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The Navy Scouts and Raiders were created before the Navy Combat Demolition Units (NCDUs). The Scouts and Raiders were first formed in September 1942, nine months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, from the Observer Group, a joint Marine Corps-Army-Navy unit. The Observer Group was the first unit trained in amphibious reconnaissance. They trained in inflatable boat insertions from submarines around the Chesapeake Bay and at the Amphibious Training Base (ATB) Little Creek in Virginia and in Fort Pierce, Florida. They were training for an intense clandestine mission in North Africa.With US Marines limited to the Pacific Theater of Operations, the Observer Group was disbanded, with the Marine Corps counterpart forming the Amphib Recon Company; the Army/Navy unit formed the Scouts and Raiders with the Army later leaving. The U.S. Navy began the Scouts and Raiders to provide reconnaissance and raiding missions to support amphibious landings. The unit could conduct raids and sabotage missions from a pair of men to platoon sized operations.The unit continued its deployment to North Africa as planned, where they earned eight Navy Crosses. Robert Halperin, a former NFL football player and future Olympic medalist who landed his ship in complete darkness on the shore of French Morocco, located and marked landing beaches, guided assault troops to their targets, and captured two enemy officers, received a Presidential Citation and the Navy Cross. This was just the first of many war-time missions for the versatile Scouts and Raiders.For more information on this subject go to the following:Integrated Close Combat Forum http://iccf.freeforums.orgCreative Commons license: CC0 1.0 Universal: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode

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  • AMPHIBIOUS SCOUTS AND RAIDERS

    Scouts and RaidersBefore there were Navy SEALs or Underwater Demolition Teams (UDT) or Naval Combat Demolition Units (NCDU), there were Scouts and Raiders. Formed as a joint Army-Navy beach recon unit eight months after Pearl Harbor, the first S & R boat crews underwent intense training at Amphibious Training Base (ATB) Little Creek in Virginia before deploying to North Africa where they earned eight Navy Crosses. This was just the first of many war-time missions for the versatile Scoutsand Raiders.In January 1943 the Scouts and Raiders School moved to Fort Pierce, Florida. Until December of 1943 when the school became all-Navy, the instructor cadre and the trainees were both Army and Navy men. The training course included running, swimming, obstacle course, log PT, hand-to-hand combat, and classes inSignaling, Radio, Gunnery, etc. According to John "Barry" Dwyer in his comprehensive book SCOUTS AND RAIDERS, "When LT Draper Kauffman was sent to Ft. Pierce in July 1943 to form the first NCDUs, he adopted and condensedthe S & R PT course in what his men called "Hell Week", which evolved into the physically and pyschologically demanding ordeal known as BUD/S, Basic Underwater Demolition / SEAL Training, which must be survived by anyone wishing to become a Navy SEAL."

    ATB Ft. Pierce, 1944 Matt Komorowski (Kaye) second from left

    The first ten volunteers for S & R were big, athletic men from the Navy's Physical Training Program headed up by Commander Gene Tunney. Among them was Phil

  • H. Bucklew who would earn two Navy Crosses and go on to become the recognized 'father of U S Naval Special Warfare'. Another S & R veteran, Richard Lyon, would become Rear Admiral and the first designated Special Warfare Officerto attain flag rank. Today Admiral Lyon is mayor of Oceanside, California.After North Africa, the Scouts and Raiders participated in landings in Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, the Adriatic, Normandy, and Southern France. They also served inthe Pacific on a variety of assignments, as Beachmasters, UDTs, and even helped train Nationalist Chinese guerrillas for operations against Japanese forces.

    l-to-r, John T. Buchanan, Tom Berkowitz, Silver Star recipient Ray B. King

    By the time World War Two ended in September 1945, over 1200 men trained and operated as Scouts and Raiders. After the war they were disbanded with some of the men joining UDT. SEAL Team TWO veteran Rudy Boesch, who went on to become the longest-serving enlisted man in the Navy at over 45 years, and the longest serving SEAL, retiring as a Master Chief Boatswain's Mate, began his career as a member of Amphibious Roger #5, the last Scouts and Raiders trainingclass.The men who were Scouts and Raiders were well educated (Class 8 was made up of 52 Ensigns!), exceptionally athletic, adventuresome trailblazers. Some gave their lives to the war effort; others have succumbed to life's natural conclusion. There are many former Scouts and Raiders who are alive and well and stay in touch with one another regularly, thanks to the efforts of their teammate, N. Joe Lee, Jr., Class 7 graduate. Joe produces a newsletter and maintains a current directory.

    l-to-r, front row-Allen McGuire, John Wise, Ed Merrill, Paul Taylor, back row-Robert Baker and Joe Lee