![]() View faces north, showing a smooth-bore cannon barrel, with a lighthouse bell from 1897 behind. Image: 80-G-K-42552: Assault Support Patrol Boat (ASPB), November 1967. NMUSN-146: Willard Park, Washington Navy Yard, Washington, D.C. Navy Coastal and Riverine Warefare in Vietnam Despite these shortcomings, the boats proved effective while clearing Viet Cong mines placed in the river bottom mud.Ī model of an ASPB is on display in the America's Wars in Vietnam: 1961-1975 exhibit in the south end of the Cold War Gallery, Bldg. Navy to utilize the craft for Task Force 117 (Mobile Riverine Task Force) primarily as minesweepers and base defense craft. Problems with seaworthiness in early 1968, and with the boat's armor, led the U.S. The first two boats arrived in September 1967, providing escort protection during troop transport of riverine assaults. The craft also carried a straight drag chain to sever the wires of water mines. Commandant, Naval District Washington, Rear Admiral Terence McKnight, addresses the audience at an official rededication ceremony for the historic commandants office, the Middendorf Building, at the Washington Navy Yard. 50-caliber machine guns, and MK-19 grenade launchers. Fifty feet in length, the steel and aluminum craft had armament including a 20mm cannon. The boats were utilized for escort duty, gunboats, interdiction and surveillance craft, and minesweepers. Known by her crews as "Alpha Boats," Assault Support Patrol Boats, participated in the Vietnam War, as part of the Brown Water Navy. The Cold War Museum is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization dedicated to education, preservation, and research on the global, ideological, and political. ![]()
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