A Celebration of the
Naval Construction Force
1942 - 2017
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Years ADS PROUDLY SALUTES THE SEABEES ON 75 YEARS OF SERVICE With former military service members making up a third of our company’s ranks, ADS is proud to celebrate the “Can Do!” attitude of the United States Naval Construction Battalions, better known as the Seabees. These skilled construction workers, trained to drop their tools and take up their weapons at a moment’s notice, exemplify courage. They were unique at conception during World War II and remain so today—living up to their bold motto: “We build. We fight.” From state-of-the-art bases to airstrips, ADS salutes you. Happy 75th Anniversary! 800.948.9433 | ADSINC.COM
THANK YOU TO THE MEN AND WOMEN OF THE NAVAL CONSTRUCTION BATTALION CENTER IN GULFPORT FOR YOUR CONTINUED SERVICE TO OUR COUNTRY AND COMMITMENT TO THE MISSISSIPPI GULF COAST. THE PORT OF GULFPORT IS PROUD TO SUPPORT OUR NATION'S MILITARY AS ONE 17 STRATEGIC SEAPORTS
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
SALUTING THE SEABEES 75TH ANNIVERSARY
Table of Contents Letters Sean J. Stackley
B.J. Muilenberg
Acting Secretary of the Navy
Rear Admiral, CEC, USN
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SEABEES:
75History Years The of U.S. Navy Construction Battalions
of the
NAVFAC Seabees HISTORY By J.R. Wilson
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75 Years of the Seabees By J.R. Wilson
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
SEABEES: THE History of U.S navy construction battalions 75 Years of the Seabees By J.R. Wilson
As the prospect of war with Japan loomed in the late 1930s, the U.S. Navy began a massive basebuilding program on islands scattered across the Pacific, using unarmed civilian contractors. When war was declared following Pearl Harbor in December 1941, the use of civilians who were neither trained to defend themselves nor allowed to carry weapons became untenable, even as the Navy’s construction needs became paramount. On Dec. 28, 1941, Rear Adm. Ben Moreell, commander of the Bureau of Yards and Docks (BuDocks) and the Navy’s Chief of Civil Engineers, requested authority to activate, organize, and train a new Naval Construction Regiment comprising three Naval Construction Battalions – men recruited from the construction trades and trained by the Marines in ground combat. Officially designated “Seabees” on March 5, 1942, they were given their motto by Moreell – Construimus, Batuimus (“We Build, We Fight”) – and their emblem, a bee in Navy uniform, carrying both construction tools
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and a submachine gun. As they continue to expand their heritage into the 21st century, the Seabees have adopted a second, unofficial, motto – “Can Do Since ’42” – reflecting the official theme of the 75th anniversary: “Built on History, Constructing the Future.” But cutting through military tradition and bureaucracy to create an entirely new kind of fighting force was no easy task. Navy regulations at the time said only line officers could exercise military command over naval personnel, but the new construction battalions were designed to be commanded by officers of the Civil Engineer Corps (CEC),
National Archives photo
National Archives photo
Above: A Seabee trains with a bulldozer at Camp Endicott, Davisville, Rhode Island. Right: Then-Rear Adm. Ben Moreel, who was commander of the Navy Bureau of Yards and Docks and the Navy’s chief of civil engineers, created the Naval Construction Battalion concept, and is known as the “Father of the Seabees.”
who were trained in construction. BuDocks called for the CEC officers to be given command, to which the Bureau of Naval Personnel strongly objected. Moreell took the question directly to the secretary of the Navy, whose decision to give the CEC full military authority over all construction unit officers and enlisted men became part of Navy regulations. From Moreell’s perspective, this both enabled the necessary means by which the Seabees needed to operate and gave a significant morale boost to the CEC officers, connecting them directly to combat operations as part of the military force. Moreell’s achievement in that regard is widely seen as a significant factor in the success of the Seabees and, ultimately, the U.S. victories in both theaters of war. After the war, Moreell was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal, with a citation that captured the spirit and determination the “King Bee” had instilled in his unique new warrior builders: “Displaying great originality and exceptional capacity for bold innovation, he inspired in his subordinates a degree of loyalty and devotion to duty
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K M T- 2
A S P H A LT R E C Y C L E R
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum
Above: Standing on springboards 13 feet above the ground, two lumberjacks from the 25th Naval Construction Battalion begin chopping down a giant tree in the tropical forest on Guadalcanal. Right: Seabees roll drums of aviation gasoline and diesel fuel down the ramp of an LST at Cape Torokina, Bougainville, during an early resupply operation, Nov. 6, 1943.
outstanding in the Naval Service, to the end that the Fleet received support in degree and kind unprecedented in the history of naval warfare.” Because of their civilian work background requirements, the first World War II Seabees were older than most Navy recruits; the average age was 37. However, President Franklin Roosevelt ordered voluntary enlistments, based on construction experience, halted in December 1942, with all future personnel for the construction battalions drawn from the Selective Service System, which significantly lowered both the age and skillsets of subsequent recruits. The new organization also attracted enlistees from Middle America, many of whom had never seen a body of water larger than a lake. A large number of those were from states – such as Arizona and Oklahoma – whose state namesake ships were sunk or heavily damaged at Pearl Harbor, leading them to join the Navy to fight in the Pacific and avenge the crews of those ships. As a land- rather than ship-based force, many also felt more comfortable as Seabees. A typical example was Ralph Clayton Wilson, who enlisted in Oklahoma shortly after his 26th birthday in
January 1942. He was just finishing Navy bootcamp when he learned of the Seabees and immediately volunteered. However, in those early weeks, the Navy was still working out who they wanted and what kind of training to give them, so the initial volunteers often were temporarily reclassified as regular Navy, then brought back to the Seabees. Wilson’s wife, Wilma, joked that she got so tired of changing the patch on his uniform, she almost told him to request a transfer to the Army. When they finally received permanent orders, the new Seabees were a bit surprised to learn they were returning to bootcamp – this time with the Marines, with whom they had more in common than with regular Navy sailors. After their weapons training, they were sent to short, but intense, Navy combat construction and engineering schools, then, for the most part, to the South Pacific, where they spent the next four years building airstrips, supply and repair depots, and other badly needed facilities for the Navy and, especially, the Marines, then deconstructing them at war’s end. For the Navy’s construction units, 2017 is a milestone year – the 175th anniversary of the founding of Naval Facilities Engineering Command, or NAVFAC (as BuDocks, the
