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The Good Ship Lollipop

The Good Ship Lollipop

I don’t like to swim in the ocean. Sand gets in places it was never meant to be. That may be ironic since I wound up in the Marines. I had never been on any water craft bigger than a 15-foot fishing boat when I joined the Corps in 1958, so I had never experienced sailing on the deep blue. By the time I shipped over to Okinawa I had only flown commercial a couple times on Bonanza Airlines between San Diego and Phoenix – the first time on a DC-3, the second on a small turbo-prop. I hadn’t experienced air sickness either time so I was unprepared for what was ahead.

In late 1959, 3rd Battalion, 5th Marines, under command of then Lt. Col. Kenneth J. Houghton, departed California on the good ship USS Breckenridge, a WWII single screw troop ship. We immediately hit heavy seas which lasted the entire journey to Japan. We even took our brig-rats. They were simply transferred from the Camp Pendleton brig to the Breckenridge brig to the Okinawa brig to finish their sentences before returning to the battalion. By the second day out we were told that the brig was in ankle deep water, something about a split seam due to heavy weather was how the swabbies explained it. As miserable as I was, I couldn’t help feeling a little pity for those guys.

It wasn’t just the disconcerting feeling of having to look up to see the tops of the 40 foot swells we wallowed through for the entire journey that was bothersome. As the old tub would crest a swell and dive into the next trough, the single prop would come part way out of the water, slapping at it and sending a shudder through the ship. Very few of us weren’t seasick from the start. Even old salt sailors were getting sick. I lived on cr-p from the geedunk for most of the first week because I couldn’t stand in a chow line below decks without throwing up. The routine in chow line, as it stretched out of the mess hall was to stay alert for anyone making a mad dash from their table in an ill-fated attempt to make it topside before giving up whatever food they had managed to swallow. At the cry of “SICK MAN COMING THROUGH” everyone would flatten themselves against the bulkhead and hope the unfortunate soul made it past them before ejection. I was seasick to some degree the entire trip. One of my buddies commented that I really had a weak stomach. “Not so,” I replied. “I can chuck it out there as far as anyone on board.”

Adding to our grief was that the front half of the ship was off limits due to the foul sea conditions for fear of a man being washed over the side. That meant the entire battalion had just half the deck space to attempt to stay out of the stinking below-decks. It didn’t help to see senior staff NCO’s, officers and military family members promenading around an upper deck.

One particular E-4 Sergeant was obnoxious to all us greenies. He was on his second tour and bragged about being a Sea-Marine, having a Med cruise under his belt. He wouldn’t admit that he wasn’t all that unaffected by the rough voyage, but one evening he got his comeuppance. It happened in the heads, which were located under the fantail. He was leaning forward, one hand on the sink, combing his hair when the kid next to him suddenly threw up all over ol’ Salt’s hand. He took one look at his hand, dashed to the closest GI can and puked. Unfortunately for him – and hilarious to all of us who had suffered his taunts – he wore false teeth. Out they popped with dinner, into the can along with the former contents of other stomachs. We heard no more old-salt-talk from him for the rest of the voyage.

What was truly perplexing about the Breckenridge was the design of the toilet system. There were urinals on the wall, yes. But for taking care of the bowels there were long troughs with dual boards spaced down their length for sitting to take care of business. Being a WWII troop ship, I assumed she had been designed by the enemy. Instead of the troughs running port to starboard, they ran fore and aft. The constant flow of sea water used to flush the trough rushed in a wave from one end to the other as the old ship climbed and dived over the sea swells. On the worst days an unthinking Marine who took position on an end seat was most likely to get his butt drenched by the dung-filled sea water as it splashed against the end of the trough. On the best days some wise yahoo might float a ball of toilet paper in the rushing water and set it afire, causing mayhem as it floated down the line of bare butts, causing guys to jump up while still in the process of relieving themselves. Pretty funny – if you didn’t happen to be on one of the seats.

