ASAP > Con Son Island RVN, ARVN DF Detachment
The Army, Republic of Vietnam operated a AN/TRD-4A site which was part of the overall DF Net and sub-nets in Southeast Asia. This was one of several sites operated by the ARVN. All, to the best of my knowledge, had American (read ASA) advisors attached -- normally Staff Sergeants. This photo circa 1968 March/April. th
Sorry for the fuzzy photo above. The DF site was located just above the beach area at the left end of the beach as we look at it here in the area of those white blobs which are supposed to be buildings. The site advisor lived in the house just above the sand line of the beach on the right portion of the beach. The RED X in the line drawing to the left is more or less near the site advisor beach house seen in the photo above.
The whitish strip of blob color in the center below the hillside is the run way, fuel storage and other bits and pieces. The main American activities consisted of a Coast Guard Loran station which was the main unit and all the various Americans assigned used its facilities such as mess hall, club, etc. The Navy operated some sort of small site up on the top of the hill to the left in the above photo and the Army and Contractors operated a Decca site in several trailers in the area just above the DF Site Advisors house.
Coast Guard 130 Supply flight on Con Son Island airfield. The CG considered their station "at sea" and they rationed beer as 2 per person daily and only opened the club on Saturday night, if my memory is not faulty.
----------------------From Web-Site Contact Email------------------------
YourName? Bob YourEmail xxxxxxxxxx@xxxxxx.xxx Subject? Con Son Message: Two Army landing craft visited the island in 1969. We were delivering useless bags of hardened cement. The stuff had been stored in open marshalling yards, during monsoon, and the bags had ruptured. It was useless when it was loaded. The other captain and I had the temerity to point out that fact, and it was almost like being back in "basic." Shut up, soldier, and haul cargo. Anyway, we delivered the stuff and spent a few days on the island. Beautiful place, for a visit. I don't recall seeing any fence lines, of any importance. Political prisoners and criminal offenders were wandering around the island, with impunity, ala Devil's Island, performing odd jobs (of a "houseboy" nature) for the Army and Coast Guard personnel.
The Army guys were living in thrown together huts and the Coasties were in neat air-conditioned modular type buildings. They had wall to wall carpets, so to speak, and the Army didn't even have wall to wall floors. Highly placed Saigon muckety mucks used the place as a quiet little getway spot. I guess there were unscheduled flights into the pretty basic little airstrip. If they ever get their act together that place would be more beautiful than Hawaii. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
Here are a few pictures with captions courtesy of Wayne Rupp who was on Con Son in the 1960s as an advisor to the ARVN DF site..
|
|
Me doing my Rambo impersonation at the DF site (hut visible in background) with one of the ARVN ops at the site Circa 1965 |
Supplies coming in for the ARVN troops and their families, I was the only American on the Island, couple of brits there running the LORAN site. |
Same as photo to the left. |
Aerial shot of the Prison on the Island. (Site of the Tiger Cages that made Life Magazine several years later)
|
|
C47 Air America plane |
Japanese Pill Box from WWII. The ARVN military was quartered in a Japanese Coast Watchers Building on high ground south of the DF site and runway. |
Lunch, eggs weren't too bad either. Buildings in background were housing and ops for LORAN site. Wearing uniform of the day there. |
VC trustees. The ARVN that took me along hunting in the jungle (monkeys) suggested that I could use them for gun bearers! Fat Chance. |
|
I bunked in one of the buildings at the LORAN site and ate meals in their "mess hall", signal reception at the site was spotty at best since the LORAN antennas and a large hill they sat on were between the mainland and the DF site that was on the beach.
|
|
|