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Navy’s oldest systems command), the 150th anniversary of the Navy’s Civil Engineer Corps, and the 75th anniversary of the Seabees. “For 75 years, Seabees … a fighting group that I’ve been proud to be a part of for the past 32 years … have been protecting the nation and serving the Navy and Marine Corps with great pride and dedication,” said Rear Adm. Bret Muilenburg, who holds the same posts as Seabee founder Moreel – commander of NAVFAC and Chief of Civil Engineers. “[It is] a proud legacy that has played a major role in every significant military engagement since World War II. Whether it has been enabling the warfighter, providing disaster relief and humanitarian assistance, or building camps and taking care of facilities and equipment for special operations forces, [Seabees] have taken care of the Navy and Marine Corps’ business.” Although best known for their exploits in the Pacific, the Seabees also were active in the Atlantic/European theater, such as assisting in the construction of an artificial harbor at Normandy after D-Day. Overall, more than 325,000 Seabees were recruited, trained, and deployed worldwide during World War II, the largest number in Seabee history. About 14,000 Seabees were sent to Korea during that war, another 26,000 to Vietnam a decade-plus later, about 5,000 to the first Gulf war, and some 20,000 deployed to Southwest Asia in the 16 years since 9/11. Today, about 11,000 men and women
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continue to provide construction support to U.S. Marines and naval forces around the globe. In a message commemorating their anniversary, Adm. John Richardson, Chief of Naval Operations, stressed the Seabees’ importance to the successful history of the Navy. “The Seabees were established in the dark days following the attack on Pearl Harbor to answer the crucial demand for builders that could fight. The Seabees have a longstanding tradition of support to the National Military Strategy through contingency construction since their establishment in 1942. The Seabees are a proud and dedicated force with proven warfighting competence and character,” he said. Even as the Navy cut its overall personnel level in the past decade, it has bolstered its investment in the Seabees, who have been in constant demand from Combatant Commands (COCOMs) to assist with combat infrastructure, work with allied and friendly nations to improve their facilities, and provide humanitarian aid. In recent years, the latter has included aiding victims of the Indian Ocean tsunami, a major Pakistani earthquake, and hurricanes – from Katrina and Sandy to Harvey, Irma, and Maria. Seabees built roads and drilled wells to help Iraqi Kurdish refugees after the first Gulf war, helped the Philippines clear tons of volcanic ash from the eruption of Mount Pinatubo, provided humanitarian aid to Somalia and Haiti, and worked with local officials to build schools, orphanages, and medical facilities in Asia, Africa, and South America. During the Vietnam War, in addition to a massive combat construction effort, 13man Seabee Teams concentrated on helping the South Vietnamese build dams, schools, and libraries, dig wells, grade roads, and more. Major Seabee construction projects since World War II have included:
National Archives photos
Left: Rhino ferry RHF-12 underway off Normandy during the first days of the invasion, June 6-9, 1944. Note the Seabee insignia on the bulldozer blade and on the Rhino power units. Right: A Seabee mobile repair shop on a large pontoon, used to support the Mulberry artificial harbor off the Normandy beachhead in mid-1944. Note the USS “Can-Do” emblem, tent, quonset hut, tattered U.S. ensign and Jeep on the pontoon, plus the mass of shipping in the distance.
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
A sign posted by Marines of the Third Marine Division, Second Raider Regiment with a tribute to the Seabees, Jan. 1, 1944. The Seabees and Marine Corps had a special bond of mutual respect, having shared much of the same hardships and dangers in the Pacific War.
National Archives photo
• construction of Naval Air Station Cubi Point in the Philippines, where half a mountain was removed to extend the runway; • Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean, where they spent years creating a viable base that proved invaluable during both Gulf wars; • Operation Deep Freeze in Antarctica, where in yearly deployments since 1955 the Seabees have built and expanded scientific bases, a 6,000-foot ice runway, and, in 1962, Antarctica’s first nuclear power plant; and • the formation of Seabee underwater construction teams (UCT) in the late 1960s to build Tektite, a joint NASA/Navy/academia undersea research facility, and place it on the ocean floor 49 feet beneath Great Lameshur Bay, St. John, U.S. Virgin Islands. As Gen. Douglas MacArthur once said, “The problem with Seabees is there just aren’t enough of them.” NAVY CONSTRUCTION BEFORE THE SEABEES Although it would be another 130 years before the stand-up of the Seabees, U.S. Navy seamen were called on to build the nation’s first overseas naval base during the War of 1812, shortly after the USS Essex rounded Cape Horn to become the first U.S.-flagged military ship in the Pacific. The Essex mounted a successful campaign, capturing several British ships and merchantmen, but after a year away from port – and by then under pursuit by a British naval squadron – Capt. David Porter selected a bay on Nukuhiva Island in the Marquesas for a safe harbor to repair and re-equip the Essex and convert some of his captured prizes into fighting ships. In only three months, nearly 300 skilled Essex crewmen, aided by an estimated 4,000 friendly natives, completed construction of “Madisonville,” named for then-President James Madison. It included houses for Porter and his
officers, a cooper’s shop, a sail loft, a bake shop, a guard house, a simple medical dispensary, a stores building, an open-shed shelter for the Marine sentries, a rudimentary dock, ramps to haul the ships high onto the beach, and Fort Madison, to protect the new facility from attacks by unfriendly Typee natives. As with the Seabees to come, the American sailors often had to lay down their tools and take up arms to defend their work. When the project was completed in December 1813, Porter sailed his two primary ships out to meet the British squadron. They became trapped in Valparaiso Harbor, Chile, then were captured trying to break the British blockade in March 1814. Back on Nukuhiva Island, fewer than 25 Marine Corps officers and men had been left to defend the new base, but repeated attacks by thousands of Typee warriors forced them to abandon it. Seven survivors managed to sail one of the captured ships nearly 2,500 miles to the Sandwich Islands, only to be captured by the same British warship that had previously captured Porter and his men. Despite the ultimate outcome, that effort in the Marquesas Islands set a number of precedents that led to and still inform the operations of the Seabees, beginning with the need for an overseas naval construction force to support U.S. Navy operations far from home. The building of that first base by the crew of the Essex and their need to fight to protect themselves would be the template for the Fighting Seabees of World War II and beyond. However, it would be another century before uniformed sailors were called upon again for naval construction work in a combat environment. With the entry of the United States into World War I, the Twelfth Regiment (Public Works) was formed at the Great Lakes (Illinois) Naval Training Station to build facilities to house, process, and train some 50,000 recruits. Beginning with only 100 enlisted Navy craftsman, the public works officer at Great Lakes used a combination of screening incoming recruits for skilled craftsmen and recruiting qualified local civilians to create a force of nearly 600 sailor-builders by July 1917. Even as they worked to build the Great Lakes station, the men in the new regiment were given military training so they could transfer, as needed, to other naval stations and bases, in the United States and abroad, or to fighting ships. As the war in Europe progressed, most remained at Great Lakes for only three or four months before taking their construction and military skills to war. By April 1918, the regiment had grown to 2,400 men in five battalions. Throughout 1917 and ‘18, hundreds of men from the Twelfth were sent to various parts of Europe. One group
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For 75 years, America’s Fighting Seabees have demonstrated their skills as builders and fighters. The Seabee Memorial Scholarship Association honors the Seabees “Can Do” spirit by providing scholarships to deserving students like Kaitlin Lebon, who graduated Magna Cum Laude with a B.S. in Biology from Oregon State University. Kaitlin’s father is EO2 Gregory Lebon, USN.
