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Beachmasters
THERE'S MORE to an amphibious assault than a battalion of Marines.
The beachmasters can tell you. So can the amphibious constructionmen and the
assault craft handlers. They are all part of the Naval Beach
Groups-and in every major landing they are right behind the first two boat
waves.
These Navymen handle the multitude of little-known tasks common to
any amphibious landing-they drive the boats that carry troops and supplies,
build roads and clear the beaches, direct traffic on the crowded beaches and
stack material as it is brought ashore.

Beachmasters run telephone line from beach to
command ship. Below: Floating fuel line is brought
ashore.

The outfit assigned this task with the Seventh Fleet amphibious
forces is the San Diego-based Naval Beach Group One's Western Pacific
Detachment. While many of the detachment's 800 men are embarked on
amphibious force ships and are ready to land with the Seventh Fleet's seaborne
Marine battalion landing team, others already are ashore in Vietnam supporting
troops who have recently landed. One of the Naval Beach Group's bigger
jobs in Vietnam was moving gear over a large pontoon causeway they maintained
at Chu Lai while the airfield was being built last year.

Tugs push pontoon causeway to beach.
Below: Equipment operator clears landing site with
bulldozer.

At the Navy's large supply activity in DaNang, the men provided
stevedores and lighter crews and operated a floating fuel line until permanent
personnel were sent in to relieve them. Other men of the group's three
combat-ready, selfsupporting components-a beachmaster unit, an amphibious
construction battalion and an assault craft division-remain at their Yokosuka,
Japan, headquarters. They train for such tasks as directing complex beach
operations, installing pontoon causeways, laying floating lines, improving
landing sites and salvaging disabled landing craft. But they're always
ready to ship out in support of Seventh Fleet amphibious landings.
-Story and Photos by James F. Falk, JOC, USN
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