November 5 Ice Run!

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  • tmsmalley
    SubCommittee Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 2376

    #1

    November 5 Ice Run!

    A few of us from the local scale boat club in Minneapolis/St. Paul had what was probably our final run of the year, today. It was 62 degrees and nice and sunny, but there was still a sheet of skim ice blowing around the pond from the 25 degree temps we have had overnight the last week or so.

    I've always wanted to run my boat under the ice, but was always too chicken. Today the ice was only about 1/16" so I took the plunge! It was great popping up though it - like surfacing at the North Pole!










    Dan L was there pushing ice around with his tugboat and he brought his Seawolf along to show us his progress.








  • steve jensen
    Junior Member
    • Nov 2006
    • 31

    #2
    Just like the 'big' boats.

    Just like the 'big' boats. How cool is this?

    Steve

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    • tmsmalley
      SubCommittee Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 2376

      #3
      It was great! I'd sure

      It was great! I'd sure hate to have to go swimming for it though -

      Hey Steve - what is your sword and sheild avatar from?

      Comment

      • steve jensen
        Junior Member
        • Nov 2006
        • 31

        #4
        Tim,

        It is the shoulder patch

        Tim,

        It is the shoulder patch from my unit in V.N. - The 18th Engineer Brigade.

        The unit patch has a pretty detailed history...every part of the patch means something...if you want to you could look it up on the web...it is an old unit -they also fought in WWII .

        Steve

        Comment

        • tmsmalley
          SubCommittee Member
          • Feb 2003
          • 2376

          #5
          Thanks for serving in Viet

          Thanks for serving in Viet Nam Steve!



          Shoulder Sleeve Insignia. Description]http://www.tioh.hqda.pentagon.mil/Graphics/18EngrBdeDUI.jpg[/img]

          Distinctive Unit Insignia. Description: A silver color metal and enamel device 1 1/8 inches (2.86 cm) overall, consisting of a four bastion fort one point down silver, the interior in red. On top of this is placed two crossed swords saltirewise in silver. Under the design is a silver motto scroll bearing the legend “ESSAYONS ET EDIFIONS” in black.

          Symbolism: Scarlet and white (silver) are the colors used for the Engineers. The four sides of the fort stand for planning, training, construction and combat support. The crenelations of the fort represent the Brigade’s participation in campaigns of World War II: Normandy, Northern France, Rhineland and Central Europe. The crossed swords symbolize preparedness in peace, and unrelenting fulfillment of Engineer missions in time of war. The motto “Essayons et Edifions” emblazoned on the scroll is translated as “Let Us Try and Let Us Build.”

          Background: The distinctive unit insignia was approved on 3 August 1966.

          History of the 18th Engineer Brigade

          The 18th Engineer Brigade traces its history back to July 29, 1921, when it was originally formed as the 347th Engineers (General Service) in the Organized Army Reserve. The unit was inactive until the beginning of World War II but on May 6, 1942, it was ordered to active duty at Camp Claiborne, Louisiana and was redesignated the 347th Engineer General Service Regiment.

          During World War II, the Regiment served in the campaigns of Normandy, Northern France, the Rhineland, and Central Europe. For this service, the 347th Engineer General Service Regiment was awarded the Meritorious Unit Commendation. After the end of World War II in Europe, the Regiment was inactivated in Germany and was assigned to the Army Reserve.

          On October 25, 1954, the 347th Engineer General Service Regiment was withdrawn from the Army Reserve and allotted to the Active Army with concurrent redesignation as the 18th Engineer Brigade. The Brigade saw active service at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri until March 26, 1963, when it was again inactivated.

          Two years later, on July 16, 1965, the 18th Engineer Brigade was reactivated at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Under the command of Colonel C. Craig Cannon, the Brigade prepared for deployment to Vietnam. The Advance Party of the 18th Engineer Brigade arrived at Tan Son Nhut, Vietnam on September 3, 1965. Three days later, Major General - then Brigadier General – Robert R. Ploger assumed command of the Brigade. Within two weeks, the Brigade Headquarters at Tan Son Nhut was fully operational and on September 16, 1965, the Brigade assumed operational control of the 35th Engineer Group (Construction) at Cam Ranh Bay. The 937th Engineer Group (Combat) at Qui Nhon was assigned to the Brigade in June of 1966.

          The history of the 18th Engineer Brigade in the Republic of Vietnam is a continuing story of impressive accomplishments in every field of engineering. The Brigade began construction operations in an underdeveloped country having extremely rugged terrain. The supply of Free World Forces in the First and Second Military Regions required ports of entry where none existed and roads where only trails could be found. In response to this challenge, the Brigade began construction of the ports at Cam Ranh Bay, Qui Nhon, and Vung Ro Bay.

          On September 21, 1968, Brigadier General – then Colonel – John H. Elder Jr. assumed command of the Brigade.

          An ammunition storage area was completed at Cam Ranh Bay on January 18, 1969. It had taken two years for the Brigade to build this complex, which covers 191,700 square feet. Brigade engineers finished English Airfield on March 21, 1969 at LZ English near Qui Nhon. The runway of this field is 3,600 feet long, 60 feet wide, and is complete with a 150 – foot by 150 – foot turn around area.