As a note of interest, 3/5 settled in at the brand new base, Camp Schwab, on arrival at Okinawa. Schwab may now become the new home of MCAS Futenma and the shanty village outside the base has apparently become a thriving city.

The old Breckenridge was commissioned in 1945, too late to participate in WWII but was in the mix for both Korean and Vietnam wars. She was decommissioned and sold to a Japanese firm for scrap in 1987. During 3/5’s voyage, I wasn’t sure which of us would be decommissioned first, her or me.

Jim Barber
Mar. 1958-Mar 1962
Semper Fi

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Comments

Dorothy Tamburich - June 23, 2020

Husband went over to Okinawa on the E D Patrick in the late 50. Still have his card when he crossed the Equator. Only complaint he had was the racks. Had a good friend RedWarner. Met him on his last duty station. MP at Cherry Point. I was in communications . Best time of my life. Been on a carrier John Stennis from Pearl. Loved it.

Joe Sanders Major, USMC Ret - June 23, 2020

On my Midshipmen Summer Cruise in 1953 on the Battle Ship “Big MO”, The USS Missouri BB 63, the heads were as described. Trough on the wall and a long set of seats over a trough in the middle of the head. (In fact I seem to recall that there may have been two of the troughs, one behind the other.) You wanted to always get upstream (Towards the bow of the ship) as the water flowed toward the stern of the ship. It was not unheard of for some one to drop a lit match into some toilet paper they had carefully place in the trough at the top end. Also if you happened to be at the end of the trough when the MO went over a really big wave and came down hard … well you get the idea.

Earl Powell - June 23, 2020

Lucky as I was in Da Nang hospital with Malaria, my fever broke a day before my rotation and the kind doctor signed my release so I could fly back to the world instead of a long cruise on a ship. I really don’t know if I could have handled a ship at that point and time. I was just lucky I guess. Hell, all of us that made it home won the lottery, thank you Jesus, amen.

W. E. Southerland, Maj (Retired) - June 23, 2020

I sailed on the General J.C. Breckenridge to Japan arriving Nov 8, 1955, Returned to the States on her in Jan 1957 and sailed again on her in 1958 to Okinawa. Was a Cpl E-3 going over in 1955, made Sgt E-4 on the next to trips. We stopped in Hawaii going over on both trips and on the return trips.

Jon P DeWitt - June 23, 2020

Yeah spent many an evening in Henoko…

Paul J Lennon, USMC ’61 – ’65, Eagle, Idaho - June 23, 2020

I had been part of I-3-5 at Camp Margarita throughout much of 1962, but after returning to the ‘States from the Cuban Missile Crisis where, for that duration, we had become briefly A-1-7, we left San Diego in early January of 1963, aboard the the US Navy’s MSTS ship ..the USS Breckenridge which is mentioned above …for Camp Schwab, Okinawa, and our ‘Far East’ tour. We became E-2-3 for that entire duration and I have great memories of my buddies and Okinawa, as well as the places we visited and which we had many ‘exercises’ upon. The majority of us stayed together in the same cohesive infantry company throughout the 3 unit-changes we experienced, during the 26 months of the preparatory-training, September of ’62’s ‘Lock-On’, and those subsequent deployment(s) mentioned. On our return-trip to the USA in late ’63 we also traveled aboard the USS Breckenridge but our Pacific crossings were pretty much ‘uneventful’. I think after spending a great deal of time on the USS Noble APA 218, the USS Paul Revere APA 248, and other APA’s (the George Clymer, the Cavalier, the Montrose, etc.) as well as the LPH-2 Iwo Jima, and (2) LST’s ..the Windham County 1174(?) and Whitfield County 1176 (?), the USS Breckenridge’s ‘Marine quarters’ were almost ‘Queen Mary-like’ …many of us thought, as I recall. Perhaps the Breckenridge went through a ‘refit and modernization update’ BETWEEN 1959 as mentioned …and 1963 when we were aboard…?, because it was being used. when WE sailed in it, as a “military dependents transport” where a lot of wives and children of military personnel on Okinawa and Hawaii, were also on-board the ship and trans-locating with our unit but, of course, AWAY FROM us …and our battalion of Marines. ( + ; Semper Fi’, my brothers…