Seabee Memorial Scholarship Association
Building A “Can Do” Legacy Through Education “My immersion in undergraduate research sparked an interest in bridging the communication gap between scientists and policy makers. With the interdisciplinary training offered in my graduate program, I hope to help foster more efficient and effective management strategies for marine resource conservation”.
Congratulations Seabees for 75 years of steadfast service to America. We Build. We Fight. We Educate. www.seabee.org
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
National Archives photo
Seabees carry sections of pressed steel runway surfacing while constructing Torokina airfield, Bougainville, in December 1943.
helped assemble the Naval Railway Batteries at St. Nazaire in France while fighting alongside operational gun crews along the nearby German lines. Others built and repaired docks and wharves in France, laid railroad tracks, built communications facilities – including converting the Eiffel Tower into a “Marconi wireless transmitting station” antenna – and constructed air bases along the coast. Continued training operations and construction at Great Lakes provided more than 125,000 recruits by November 1918 to supply the major naval buildup that had begun in spring of 1917. The Twelfth Regiment and Public Works Department grew apace, reaching a peak strength on Nov. 5, 1918, of 55 officers and 6,211 enlisted men, formed into 11 battalions. All of that ended with the war’s conclusion in midNovember 1918, and the Twelfth Regiment (Public Works), never recognized as an official unit of the U.S. Navy, gradually faded away, leaving behind a legacy of organizational, operational, and training efficiency and success – attributes that, a generation later, would come to be closely identified with the Seabees. Although the Twelfth Regiment was gone, the idea of using experienced craftsmen, with military training, for naval construction remained alive in the years between the two world wars. In the early 1930s, BuDocks began including “Navy Construction Battalions” as part of their contingency war plans. However, a plan adopted by the War Plans Board in 1935 proved severely limited, with a divided command structure and no provisions for recruiting, enlisting, training, or even developing training facilities for construction battalion enlisted personnel.
During 1940 and ‘41, large naval bases were under construction on Guam, Midway, Wake Island, Hawaii, Iceland, Newfoundland, Bermuda, Trinidad, and numerous other locations throughout the Pacific, Atlantic, and Caribbean. The work was still being done by civilian contractors, but military Headquarters Construction Companies, comprising two officers and 99 enlisted men each, were assigned as draftsmen, engineering aides, inspectors, and supervisors, although they did no actual construction work. After Pearl Harbor, those men came under heavy attack from Japanese forces. The lessons the Navy learned, from the War of 1812 through World War I’s Twelfth Regiment, paved the way for a new and more comprehensive effort – the Navy’s first official uniformed Construction Battalions (or CBs). WORLD WAR II World War II saw the creation of the Seabees, their rapid record-setting growth, situational development of tactics, techniques, and procedures and concepts of operations, and the birth of a modern legend. The need for an armed, military construction battalion was driven home forcefully as the Japanese seized Wake Island in the days immediately following Pearl Harbor, capturing more than 1,200 civilian construction workers. Under international law, civilians were not permitted to resist enemy military attack; to do so meant summary execution as guerrillas. Even so, 98 of those captured were executed and many others died in captivity. The Japanese commander who ordered the executions was himself executed after the war. Similar attacks occurred throughout the Pacific as the Imperial Navy moved swiftly to capture as much territory as possible – especially islands America and its allies might use as bases – while the U.S. Navy was still recovering from the attack on Dec. 7.
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HIDDEN HISTORY
American Volunteer Group (AVG) pilots, better known as the Flying Tigers, run for their P-40B Tomahawks in a posed photo. The vastly outnumbered AVG had only 79 qualified pilots and 62 operable aircraft on Dec. 2, 1941, but they and their shark-mouthed P-40s became legendary for their achievements against the Japanese over China and Burma.
National Archives photo
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
A Seabee watches from his steamroller as B-29 Superfortresses arrive above Tinian.
Marine-trained and combat ready, Seabees often went ashore with the first wave of amphibious assault troops, fighting enemy air and ground attacks and seemingly never-ending snipers as they built bases, roads, airfields, harbors, and fuel, weapons, and other supply storage facilities on hundreds of undeveloped islands, some barren, some covered with jungles or mountains, some measuring only a mile or two wide and long. Their primary structure was the Construction Battalion: four companies with all the skills needed for nearly any job, plus a headquarters company that included medical and dental care providers, administrators, storekeepers, cooks, and other support specialists; typically, 32 officers and 1,073 enlisted. As the Seabees grew in number to meet increasingly larger and more complex projects, more than one battalion frequently was assigned to the same base. In such cases, they were organized into a regiment. Occasionally, two or more regiments were combined into a brigade and even two or more brigades into a Naval Construction Force. The men in those units had the requisite skills, training, and intuitive versatility for whatever mission the Navy gave them, but BuDocks decided it was a waste of manpower to assign a full battalion to a project a much smaller specialpurpose unit could do just as well. The first of those was the Special Construction Battalion – aka, Seabee Special – comprising stevedores and longshoremen needed to bring order to the unloading of ships in combat zones. Under the command of officers commissioned from the Merchant Marine and stevedoring companies, they soon had combat cargo handling at levels comparable to the most efficient ports in the United States. Other Seabee Special units included: • construction battalion maintenance units, about a quarter the size of a regular battalion and organized to take over maintenance of new bases once the full Construction Battalion had completed its work and moved on to the next mission; • construction battalion detachments, which, based on function, could be as few as six or as many as 600 men, primarily assigned to assembling, handling, launching, and placing pontoon causeways, although
they also took on other specialties, from repairing tires to dredging; • motor trucking battalions; • pontoon assembly detachments, which manufactured pontoons in forward combat zones; and • petroleum detachments, manned by experts in pipeline installation and petroleum facilities. The Seabees gained further fame for ingenuity in the face of often severe lack of materials; for example, using Coke bottles in place of glass insulators on power lines, turning metal ammo boxes into makeshift replacement radiators to keep captured Japanese trucks running, and using thin sheets of metal and paper to replace gaskets on bulldozers. Their determination to succeed, regardless of the obstacles, was summed up in a sign they posted at a newly constructed base on Bougainville: “The difficult we do now; the impossible takes a little longer.” Seabee speed was demonstrated on the island of Espiritu Santo, near Guadalcanal, where U.S. forces needed an airfield from which to attack a nearly completed
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
Dust and steam rise from the hot earth as Seabees of the 62nd Naval Construction Battalion use a power shovel to load a dump truck on Iwo Jima, March 25, 1945.
