Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 1


Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 1, is a United States Navy Seabee battalion. NMCB 1 has a long, proud and distinguished history as the very first Naval Construction Battalion of the service that would become known as the Seabees.

History

Commissioned on 15 March 1942 as Naval Construction Battalion 1. The Battalion was split into 2 Construction Detachments. The 2nd Construction Detachment went to Tongatabu and the 3rd Construction Detachment went to Efate, New Hebrides. The Seabee name did not exist when these groups deployed.

World War II

Mid-year 1941 CB 1 did not exist, civilian contractors were working large construction contracts at Guam, Midway, Wake, Pearl Harbor, Iceland, Newfoundland, and Bermuda. BuDocks decided to improve the Navy's supervision through the creation of "Headquarters Construction Companies". These companies would report to the Officers in Charge of Construction. They would be the draftsmen and engineering aids needed by the inspectors and supervisors to do their work. These companies would consist of two officers and 99 enlisted men, but would do no any actual construction. Rear Admiral Chester Nimitz, Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, authorized the formation of the first Hq Company on 31 October 1941. Recruitment started in November and the company was formed on 7 December. The men went through boot at Naval Station Newport, Rhode Island. By 16 December 1941, four additional companies had been authorized. December 7th happened changing plans and with them the ratings needed by a change in mission. The first Company formed provided the nucleus for the formation of the 1st Naval Construction Detachment sent to Bora bora. In the beginning that detachment was called the 1st CB, but
Budocks decided it's size made that an incorrect identification. It then became the 1st Naval Construction Detachment. With the outbreak of war, Admiral Ben Moreell, Chief of BuDocks, recommended creating three Naval Construction Battalions and on December 28 requested authority to carry this out. On 5 January 1942, the Bureau of Navigation authorized recruitment of tradesmen for those Battalions. Simultaneous to Adm. Moreell's Battalion request, the other four Hq Construction Companies had been approved. So, Hq Companies 2 & 3 were combined to form the 1st Naval Construction Battalion and deployed as the 2nd & 3rd Construction Detachments. Upon completion of training, CB 1 was sent to the South Pacific for 23 months in the Tonga and Samoan Islands. The Detachments built runways, quonsit bases, gun emplacements, and petroleum tank farms. The Fua'amotu International Airport and Faleolo International Airport were created as projects of the 2nd Construction Detachment. The 3rd Construction Detachment built Quoin Hill Airfield on Efate that was abandoned in 1946 as well as a bomber base. A detail from the 3rd detachment was rushed from Efate to Espirito Santo to build a bomber strip to attack the Japanese on Guadalcanal. Also on Efate were the 4th Marine Defense Battalion and the 24th Infantry Regiment. The Marines sent an AA Battery and the Army sent an Infantry Company to help the Seabees. Together, working around the clock, they cleared and laid a 6,000' runway in the jungle in 20 days. Fighters landed the day after completion and B17s came the next. The Turtle Bay Airfield became a fighter strip that today is abandoned to nature. Major Pappy Boyington with his VMF-214 were stationed at Turtle bay in 1943. Another Medal of Honor winner flying out of the base was 1st Lt. Kenneth A. Walsh of VMF-124. The Battalion was sent stateside and decommissioned in June 1944.

Post-war

In 1949, the Navy went through a
reorganization that created a new type of construction unit – the Mobile Construction Battalion. On 8 August 1949, U.S. Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 1 was established at Naval Amphibious Base Little Creek, Virginia and was formally commissioned on 28 October. In December the battalion took part in a multi-service Operation PORTEX on Vieques, Puerto Rico. In 1951 homeport changed when the Battalion moved from Little Creek to Davisville, Rhode Island. During the next four years the Battalion would go to Puerto Rico; Guantanamo Bay, Cuba; Bermuda; Port Lyautey, French Morocco; Argentia, Newfoundland; and Rota, Spain. In 1956, the Battalion went to Antarctica and participated in Operation Deep Freeze II. During that deployment MCB 1 had detachments on six continents. MCB 1 returned to Antarctica in 1961 to assemble a nuclear power plant for which the Battalion received the Navy Unit Commendation.

Vietnam

MCB 1 was the first Alantic Fleet Battalion to deploy to Vietnam. From 1966 to 1970, the Battalion made four consecutive deployments to Southeast Asia. During the second deployment an urgent airfield was needed at Quảng Trị. The project was designated "top secret", site "X", and to be completed in under 45 days. MCBs 1, 3, 4, 7, 11, 74, 121, and 133 all sent detachments of men and equipment to get the job done. Those detachments dubbed themselves the Ghost Battalion and chose the Jolly Roger for the Battalion's colors The Ghost Battalion was dis-banded 1 November 1967. While making those deployments four NMCB One members made the ultimate sacrifice serving their country. Their names were Constructionman Starkey, Steelworker 3rd Class Williams, Chief Builder McGinn, and Lieutenant Junior Grade Moscrip.