          On May 3, 1969, Brigadier General John W, Morris assumed command of the Brigade. Soon afterwards, Brigade engineers finished construction of a cold storage warehouse at Qui Nhon for the Qui Nhon Support Command. It was the first of its kind in Vietnam. Construction of the Tandem Switch Building at Vung Chau Mountain was also completed about this time. This 4,000 square foot building houses more than $900,000.00 worth of sophisticated communications equipment. During the summer months of 1969, Brigade engineers completed the 200,000 barrel capacity Air Force tank farm at Cam Rahn Bay, after laying over 12,000 feet of pipe for the project.

          The beginning of 1970 saw the initiation of the 18th Engineers Brigade’s Operation Last Chance, a program of command emphasis and tight organization directed toward the motivation and success of that years engineer operations. The goals of the program were to maintain primary missions of the combat support as well as insure the completion of the many projects planned for the 197o construction season.

          The ship loading and unloading capacity of the Delong piers at Cam Rahn Bay’s port facility was greatly increased by repair and reconstruction of the seawall there by Brigade engineers. Implanted along a mile long section of the beach, the wall permits barges and other shallow-draft craft to dick at the shore for easy on and off loading.

          February of 1970 aw the completion of a project begun in the summer of the previous year at Qui Nhon that replaced the deteriorating floating steel dock with a Permanente structure which accommodates six ammo barges. The port of Qui Nhon is one of the few supply points where ammunition for the First and Second Military Regions can be handled in bulk quantities. Prior to the completion of this new facility, the handling of ammunition there had to take place in an area near public housing and fuel storage depots.

          On May 3, 1970, Major General – then Brigadier General – Henry C. Schrader assumed command of the 18th Engineer Brigade. Shortly after this, the most difficult stretch of the roadway that the Brigade had ever undertaken – the 27 kilometer stretch of National Highway QL-11 South in the Central Highlands known as the Good View Pass – was completed. This road was transformed from a treacherous mountain path into a thoroughfare worthy of the name of National Highway in little more than a year’s time. The Good View Pass metamorphosis is one of the high points of the Lines of Communication highway project that the Brigade is engaged in.

          The Lines of Communication Program, which represents the most significant contribution that the 18th Engineer Brigade has made to the economic growth of Vietnam, consists of about 1,500 kilometers of road upgrade from 1967 to 1972. After a slow start in the beginning of this work, the Brigade finished some 560 kilometers of highway reconstruction, and improvement in 1970 and another 450 kilometers are scheduled for completion in 1971 by Brigade units.

          In conjunction with the Brigade efforts on the Lines of Communication Program, 18th Brigade engineers have been deeply committed to a program of affiliation with ARVN (Army of the Republic of Vietnam) engineers. In addition to continuous training programs which the Brigade established to train ARVN equipment operators, the engineers of the 18th provided technical assistance and logistical support to several projects undertaken by the Vietnamese Army, most notably in the construction of the 3,600 bridge at Tuy Hoa. Upon its completion and opening on February 13, 1971, this bridge became the longest overpass of its type in the Republic of Vietnam.

          Some 76 other concrete and steel bridges on a smaller scale than that at Tuy Hoa were constructed solely by Brigade units in 1970 and a similar number of such bridges is scheduled for completion in 1971.

          Land clearing operations have proven to be a major secondary mission on the Brigade for the security of both military and civilian transportation along roads. Over 50,000 acres of jungle and other dense vegetation have been removed so far for this purpose, thus denying the enemy cover, concealment, and bases of operation. The most dramatic example of such land clearing operations is on the Batangan Peninsula, long the stronghold of the Viet Cong 48th Local Forces Battalion. Over 13,00 acres of countryside in this area were plowed free of all vegetation in 1970 and some 300 enemy bunkers and 8,000 yards of tunnels and trenches were discovered and destroyed as well as large quantities of ordinance and food supplies. The work in the Batangan area and similar locations elsewhere in Vietnam is being continued by Brigade units in 1971.

          In support of the XXIV Corps, the 18th Brigade mounted what was described as the most ambitious engineering effort in Vietnam at the end of January 1971. The Brigade engineers pushed a roadway across the rugged terrain of the northern Quang Tri Province to the Laotian border and constructed a 3,200 x 60 foot assault airfield in little more than a fortnight at Khe Sanh. This construction effort was part of Operation Dewey Canyon II the flow of North Vietnamese men and supplies coming down the Ho Chi Minh trial into South Vietnam.

          Most of the units operating as subordinates to the 18th Engineer Brigade have at one time or another been engaged in civic action projects with the villages nearest them. The 18th Brigade engineers have built schools, and hospitals, relocated villages, given medical aid, and built artificial lakes for the benefit of local nationals. An example of these projects is found in Ban Me Thuot where elements of the Brigade have worked closely with a MACV Civil Affairs Team in cleaning up the village market place of literally tons of garbage.

          Thus the accomplishments of the 18th Engineer Brigade have not only made a success of combat forces possible in the First and Second Military Regions, but have also provided an impressive beginning in stimulating and stabilizing the economic growth of the Republic of Vietnam.

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