Proud Coal Miners Son, Born Muhlenburg Co. Ky. 1944
On The Kitchen Table And Put In The Coal Stove Oven On Low
"An That's A Fact" 

 Robert "Bob" Brown  63-66

Basic Training-Ft.Knox  Engineer Sch.-Ft.Belvoir 
 Korea And The University of Vietnam

                                                    

       "I Soldier With a Hammer". 
Scarlet symbolizes our shared heritage with the Artillery.  White, which was the
original color of the Infantry,

”To Work is to Conquer”
  A sea lion, which is part of the arms of Manila, signifies service in the Philippines and the head of a stone war club


62nd Engr. Bn.
symbolizes the Corps secondary mission.
The bridge section depicted on the crest symbolizes the technical capabilities of the battalion 


76th Engr Bn.
 represents service in New Guinea it’s motto previously mentioned, is "Laborare est Vintere"

 
 


A Co.76TH.Engr.Bn.  KOREA "63-64"  Osrie-Osan-Wejonbu

  A Co. 62ND. Engr. Bn. Ft.  LeonardWood Mo. "64-65"  

 
 A Co.  62ND. Engr. Bn. VIETNAM "65-66"  
Phan Rang - Camrahn Bay   

 

Boat Cruises

USNS Gen. R.M. Blatchford

USS Gen. William
Mitchell

 

 




History of the 76th. Engineer Bn.(Const)

The 76th Engineer Battalion (Construction) was originally constituted on the inactive list of the Regular Army 1 October 1933 as the 4Oth Engineer Regiment (General Service) It was redesignated the 34th Engineer Regiment (General Service) 1 January 1938, and activated 5 March 1942 at Vancouver Barracks, Washington, with a cadre of officers and enlisted men form the 18th Engineer Regiment (Combat. On 18 April 1942 part of the Regiment entrained for Seattle, Washington and boarded the USS St. Michael, for Skagway, Alaska, the famous boomtown of '98. They arrived there on 22 April and the remainder of the Regiment came in on the 25th. On 1 August 1943 the Regiment received orders to return to the United States. It united at Whitehorse, entrained for Skagway on the 16th, embarked for Port Edward, British Columbia on four small passenger ships of a Canadian line, and traveled from Port Edward to Camp Sutton, North Carolina by rail. It returned to the States a unified organization fused by labor, hardship, and long experience in working together. A goal that bad been achieved in record time had raised its esprit de corps to very high level. Until 10 February 1944 the 34th remained in North Carolina, undergoing extensive training and solving night problems to accustom the elements of the command to night movement and security. On the 10th of the month the 34th left Camp Sutton enroute to Camp Hathaway, Washington, where it arrived on the 15th. Twelve days later the entire Regiment moved to Portland, Oregon, by truck and debarked on the U.S.A.T. Motorship Pennant, After a voyage of 37 days it disembarked at Darwin, Australia, and moved to its bivouac area 5 miles northeast. As of 20 July 1944 the Regiment was redesignated the 34th Engineer Construction Battalion. Construction work stopped on 20 December and six days later the Battalion~ on board the LST's 680 and 126, and Liberty Ship A.K. Mercury~ was once again at sea The three ships joined a large Naval Task Force off Sansapor and proceeded to their destination via Leyte, Surigao Strait, and the China Sea. At dawn on the morning of "S-Day", 9 January 1945~ the convoy entered Lingayen Gulf, Luzon, Philippine Island. Following heavy Navy shelling and dive-bombing the first elements of the Battalion, along with other assault troops, beached at 12oo hours followed shortly by the remainder of the men and equipment. Following the Japanese surrender the Engineers of the 34th wound up in Korea where until their inactivation 25 January 1949, they directed their efforts toward building up the country. Six months after its inactivation the 34th was again activated, on 25 June under the designation 76th Engineer Construction Battalion, it came to life again this time in Okinawa. One year later it was to receive the dubious honor of being the first engineer construction battalion to arrive in Korea after the start of the Korean Operations, Reaching Korea in July 1950, it immediately set out to prove its worth. The awards for service in Korea and the previous ones for the Alcan Highway in Alaska are indicative of the standards of service contained in the battalion motto,” To Work is to Conquer”. The colors of the 76th bear campaign streamers for the New Guinea and Luzon campaigns during the Second World War. Its new distinctive insignia, approved in June 1952, is red and silver, the Corps Engineers colors and carries symbols representing service in there two campaign A sea lion, which is part of the arms of Manila, signifies service in the Philippines and the head of a stone war club represents service in New Guinea it’s motto previously mentioned, is "Laborare est Vintere" It would be hard to fine a simpler phrase to describe the activities of 76TH ENGINEER BATTALION (CONSTRUCTION]

BATTLE HONORS CAMPAIGN STREAMERS

WORLD WAR II 'KOREA New Guinea UN Defensive Luzon (with arrowhead) UN Offensive CCF Intervention First UN Counter-offensive CCF Spring Offensive UN Summer-Fall Offensive Second Korea Winter Korea Summer-Fall 1952 Third Korean Winter Korea Summer-Fall 1952

Decorations; Meritorious Unit Streamer ALCAN Highway. Three Meritorious Unit Streamers embroidered KOREA. Philippine Presidential Unit Citation Streamer embroidered 17 October 1944,to 4 July, 1945 Two Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation Streamers embroidered KOREA Company A entitled to a Republic of Korea Presidential Unit Citation Streamer embroidered Naktong and Nam River

 



Family Tree

Many many years ago when I was twenty-three,
I got married to a widow who was pretty as could
be. 

 This widow had a grown-up daughter, who had hair of red.  
My father fell in love with her, and soon the two
were wed. 

 This made my dad my son-in-law and changed my very life.
 My daughter was my mother, for she was my father's wife.

 To complicate the matters worse, although it brought me joy.
 I soon became the father of a bouncing baby boy.

My little baby then became a brother-in-law to dad.
 And so became my uncle, though it made me very sad.

 For if he was my uncle, then that also made him brother
To the widow's grown-up daughter who, of course was my  stepmother.

 Father's wife then had a son, who kept them on the run.
 And he became my grandson, for he was my daughter's
son.

 My wife is now my mother's mother, and it makes me blue.
Because, although she is my wife, she is my grandma
too.

If my wife is my grandmother, then I am her grandchild.
And every time I think of it, it simply drives me
wild.

 For now I have become the strangest case you ever saw.
As the husband of my grandmother, I am my own
grandpa!!

 

**********************

Vietnam Photos
Click on photos To Enlarge

 



Bob Bro
wn



David Enyart

 
 


 


 

 

 

 

 

 


Korea Photos
Kimpo & Osan  1963-64


Hills around Kimpo


Stan & I


TDY @ Osan

 
Me and my 2 friends
an helpers for the year.


Papason in the Vill


 
My home for 13 months
 


   
One of the cooks
 



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