Japanese airbase that threatened the sea lanes to Australia. It took the Seabees only 20 days to carve a 6,000-foot airstrip out of the island jungle, soon enough for U.S. planes to help support the capture of Guadalcanal and the U.S. campaign in the Solomon Islands. In the North, Central, South, and Southwest Pacific, the Seabees built 111 major airstrips, 441 piers, 2,558 ammunition magazines, 700 square blocks of warehouses, hospitals to serve 70,000 patients, tanks for the storage of 100 million gallons of gasoline, and housing for 1.5 million men. Overall, they served on four continents and more than 300 islands, organized into 151 regular Construction Battalions, 39 Special Stevedore Battalions, 164 Construction Battalion detachments, 136 Seabee maintenance battalions, five pontoon assembly detachments, 54 regiments, 12 brigades, and five Naval Construction Forces. While best known for their operations in the Pacific, where 80 percent of the Naval Construction Force served, the Seabees also were an integral part of the war in the Atlantic, building, expanding, and maintaining bases in the Caribbean, Central America, and South America, with a special emphasis on protecting the Panama Canal, essential to America’s conduct of a two-ocean war and supporting U.S. and allied forces in Africa and Europe. One of the largest efforts in the western Atlantic was the construction of the Naval Station at Roosevelt Roads in Puerto Rico. Home to the Tenth Naval District, it had grown so large by the end of the war that it became known as the “Pearl Harbor of the Caribbean.” Farther south, the Seabees built a vast network of coastal bases from Bermuda to beyond the Brazilian bulge, creating a barrier protecting vital shipping lanes from German U-boats. They also worked on the Pacific side of Latin America, building airfields, blimp hangars, and new and enlarged harbors from Honduras to Ecuador, providing bases from which seaplanes, patrol bombers, blimps, and surface craft could hunt down and destroy enemy submarines.
Seabees saw their first Atlantic theater combat when they landed in North Africa with U.S. assault troops in November 1942. As Allied tanks and infantry pushed toward Tunisia and Germany’s famed Afrika Korps, the Seabees built a line of staging and training areas along the northern coast and a huge naval air station at Port Lyautey, Morocco, on Africa’s west coast. For the invasion of Sicily, they drew from ancient history and the pontoons Xerxes had used to cross the Hellespont in his 5th century B.C. invasion of Greece. As usual, the Seabees added their own twist, creating steel pontoons of standard size that could be assembled quickly to form causeways, piers, and other structures required by amphibious warfare. The new pontoons turned what had been considered an impossible site for a major amphibious landing into a safe path for large numbers of men and equipment to move ashore in a surprise attack.
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
Cover image from a 1960 brochure on Operation Deep Freeze, an ongoing mission that began in 1955, when Seabees built the first permanent structure at the South Pole.
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world’s two great oceans to Berlin and Tokyo in the nearly four years of deadly conflict that followed Pearl Harbor. THE CYCLE BEGINS: BUILD UP IN WAR, DOWNSIZE IN PEACE, THEN BUILD UP AGAIN Throughout U.S. naval history, construction units were created on the fly in the midst of combat, grew quickly and substantially, then faded away as peace replaced war. Unlike its predecessors, the Seabees were not disbanded at the end of World War II, but declared a permanent component of the regular peacetime Navy in 1947 (during the war, the Seabees were considered a Naval Reserve organization). Still, along with the rest of America’s massive wartime military, their numbers were drastically reduced to only 3,300 active duty sailors by 1949. However, they were supported, as needed, by a newly created Seabee Reserve Organization, organized into a number of
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
Seabee efforts were crucial to later Allied victories at Salerno and Anzio, where they were under constant German bombardment, and the invasion of southern France. As important as those projects were, they were eclipsed by the Seabees’ role in the invasion of Normandy in June 1944, an effort that had begun two years earlier with construction projects in Iceland, Newfoundland, Greenland, Northern Ireland, Wales, and Scotland. Ultimately, a huge arc of naval air stations and bases across the North Atlantic enabled the Navy to take control of the seas and freed the Seabees to build invasion bases and make preparations for D-Day. Seabees were among the first to go ashore on June 6, 1944, working with U.S. Army engineers, under heavy German fire, to destroy an intricate network of steel and concrete barriers the Germans had built, from the beaches to well offshore, to block any attempt at an amphibious assault. Despite taking heavy casualties, they set their explosive charges on schedule and blew huge holes in the enemy’s defenses. It was through those breaches that some 10,000 Seabees once again employed pontoons, enabling Allied troops and tanks to get ashore and push the Germans inland. Their next task was building a huge port, using more pontoons and prefabricated concrete structures shipped from England. The temporary, artificial “Mulberry” harbors were used to land hundreds of thousands of tons of war materiel daily – and more than a million warfighters – in the four weeks following D-Day. The Seabees’ skills were severely tested as they sought to rebuild harbors at Cherbourg and Le Havre, which had been destroyed by the retreating Germans. They began receiving cargo at Cherbourg within 11 days of landing, and within a month, the harbor could handle 14 ships simultaneously, a feat duplicated at Le Havre. Ports all along the French coastline were rapidly restored to handle huge shiploads of war materiel. In March 1945, Seabees faced the swift and unpredictable currents of the Rhine River, one of the final barriers in the Allied march on Berlin. Once again employing their by then ubiquitous pontoons as ferries, they assisted Gen. George S. Patton’s successful crossing of the Rhine, helping force the Third Reich to surrender the following month. By the end of the war, nearly 300 Seabees had been killed in action and another 500 in construction accidents. Individual Seabees were awarded five Navy Crosses, 33 Silver Stars, and 2,000 Purple Hearts as the warrior builders literally paved the way across the
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
Seabees assigned to Seabee Team 1104 in a group image taken prior to deployment to Dong Xoai, Vietnam. CM3 Marvin Shields and SW2 William Hoover were killed and seven members of the team were wounded in action in one of the bloodiest and hardest fought battles of the Vietnam War. Shields was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.
divisions, comprising five officers and 40 enlisted reservists. They worked a variety of tasks in the late 1940s, ranging from rebuilding Japan’s bombed-out infrastructure and building a fleet weather station in far eastern Russia, to preparing Bikini Atoll for upcoming atomic bomb tests, and building new facilities to support U.S. research efforts in Antarctica. Expanded once again to 14,000 men (mostly calledup reservists), the Seabees went back to war in 1950, following the invasion of South Korea by the communist North in June of that year. Their reputation was confirmed as they joined United Nations-sanctioned troops in the amphibious invasion of Inchon, battling 30-foot tides, treacherous currents, and nonstop enemy fire to position pontoon causeways to move troops, tanks, and other equipment ashore. During the Korean War, the Seabees were organized into 13 battalions of two distinct types: Amphibious Construction Battalions to support the landing of men, equipment, and supplies safely and efficiently, and Naval Mobile Construction Battalions to handle land-based construction of camps, roads, airstrips, and other facilities. The end of hostilities in July 1953 saw a new paradigm for the Seabees. Rather than another major size reduction, calls for military construction to deal with a growing number of hotspots – from Berlin to Cuba to Southeast Asia – led to a restructuring and an increase in non-Reserve numbers. Working on six continents and focused on building rather than fighting, the remainder of the 1950s were filled with innovations, experimentation, and what often seemed
impossible construction efforts, from overcoming blizzards and far below zero temperatures on Antarctica to moving mountains and reclaiming swampland for a major air station and massive port in the Philippines. That period also saw the growth of the Seabee Reserves to 242 divisions of 4 officers and 50 enlisted, and, in 1960 – the first U.S. operations in Vietnam – creation of 18 reserve battalions, eventually leading to establishment of the 1st Reserve Naval Construction Brigade, in charge of all Seabee Reserve elements, in September 1969. At the same time, the Seabees took on yet another new mission as an operationally ready disaster relief force, helping earthquake, typhoon, hurricane, and tidal wave victims, from Greece to Guam and Alaska to the Azores, rebuild, as well as battling major forest fires in the United States. Following the discovery of electronic surveillance devices throughout the new U.S. embassy in Moscow in 1964, the State Department called on the Seabees for all future construction and renovation work involving security-sensitive Foreign Service facilities around the globe. The Naval Support Unit-State Department, created in 1966, quickly became a permanent part of State Department operations abroad. THE SEABEES AT WAR IN SOUTHEAST ASIA From 1964 through 1968, Seabee strength worldwide grew to more than 26,000 men in 21 full-strength Naval Mobile Construction Battalions, two Construction Battalion Maintenance Units, and two Amphibious Construction Battalions. Thirteen-man Seabee teams spent much of the early 1960s in Thailand, helping rural development efforts, then development of remote area security by Thai border patrol police. In South Vietnam, teams also were at work throughout the decade, performing civic tasks, such as training locals in basic construction skills and providing medical assistance, and military engineering projects in 22 largely rural
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U.S. Navy Seabees on celebrating 75 years!
