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Our tour on March 14-16 included the Battleship North Carolina in Wilmington, NC; The U.S. Army Airborne Museum in Fayetteville, NC and the U.S. Army Basic Combat Training Center near Columbia, SC. We overnighted in Wilmington and Columbia and travelled a total of 550 miles in three days. |
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The Battleship North Carolina was the most highly decorated American battleship of World War II. North Carolina participated in every major naval offensive in the Pacific theater of operations earning 15 battle stars. It was commissioned in April 1941. |
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One of nine 16" gun mounts |
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One of three Vought Kingfisher Scout Float Planes used for aerial reconnaissance |
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The ship was equipped with a battery of sixteen 1.1 inch anti-aircraft guns
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The ship also had 18 50-caliber machine guns |
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We received an initial briefing from a docent. |
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We were divided into groups and led on a tour
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We toured nine levels of the ship |
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Including the Bridge |
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Crews Quarters |
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Radar room |
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The engine room
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The rammer loads six powder bags into the gun. The primer man then inserts the primer in the
last bag which provides the spark to ignite the powder bags that fired the projectile
out of the gun. The men then closed
the breech and turned on the ready light to signal to the turret officer that
the gun was ready to fire. The entire
process takes only 30 seconds. |
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Chow Line |
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"Scuttlebutt" was the drinking fountain on the |
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Vegetable Prep |
ship where sailors would exchange rumors on the voyage.
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All 36 volunteers on the trip |
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On arrival at the U.S. Army Airborne Museum in Fayetteville |
in front of the statue of Iron Mike.
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Paratrooper suspended in air at the entrance |
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The Airborne Trooper. The inscription on the base reads "Iron Mike, in honor of Airborne Troopers whose courage, dedication and traditions make them the world's finest fighting soldiers". |
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We witnessed a reenlistment ceremony upon arrival |
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The exhibits included scenes from WWII, Korean War, Vietnam, Afghanistan and the Global War on Terror. Operation Torch (November 8-16 1942) was an allied invasion of French Africa. Torch was a compromise operation that met the British objective of securing victory in North Africa while allowing American armed forces the opportunity to engage in the fight against Nazi Germany on a limited scale.
| Established in 1918, the 101st Division was first constituted as an airborne unit in 1942.] During World War II, it was famous for its role in Operation Overlord (the Airborne D-Day landings in Normandy on 6 June 1944), Operation Market Garden; the liberation of the Netherlands; and its action during the Battle of the Bulge around Bastogne, Belgium. During the Vietnam War, the 101st Airborne Division fought in several major campaigns and battles. In mid-1968, the division was reorganized and redesignated as an airmobile division; in 1974, as an air assault division. The titles reflect the division's shift from airplanes to helicopters as the primary method of delivering troops into combat. At the height of the War on Terror the 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault) had over 200 aircraft. |
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Airborne lands in Anzio and makes the way to Salerno |
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The Military Assistance Command, Vietnam known as Red Hats were technical advisors to the Vietnamese Airborne. They also fought along with their Vietnamese counterparts in Hue and the Tet offensive. |
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M.A.S.H. units (Mobile Army Surgical Hospitals) used in the Korean War were not practical for the jungles of Vietnam. M.A.S.H. units travelled with the fight, but Vietnam was a different kind of war. This was jungle fighting or guerilla warfare with many battles being relatively small and Huey helicopters were the primary source of travel. The ratio from Killed In Action to surviving wounded in WWII was 29%, and in Vietnam 19%. Forty-two per cent of Americans wounded in Vietnam were able to return to active duty. |
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Examples of Airborne Poster Art |
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On the way to Columbia we had to stop at the world famous Bucee's in Florence, SC. |
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For dinner we had a choice of going to the Golden Corral buffet or the Bonefish Grill. We selected the Bonefish. With my fellow volunteers Paul Watters, Navy Pilot; Don Bonamarito, USMC and Major Stoney Bates, USMC.
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On arrival at Fort Jackson we were met and escorted by Drill Sergeant Gipson. |
Fort Jackson, is the U.S. Army's main production
center for Basic Combat Training. The installation trains roughly 50 percent of
all soldiers and more than 60 percent of women entering the Army each year. Accomplishing
that mission means training 46 weeks a year over 45,000 basic training and 12,000
additional advanced training Soldiers every year.
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Army Infantry trainees lined up to prepare to climb the Victory Tower. |
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Trainees on the rappelling tower |
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Victory Tower |
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SGT Gipson told me that 25% of trainees are foreign born. A 2002 Executive Order made noncitizen members of the armed forces eligible for expedited U.S. citizenship. Sixteen per cent of the U.S. Army is female. |