooded on in the staging area known as the Saigon University area between Saigon and Bien Hua. Four days later we moved to Phu Loi Airfield at Thu Duo Mot. I was in the second vehicle to roll on the airfield.
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I took a similar boat ride from fort lewis Washington on the Gordon with the 4 th inf div.we left on September 15 th 1966 and did not get there until oct 4 ,due to break downs and a stop somewhere this 70 year old mind cannot recall.we were met at the beach with trucks and buses on to TUY HOA for a few months to meet Mr. Charles then to Plieku Kotum prov.and the NVA , boy did I miss that old tub.luckily I got to fly home
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SGM Gregory Hoppe
The only military sponsored cruise I ever took was one from Oakland, California, to Honolulu, Hawaii on board the MSTS Gaffey. From Honolulu it was buses to Schofield Barracks to the repldepot , which turned out to be an open air amphitheater that was covered. From there it was off to Mortar Platoon, HHC, 1/14th Infantry(Golden Dragons), "The Right of the Line", 25th Infantry Division (Tropic Lightning). It was just a seven-day overnight cruise spent in the bottom bunk watching everybody puke. WOW! We didn't even have a formal dining.
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