Landing party
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A landing party is a portion of a ship's crew designated to go ashore from the ship and take ground, by force if necessary. In the landing party promulgated by the US Navy 1950 Landing Party Manual, the party was to be equipped with
History
Since the American Revolution larger U.S. Navy warships had a detachment of Marines. As the Marine detachments were small, it was sometimes necessary to supplement their numbers with armed sailors when making opposed landings. By the late 1800s, the Navy developed formal doctrines for the organization and use of landing parties.
Prior to World War II, landing parties were used on at least 66 occasions during the 19th Century and 136 times in the
In 1918 the Navy published the Landing Force Manual which formalized doctrine for the employment of sailors as ground troops.
Following World War I, the Marine Corps expanded to have the Fleet Marine Force which could take over most missions previously performed by naval landing parties.
The last significant use of a naval landing party was during the
In World War II, amphibious landings were supported by large groups designated a "shore party". After World War II, the U.S. Navy organized Beachmaster Unit One and Beachmaster Unit Two.[5]
Following World War II, the Navy retained the doctrine of using sailors as ground troops but did not use them in practice. In 1950, a new edition of the Landing Party Manual was published, which superseded the Landing Force Manual of 1938. In 1960, the 1950 Landing Party Manual was superseded by an updated edition.[6]
Although landing parties are no longer part of U.S. Navy doctrine, the Navy's
In 1997 a group of Civil War re-enactors formed a unit called the U.S. Naval Landing Party.
See also
References
- ^ Landing party manual, United States Navy, 1950, United States Navy, 1950, p. 4 – via Internet Archive
- ISBN 9781602396715.
- ^ "Sailors as Infantry in the US Navy".
- ^ "Admiral David Porter's Report on the Second Battle of Fort Fisher – Iron Brigader". 7 January 2015.
- ^ Beachmaster Unit ONE official unit history, Commander, Naval Surface Force Pacific, United States Navy Pacific Fleet, retrieved 2018-08-29
- ^ "Landing Party Manual, United States Navy, 1960". November 1960.
Further reading
- Roth, CAPT Patrick H. (October 2005), Sailors as Infantry in the US Navy, Naval History and Heritage Command, U.S. Navy
- Fullam, CAPT William Freeland (1912), The landing-force and small-arm instructions, United States Bureau of Naval Personnel, United States Navy