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force Engineering Aide 3rd Class Jim Millar, kneeling, and Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 62 personnel on a survey in 1968. A team of NMCB 62 surveyors spent four days in the field near the Dai Ghang River, Republic of Vietnam, surveying a future road into Viet Cong-held territory.
U.S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
provinces from the Mekong Delta to the North Vietnamese border. For the larger Seabee battalions, from their first deployment in 1965 to their withdrawal in 1970, Vietnam marked the largest number of warrior/builders since World War II, ultimately peaking at 26,000 in 1969. It also was the most massive construction effort since World War II, as it entailed building roads, airfields, cantonments, warehouses, hospitals, storage facilities, bunkers, harbors, coastal strongholds, water distribution systems, communications infrastructure, and advanced bases throughout Vietnam. After the war, the Seabees once again were reduced in number, with most of those remaining working on major peacetime projects that had been put aside to deal with the necessities of war. Despite their smaller numbers, they were in increasing demand from Europe to the Indian Ocean to the bottom of the sea itself. Throughout the 1970s and ‘80s, the Seabees were kept busy with numerous projects, large and small, in Greece, Crete, Sicily, Italy, Spain, England, Scotland, Germany, Okinawa, Taiwan, the Philippines, Guam, Puerto Rico, Newfoundland, Micronesia, Bolivia, Nicaragua, Guantanamo Bay, and Antarctica, as well as undersea projects performed by two Seabee Underwater Construction Teams. Construction of a major naval complex on the Indian Ocean island of Diego Garcia – a tiny (6,700 acres), rainsoaked coral atoll 7 miles south of the Equator – occupied Seabee Naval and Amphibious Construction Battalions for more than a decade and constituted the largest peacetime construction project in Seabee history. BACK TO BATTLE IN THE 1990S The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 and the subsequent “first Gulf War” – officially six months of mobilization and preparation as Operation Desert Shield, concluding with three days of “shock and awe” as Operation Desert Storm – saw the largest Seabee military action since Vietnam. On Aug. 13, 1990, 210 Seabees of ACB-1 arrived in Saudi Arabia, followed by personnel of Naval Mobile Construction Battalions 4, 5, 7, and 40, to provide construction support for the First Marine Expeditionary
Force (MEF). They were joined a short time later by 100 members of Amphibious Construction Battalion 2, which worked with the Marines to prepare for an amphibious assault on Kuwait. Next in were Construction Battalion Units 411 and 415 – both with female officers-in-charge, a Seabee first – who built and maintained a 500-bed medical facility at Al Jubail, Saudi Arabia. The air detachments of the four deploying Seabee battalions arrived in mid-September. By early February 1991, 2,800 Seabees were in the region, building vital facilities at four airfields being used by the Marine Air Combat Element, as well as a headquarters complex for the First MEF and a 15,000-man camp for the Second MEF, the largest wartime multi-battalion Seabee project in two decades. With the launch of a massive Allied air campaign of more than 40,000 sorties in January 1991, the Seabees prepared to move into Kuwait to support advancing ground forces, building and repairing roads and airfields. Other units did the same across northern Saudi Arabia, creating the main supply routes for a Marine ground assault. Priorities were multiple: providing water, roads, and galley facilities for 30,000 Marines and building camps to hold up to 40,000 prisoners of war. Following the Iraqi surrender on Feb. 28, 1991, forward-deployed Seabees returned to Kuwait. But the warrior/builders were back in Iraq in April as part of a United Nations relief effort to protect minority Kurds who had rebelled against Saddam Hussein’s government and declared independence for their home region in northwest Iraq. Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 133 deployed to the Kurdish region and worked 12-hour days building latrines, providing electrical and water-well support, grading roads, and a host of other “emergency service relief work” to support thousands of Kurdish refugees until they could return to their villages.
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It has been a monumental year thus far for the CEC/Seabee Historical Foundation as we celebrate the Seabee Diamond Anniversary throughout cities nationwide, with events that honor Seabee veterans of every era, encourage young people to explore STEM, and raise awareness of the Seabees. We seized this opportunity in time to launch a campaign to fund new state-of-the-art exhibits at the U.S. Navy Seabee Museum in Port Hueneme, California. There’s much more to come, and you can always learn more at:
seabee75.org CEC/Seabee Historical Foundation PO Box 657 • Gulfport, MS 39502(228) 865-0480 • info@seabeehf.org
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U. S. Navy Seabee Museum photo
Left: Among the major projects completed by the Seabees during Operation Desert Shield were a headquarters complex for the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force and a 15,000-man camp for the 2nd Marine Expeditionary Force. The completed camp complex was dubbed “Wally World.” Below: Seabees assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion Four Zero (NMCB-40) were tasked with rebuilding a damaged bridge in Fallujah, Iraq, used heavily by Iraqi citizens during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
The remainder of the 1990s saw a “typical” mix of Seabee humanitarian and disaster relief missions, from clearing an estimated 250,000 tons of ash dumped on the U.S. Subic Bay Naval Complex and Clarke Air Force Base by the eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in the Philippines in June 1991 to supporting the U.S. contingent of a UN military force combating armed gangs stealing relief supplies sent into famine-ravaged Somalia in 1992 to repairing hundreds of buildings and schools damaged when Hurricane Andrew hit Dade County, Florida, in August of that year. In 1993, the Seabees participated in planning for peacekeeping operations in the former Yugoslavia, were involved in a UN mission to Haiti, played a major role in a counter-narcotics program in South America, and aided disaster recovery following an 8.1 earthquake in Guam. The rest of the decade was similar: building a UN field hospital in Croatia, drilling water wells in Morocco and Honduras, and providing hurricane disaster relief to eastern Caribbean islands and aid to earthquake victims in Japan. To support Haitian and Cuban disaster refugee efforts in 1994, the Seabees worked as part of a multi-national/ multi-service “Operation Sea Signal” at Guantanamo, ultimately building two tent cities to house nearly 20,000 people, which required 100,000 man-days of construction in a harsh environment while refugees were arriving. Bosnia and Croatia were primary Seabee missions in 1995 and 1996 as part of UN-sponsored humanitarian relief in those war-torn nations that had been part of Yugoslavia. Those ranged from completing the Navy’s contribution to the Joint Fleet Hospital in Zagreb to constructing five tent camps in Croatia. In a major deployment to Bosnia in September 1996, Seabees tore down 14 base camps as part of the withdrawal of U.S. Army troops from the region and completed 19 force sustainment projects.