One's Seabee Teams

From the fall of 1971 through early summer of 1972, NMCB 1 was the second battalion to occupy and construct the British Indian Ocean Territory station on Diego Garcia. They relieved Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 40, who had landed, nine months earlier, on the island by LSDs and LSTs. They constructed the facilities that NMCB 1 would complete over their nine-month deployment. The runway that NMCB 1's advanced party landed on in C-130s was 3000 feet long. When MCB 1 left, the runway was 11,500 feet. It was at grade and ready for NMCB 62 to pour, 50'wide x 12"thick x 11,500'long in concrete. NMCB 1 also made the concrete silos for storing the cement to pour the runway. The Battalion also prepared the aggregate piles by blasting and mining coral and rock, crushing it and stock piling it for 62's use. The pile was over 500 feet tall, creating a mountainous hill on the island, whereas the average elevation had originally been 6.5 feet above sea level.
In 1974 NMCB 1 was the last Battalion to deploy from Davisville. When the Battalion returned from Rota, it was to Naval Construction Battalion Center, Gulfport, Mississippi.
1983 Beirut barracks bombing:
On 23 October 1983 a truck laden with explosives was driven into the U.S. Marine's peacekeeping force barracks in Beirut. Killed were: 220 Marines, 18 USN, 3 U.S. Army with 80 seriously wounded. NMCB 1 quickly deployed a 42-man det to construct bunkers for the Marines. An additional 40 men were sent to get the job done
NMCB 1 sent two details in 1990 to Saudi Arabia in support of Operation Desert Shield and Operation Desert Storm. The following year, the Battalion provided disaster relief following super typhoons on Guam and American Samoa. Upon returning to homeport in May 1992, the Battalion was again providing disaster relief, this time in South Florida in the aftermath of Hurricane Andrew. In December 1992, NMCB 1 redeployed from Rota to Somalia to conduct construction in support of Operation Restore Hope.
A 180-person detachment from NMCB 1 deployed to Bosnia-Herzegovina in December 1997 to support Operation Joint Guard. NMCB 1 returned to the Balkans when a 97-person detachment deployed to Kosovo in December 1999 as part of Task Force Falcon. During their 2000 European deployment, Detail Souda Bay conducted disaster recovery operations in remote Crete villages following torrential rains.
In June 2002, the Battalion deployed to Okinawa, Japan for the first time since 1987, where it performed various peacetime construction operations across the Pacific. Upon arriving in Okinawa, the Battalion immediately redeployed a 102-person Air-Det to Basilan Island, in the Philippines, in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. Under hostile conditions, the Air-Det improved roads, drilled wells, built bridges and base camps and rebuilt a timber pier.
During its 2003–2004 Pacific Deployment, "The First and The Finest" made history by being the first NMCB to have deployed to two main-body deployment sites in Rota, Spain and on Guam. NMCB 1 performed peacetime construction operations in the Atlantic, European, Pacific and Central Command Areas of Responsibility, while simultaneously deploying its Air-
Det to Iraq in support of Iraqi Freedom. In September 2004, NMCB 1 performed disaster recovery operations at NAS Pensacola following Hurricane Ivan.
For its 2005 European deployment NMCB 1 had details tasked in twelve countries throughout Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Caribbean. The Air Det returned to Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Immediately upon returning to homeport in August 2005, the Battalion was heavily involved in the disaster recovery operations of Hurricane Katrina.
In June 2006, NMCB 1 deployed to 20 sites in 9 countries as part of their Pacific deployment. The Battalion was tasked with construction projects in Okinawa, Atsugi, Sasebo, Yokosuka, Iwakuni, Fuji, Chinhae, Pohang, Diego Garcia, Camp Pendleton, and San Clemente Island, contingency operations in Pohnpei, Indonesia, Philippines, and Afghanistan, and prison detainee operations in Iraq.
In September 2007, following a successful homeport, the Battalion deployed to 16 different sites throughout CENTCOM, PACOM, and NORTHCOM. NMCB 1 provided contingency construction and engineering in support of both Operation Iraqi Freedom II and Operation Enduring Freedom, in Iraq and Afghanistan. While supporting the mission in CENTCOM, the Battalion was tasked with construction projects in Guam and San Nicolas Island, CA. Those Seabees redeployed to main body midway through deployment.

Unit awards

A unit citation or commendation is an award bestowed upon an organization for the action cited. Members of the unit who participated in said actions are allowed to wear the awarded unit citation on their uniforms. NMCB 1 has been presented with the following awards:
Campaign and service awards
Vietnam Service NMCB 1's Battle Streamer for Vietnam has one silver star and one bronze star: the streamer alone counts as the first award. The conflict was divided into 18 award periods and the battalion qualifies for seven.