Gerry Schemel Cpl E-4 - June 23, 2020

Served with 3rd Amtrak’s and was aboard mostly LSDs. They rode pretty nice in rough seas. Remember one time it was really bad. The APAs and AKAs in our convoy were really taking it hard. We heard their screws when they came out of the water. A lot of the Marines on our LSD were used to rough seas but even they were having it hard. I grew up around boats and thought I had good sea legs but was feeling a little squeezy. Went to the head and a Marine bent over and threw up on my boots. I immediately responded by throwing up on his head. Ruff times. Semper Fi

Edward Roessler - June 23, 2020

That was a great story, Well done. I sailed on the Breckenridge in Oct. and Nov. 1962 bound for Okinawa. We named the ship the “Leaking Lena” after the 1950’s TV cartoon show “Time for Beanie and Cecil the sea sick sea serpent”. We sailed with a combined group of Marines and Army Paratroopers of the 503rd P.I.R.. Sea sickness was never a problem for me. I had instructions from my Uncle Randall, a WW2 Navy sailor who served from 1940 to 1946 on a Cruiser and later the new carrier Hancock. He told me to always lean in the same direction that the ship was rolling. He said “If you fight to always stay upright you will be sick as a dog in no time”. On the first evening out at sea I gathered my Bro’s and walked the deck with the roll of the ship and not one of us ever barfed up a meal the entire cruise and man oh man did we hit some storms! When we boarded we where under the protective wing of our Squad leader who we had named Cpl. Turkey neck Slacker. He had done this all before and he was determined to keep us all out of being assigned Mess duty that he referred to as “Hell on the Sea”. With some devilishly clever moves, Cpl. Slacker lead us through the mess of boarding and we where assigned sweep down where we only worked 15 minuets twice a day spending the remainder at the fan tail sucking up the warm Pacific sunshine and plenty of smokes and cokes. I believe that I would have followed that Crazy Bastard into the bowels of hell. There is no sense to explain the sleeping arrangements, the smell of barf or the antics in the Head sending floating fire balls down the poop shoot because this has been covered by other comments. How ever, one evening we had a “coolest tattoo contest”. It was won hands down by a Paratrooper who dropped his drawers showing his butt. Each side there was a little, red, devil shoveling coal in the hole that admitted flames up his back. Ya gotta hand it to the Paratroopers. All of them where as nuts as we where. We made a stop at Pearl Harbor ( got to see the recent erected Arizona Memorial) then on to Yokohama for a taxi ride from hell. Never tell a Jap taxi driver to Hyacko for he will make the Indy 500 look like a Sunday school picnic and hash mark your skivvies. Then it was off to Okinawa while avoiding a Typhoon while spending Thanksgiving day among the sick, lame, lazy, blind, crippled and crazy in a mess hall strewed with vomit, food trays, spilled milk, sliced turkey and cranberry sauce. And so it was, “Time For Beanie Fans” on the USS Breckenridge or Aka Leaking Lena.

Floyd Kerstetter - June 23, 2020

I have never been on any type of ship during my tour of duty in Vietnam. I was sent to the Fleet Marine Force and again never seen sea duty. We flew in different aircraft including in Vietnam which I had served their there from 1968-1970.

Billy Ashworth - June 23, 2020

I was on a ship I don’t remember the name when you get 80 years old some times it hard to remember but I do remember when we left Yokahoma to go to Oakland California we ran into a storm and I was on guard duty on the rental to keep watch so no one would fall overboard I was standing on the fanatic and I watch the waves I guess they were 30 to 40 feet high but I told this to my friends they did not BELIVE me

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