21ST CENTURY SEABEES The Seabees returned to Southwest Asia in late 2001, supporting the Marine invasion of Afghanistan after 9/11 and of Iraq in 2003. Their participation in America’s longest war was marked by numerous “build-and-fight” missions – as well as some precedent-setting events. In 1972, with the opening of all Navy ratings to women, the first female Seabee had joined their ranks, starting a trend that would see women common among the Seabees within two decades. Forty years later, in Afghanistan, an all-female team of eight Seabees forever laid to rest any question about women warrior/builders as they became the first all-female unit to take a project from start to finish. The team was assigned to build four two barracks at a post in the rugged mountains of Helmand Province, a Taliban stronghold that had seen near-constant combat. Despite typical Seabee working conditions – a tight threeweek deadline, freezing temperatures, a rice-and-beans diet – they decided to double their task by adding an operations center and a gym to the construction effort.
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
Two weeks later, after installing electricity and utilities in the finished structures, the job was done – in record time. Throughout Operation Enduring Freedom-Afghanistan and Operation Iraqi Freedom, Seabees provided critical construction skills in the effort to rebuild – or, even more often, build – infrastructure, along with numerous forward operating bases for U.S. and coalition forces. The continued battle against ISIS in Syria and Iraq, ongoing terrorist activities worldwide, a record-setting hurricane season, more devastating earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, and rising tensions with North Korea, China, and Russia – along with new basing requirements in the Pacific for the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps – mean the demand for Seabee skills and ingenuity remains high. The U.S. Navy Program Guide 2017 – an extensive report on the status, requirements, and possible future missions of the Navy and Marine Corps – notes the Seabees’ value in support of Navy commandeers, joint force and combatant commanders, and the Marine Air-Ground Task Force: “Forward-deployed Seabees enable the surge of tasktailored engineer forces and equipment sets to enhance the MAGTF and other naval and joint forces on land. … In operations other than war, forward-deployed Naval Mobile Construction battalions hone construction skills through humanitarian assistance and disaster recovery
Engineering Aide 3rd Class Raynante B. Taa records the information being relayed to him from Steelworker Constructionman Lisa W. Majzoub, who is taking measurements during their surveying project at Camp Bastion. Both Seabees are assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 5.
operations, participate in foreign engagement exercises, and complete construction projects that support sustainment, restoration, and modernization of Navy and Marine Corps forward bases and facilities. “The Navy has developed a long-range plan to recapitalize the tables of allowance of all Seabee units. The initial priority is to correct existing inventory deficiencies and replace aging tools and equipment that are no longer parts-supportable. During the next several years, [the Seabees] will be outfitted with modern and recapitalized tactical vehicles, construction and maintenance equipment, communications gear, infantry items, and field-support equipment.” All of which means the Seabees can expect another 75 years of service to the military and the nation. And while the Seabee of 2092 might seem to have little in common with his or her 1942 ancestors, the “can do” spirit, on-the-fly inventiveness, and determination to complete whatever task is assigned, usually in record time, is likely to endure.
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
NAVFAC History
By J.R. Wilson
During its first six decades, the United States won two wars against the largest and most powerful empire in history; won the almost entirely naval Quasi-War with the French; established the Monroe Doctrine, declaring U.S. protection of the Western Hemisphere from European colonialism; and fought two wars against the Barbary pirates, who had seized ships and enslaved Christians, primarily in the Mediterranean, for hundreds of years. While American warships of the short-lived Continental Navy had engaged the British during the Revolutionary War, it was the Barbary threat that led Congress to officially create the U.S. Navy and authorize construction of its first six ships in 1794. That nascent Navy played a crucial role in each of those subsequent events, slowly growing in size and capability as the United States evolved into a regional power. By 1842, the Navy had seven ship repair yards, four ordnance stations, and five naval stations along the East Coast, supporting a fleet of 53 ships. “It doesn’t seem like much today, but it was a humble start. In 1842, our young nation was beginning to understand the importance of a navy, and it was decided we needed a professional organization to handle public works,” said Rear Adm. Bret Muilenburg, commander of the Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC) and Chief of Naval Civil Engineers. That led to creation of the Bureau of Navy Yards and Docks (BuDocks), predecessor to NAVFAC, which is celebrating its 175th anniversary in 2017.
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“Originally, it was only one naval officer and six civilians, compared to 22,000 personnel today. We must imagine the original seven leveraged industry contractors to a great extent to get the work done,” he said. “The entire Navy was structured around the concept of bureaus at the time. Throughout those years, the scope and responsibility were really the same, just expanding as our nation matured and our influence around the world increased. “As we grew, our civilian and military leadership felt the need to continue to consolidate and professionalize the management of our facilities and infrastructure. In 1911, all construction for the Navy, which had been done by the individual bureaus, was put in the hands of BuDocks.” In May 1966, BuDocks was formally renamed NAVFAC, a systems command that delivers and maintains quality, sustainable facilities, acquires and manages capabilities for the Navy’s expeditionary combat forces, provides contingency engineering response, and enables energy security and environmental stewardship.
Library of Congress photo
Of today’s 22,000 NAVFAC personnel, 79 percent are U.S. Civil Service, 12 percent are foreign nationals, 7 percent are U.S. military, and 2 percent are contractor personnel, operating at 12 component commands and three specialty centers around the world. Finding the right mix of personnel to deal with new technologies and the Navy’s 21st century requirements is a continuing challenge. “Our products and services range the gamut from hands-on tradesmen work all the way to high tech, such as cyber protection of industrial control systems. One of our challenges is the broad portfolio of things we do. We bring in a lot of folks right out of trade school or college and give them a lot of on-the-job training and professional credentialing,” Muilenburg said. Each component group provides a specific capability to the overall mission, he added. “Civil Engineer Corps officers lead NAVFAC through the military chain of command, providing an interface with supported operational commanders and their mission needs. They are all professionally credentialed engineers or architects and members of the Defense Acquisition Corps, and all are qualified as Seabee combat warfare specialists, so they can go off established bases anywhere
An assembled naval rifle aboard Washington Navy Yard, circa 1890, four years after the yard was designated the manufacturing center for all Navy ordnance. The Washington Navy Yard is the oldest shore establishment of the U.S. Navy, established 1799.
in the world to support the mission. Our enlisted Seabees are tradesmen who work alongside the civilian workforce or go out on their own to contingency locations to perform construction. “The U.S. civilians really provide the business and technical expertise to run NAVFAC and deliver our 15 or so services. They include engineers, architects, scientists, utility operators, environmental specialists, real estate specialists, cyber security specialists, etc. At overseas installations for our allies, such as Japan or Italy or Spain, we hire citizens of the host nation who provide many of those same technical and business skills. It’s a good team that works well together, merging everybody’s strengths to make it all work.” World War I and, to a far greater extent, World War II saw America’s global influence continue to build, and with that, an increasing need for a strong Navy, based out of the United States but with a growing number of overseas bases and capabilities. During World War I,
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U.S. Navy photo by Photographer’s Mate 2nd Class Michael Hight
U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command photo
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
Right: The U.S. Navy light cruiser USS St. Louis (CL 49) has guns removed from her forward 6-inch gun turrets during overhaul and battle damage repairs at the Mare Island Navy Yard, California, circa September 1943. Construction of naval bases, and supporting the activities taking place aboard them, expanded and accelerated during World War II. Below: U.S. Navy Seabees of Underwater Construction Team Two (UCT-2) make a scheduled dive to maintain pier facilities at Diego Garcia. Diego Garcia was NAVFAC’s largest peacetime construction project, and took place over a decade. Underwater Construction Teams provide a capability for construction, inspection, repair, and maintenance of ocean facilities supporting Naval and Marine Corps operations, including repair of battle damage.
BuDocks oversaw the construction of 35 new naval training stations, submarine bases, and air stations. That effort went into hyperdrive during World War II, and has remained central to U.S. naval power projection across the globe ever since. As of mid-2017, there are more than 100 points of delivery around the world providing naval services, including 71 Navy bases and 24 Marine Corps bases, plus nine Air Force bases where NAVFAC is the primary construction provider. A new Marine Corps base is under construction in Guam, as is a joint capability base – Camp Lemonnier, run by the Navy – in Djibouti, in the Horn of Africa. NAVFAC also recently completed a ballistic missile defense base in Romania and has another under construction in Poland, both unusual for the Navy as neither one is on a seacoast. “We are inherently a technical organization and really value technical knowledge and credentialing,” Muilenburg explained. “We have to adapt to new challenges, such as cyber security and the energy work we do. Sometimes it’s hard to grow that, and we have to augment with existing experts in the field. If it is a long-term need, we will bring it in-house and develop our own people; for shorter term needs, we might use contractors.” “We’ve changed to make sure we are tied closely to U.S. DOD [Department of Defense] structure at the network of Navy and Marine Corps bases that has developed since World War II. We adapt to changes in U.S. military
organizational structure so our forces are aligned to operational commands and the commands that run our installations around the world – Navy fleets, Marine forces, all geographic COCOMs [Combatant Commands]. We are closely tied to the Navy Installations Command, that owns and operates all our bases, and to its sister Marine Corps command.” NAVFAC’s core mission has remained the same, however – the complete facility life cycle, from planning through design, construction, operation, maintenance, renovation, and eventually demolition of obsolete facilities.
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The American Society of Civil Engineers congratulates 3 significant milestones for the Naval Construction The American Society of Civil Engineers congratulates 3 Force: significant milestones: 75 years Navy Seabees 75 years ofof thethe U.S. U.S. Navy Seabees 150th anniversary of the Navy Civil Engineer Corps Corps 150th anniversary of the Navy Civil Engineer 175 years of Naval Facilities Engineering Command
WELL DONE!
U.S. NavyCREDIT photos by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Daniel Garas PICTURE
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
Above: Seabees assigned to the Convoy Security Element of Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 15 construct a bunker project in support of the Afghan National Army. NMCB-15 was deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom as an expeditionary element of U.S. Naval Forces supporting various units worldwide through national force readiness, civil engineering, humanitarian assistance, and building and maintaining infrastructure. Right: Seabees assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion (NMCB) 15 pour concrete during a runway expansion project.
“That’s on-base. Off-base, our role has really expanded in recent decades, such as work done in Southeast Asia, Africa, and Eastern Europe, often for the COCOMs. We do humanitarian assistance projects – schools, medical clinics – and exercise-related construction, often for the Marines, where they are operating with our allies and partners. Disaster response is another core competence we exercise frequently,” he said. “To do all that, both on established bases and off, we’ve had to develop a global contracting capability of products and industry partners ready to quickly respond anywhere in the world. Our Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center [EXWC] in Port Hueneme, California, is where we have all our PhDs – engineers, scientists, and others on
the edge of engineering techniques, expanding the life of infrastructure, such as piers and runways. They also bring new technologies to warfighters in expeditionary settings, such as water purification and solar energy systems.” The EXWC was created in September 2012 with the consolidation of the NAVFAC Engineering Service Center, NAVFAC Expeditionary Logistics Center, the Specialty Center Acquisitions NAVFAC, and the NAVFAC Information Technology Center, to provide a single command and touch point responsible for NAVFAC specialty functions, which include:
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Matthew Theoharous, Executive General Manager, Defense
Lendlease would like to congratulate the U.S. Navy Seabees on their 75th Anniversary.
T +61 2 9277 2940 E matthew.theoharous@lendlease.com
75 SERVICE YEARS OF
U.S. Navy photo
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
• Facilities planning and life cycle management • Facilities maintenance and repair • Capital improvements: engineering, design, and construction • Utilities operations and management • Transportation and base vehicle support equipment • Grounds maintenance and janitorial services • Environmental planning, stewardship, and remediation • Real estate acquisition and real property management • Anti-terrorism/force protection ashore • Contingency engineering • Expeditionary systems acquisition and life cycle management • Ocean facilities: cables, buoys, and waterfront structures • Shore energy efficiency, resiliency, and management • Military housing privatization business agreements • Cybersecurity for facilities/industrial control systems • Weight handling program management The 21st century has brought two new major issues into NAVFAC’s portfolio: cyber security and energy security. Cyber protection becomes a bigger concern each year as more and more military – and civilian – systems rely on central control systems and networks to handle everything from utility systems to climate control to highend sensors. For those facilities to do their jobs, they must be protected from interruptions, whether from natural disasters or human attack. That emphasis represents a major change in NAVFAC’s mission. The same is true for energy at U.S. bases; NAVFAC must ensure they can recover quickly from any interruption, but also that their sources of energy are affordable and redundant. That has led to NAVFAC R&D and fielding of multiple alternative energy sources for those facilities, combining traditional petroleum-based energy with solar, wind, and geothermal. The Dec. 7, 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor led to a major expansion and organizational change for BuDocks, which was responsible for a massive and growing construction
Naval Facilities Engineering Command, Engineering and Expeditionary Warfare Center (NAVFAC EXWC) managed the deployment of the Fred. Olsen Ltd. “Lifesaver” Wave Energy Conversion device between March 22 and 25, 2016, to the Navy’s Wave Energy Test Site (WETS). NAVFAC EXWC established and still manages the WETS facility located off Marine Corps Base Hawaii.
program to build and expand bases across the globe, particularly in the Pacific. However, that work was being done by civilian contractors who were neither adequately trained to defend themselves nor allowed to carry arms, despite being in a war environment and targeted by the Japanese. “From those safety concerns for our contractor personnel was born the idea of creating a military capability – a combination of engineers and tradesmen with an infantryman, able to defend themselves, captured in the motto ‘We Build, We Fight.’ That was the birth of the Seabees,” Muilenburg said. “Since then, the Navy and Marines have had two options on getting engineering construction work done, both on and off base, either through the Seabees or through NAVFAC acquisition. Each has the ability to work in contingency zones. “NAVFAC serves as the technical authority for all construction work, including that by the Seabees, defining the building codes and methods. As NAVFAC commander, I also serve as Chief of Civil Engineers and see after the welfare of both civilian and military personnel. NAVFAC also serves as the command that purchases and maintains equipment for the Seabees and Navy Expeditionary Combat Command [NECC] units. NECC is responsible for manning, training, and equipping the Seabees, who operate under NECC.” NAVFAC and NECC work hand-in-hand to make sure the Seabees are mission capable, but the Seabees report to NECC and, when deployed, to the operational commander, fleet, or Marine commander responsible for that mission. NECC, in turn, reports to the fleet commanders, primarily to U.S. Fleet Forces Command. “NAVFAC is tied into the same commanders as NECC, to make sure our efforts are coordinated. We make sure the construction done by the Seabees is done to code and standards, the equipment provided to the Seabees and
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75 CONGRATULATIONS AND THANK YOU FOR ENSURING THAT WOMEN ENGINEERS "CAN DO" TOO!
Congratulations & Thank You! TO:
NAVFAC................................................ 175TH ANNIVERSARY The Seabees ................................... 75TH ANNIVERSARY Civil Engineering Corps .... 150TH ANNIVERSARY
For 400 years
of combined service to our country.
TH
The Society of Women Engineers thanks the United States Navy Seabees for continuing to make a place for all to use their talents in service of our country.
Congratulations to the United States Navy Seabees, and all women and men who proudly serve the U.S. Naval Construction Force, on your 75th anniversary!
Sound & Sea Technology, Inc. Tel: 425 743-1282 Email: info@soundandsea.com Web: www.soundandsea.com
U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class R. Utah Kledzik
A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
U.S. photo by Cmdr. Joe O’Sullivan
Above: The guided-missile destroyer USS Jason Dunham (DDG 109) returns to its homeport of Naval Station Norfolk following a seven-month deployment to the U.S. 4th and 6th fleet areas of responsibility. NAVFAC continues its 150-year mission of building, maintaining, and operating U.S. Navy facilities, including naval stations. Left: Eric Cannon and Emil Handzel, members of the NAVFAC Southeast Contingency Engineering Response Team (CERT), inspect tree damage at the Navy’s Atlantic Undersea Test and Evaluation Center (AUTEC), located on Andros Island, Bahamas. The NAVFAC Southeast CERT team deployed to assess hurricane damage at AUTEC to help get the center back to normal operations after Hurricane Matthew made its way through the Caribbean in 2016.
NECC is fulfilling its mission, and maintain oversight of the personnel community management of the enlisted and officer Seabees,” he explained. “It’s really a partnership to make that happen. “NAVFAC also has a strong relationship with the Army Corps of Engineers, along with Air Force civil engineers and Marine Corps engineers. Generally, each service’s engineers take care of their service’s needs, but NAVFAC and the Army Corps are designated as DOD’s construction agents. Overseas, each nation is designated as either NAVFAC or Army Corps lead for DOD construction. But we all work together to get things done, rely on each other, share information.” At any one time, NAVFAC has some 100 projects underway around the globe, what Muilenburg terms “phase zero work” under the
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A Celebration of the Naval Construction Force
guidance of the geographic COCOMs to help establish friendships, partnerships, and trust while building host-nation capacity to work with the U.S. in providing regional security. “Our allies and partners are important to us. There are a lot of challenges for the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps in the world, too many for any one nation to do it all alone, so the network of allies and partners working together for common security, peace, and freedom of commerce is important. And our overseas bases – often joint – are a key element in that regard. NAVFAC does the construction work, tied in with host-nation officials and contractors,” he added. “Something NAVFAC does that often is not seen is our ocean engineering work, where facilities meet the sea floor, whether at a base, a floating platform, or undersea cables. We provide a unique capability to do that work.” While NAVFAC has had primary responsibility for naval and Marine Corps construction projects throughout its 175 years, especially in the Pacific during World War II, Muilenburg cited Vietnam as a primary example of the command’s operations in a wartime environment. “NAVFAC was the construction agent for all of DOD throughout Vietnam, which was an enormous construction effort,” he said, adding they are still heavily involved in new construction across the Pacific. “The base we’re now building on Guam and the entire effort of repositioning our Marine Corps around the Pacific – Guam, Australia, Hawaii, Japan – is very important for the Corps and our allies. “We have a challenge for the foreseeable future. Our Navy today has 278 ships and a growing body of studies suggests 355 is the right number to carry out our nation’s business. Those ships need infrastructure to deploy
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U.S. Navy sailors and American and Romanian contractors construct a U.S. Aegis Ashore missile defense system at Naval Support Facility Deveselu, Romania. Having recently completed the Romanian ballistic missile defense facility, NAVFAC construction is underway on a Polish counterpart.
globally, bases where we train, resupply, re-arm, refuel, and take care of our families. The pressure to continue to put our resources as a Navy into warfighting platforms will continue, as will the pressure to find better, more efficient and cost-effective ways to run our infrastructure.” And therein lies the command’s biggest challenge, he said. “We have too much infrastructure to maintain using our current ways of doing business with the funding available. That’s a core challenge for NAVFAC for the next 20 years: How to do we tackle that challenge and keep our ships and Marines supported and still reduce infrastructure? That’s not necessarily BRAC [Base Realignment and Closure], but also partnerships with industry, communities that host us, and how we can use third party financing to, in effect, reduce infrastructure while still getting the mission done,” he said. “A primary example is our housing public-private partnership, where we have essentially turned military housing on our bases over to industry partners, who renovate and build new housing using private financing. NAVFAC still owns the land and manages it together with those third parties, leveraging their expertise and financing. “Throughout our 175 years and our growth from five to 95 installations, NAVFAC has provided our military with full cycle engineering management. We continue to do that all over the world, always looking for ways to do it better, faster, more effectively as the needs of the Department of the Navy change.”
U.S. Navy photo by Lt.j.g. Alexander Perrien
75 Years of the Seabees