THE INCEPTION
Beach Jumpers were United States Navy tactical cover and deception units
which were organized under Admiral H. Kent Hewitt, then Commander,
Amphibious Forces, and all U.S. Naval Forces in Northwest African waters
and the Western Mediterranean. The concept for Beach Jumpers came
about as a result of then Lieutenant Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., the Hollywood
actor turned naval officer during World War II having been detached from
"Blue water" duty on the high seas and assigned to duty with British Admiral
Lord Louis Mountbatten Combined Operations (Commandos) in England.
Lieutenant Fairbanks assignment was to be one of those temporary duty
officer exchange programs where American Officers would acquaint
themselves with the training, planning, and execution of raiding parties,
diversions, and deception operations. Lieutenant Fairbanks however did
more than just observe the workings of these commandos. He trained with
them at the aptly named H.M.S. Tormentor Advanced Training and
Amphibious Operations Base, and at the Commando Training School at
Ancharry Castle, Scotland. Subsequently, he participated in several cross
channel harassment raids from the Isle of Wight which was the forward base
for such activities. It was during these raids that Lieutenant Fairbanks
gained a true appreciation for the military art of deception.
Lieutenant Fairbanks was subsequently transferred to Virginia Beach where
he came under the command of Admiral Hewitt who was supervising the
training of U.S. Naval forces in preparation of their deployment to North
Africa and the Mediterranean. It was here that the brash movie star now
Naval Lieutenant pitched his idea for a similar unit of specialists trained to
conduct tactical cover, diversionary and deception missions. Admiral Hewitt
immediately saw the advantages of such a unit and agreed to support
Fairbanks. All that was required now was to sell the Navy brass in
Washington.
In Washington, Fairbanks was at his persuasive best. Inspired by the
success of British Commandos in using sonic deception on raids against the
Nazis and Fairbanks' concept of operations, Admiral Ernest J. King,
Commander-in-Chief, U. S. Fleet, and Chief of Naval Operations issued a
secret letter on 5 March 1943 charging the Vice Chief of Naval Operations
with the recruitment of 180 officers and 300 enlisted men for the Beach
Jumper program.
The recruiting effort identified four general requirements: (1) no seasickness,
(2) experience in small boat handling, (3) enough electrical knowledge to fix
a home radio, and (4) at least fundamental knowledge of celestial
navigation. The announcement further stated that "The Navy is requesting
volunteers for prolonged, hazardous, distant duty for a secret project ".
On 16 March 1943, the volunteers reported to the Amphibious Training Base
at Camp Bradford, Virginia and Beach Jumper Unit-1 was commissioned as
a command . The basic mission of Beach Jumper Unit-1 was:
"To assist and support the operating forces in the conduct
of Tactical Cover and Deception in Naval Warfare"
Small boat handling, seamanship, ordnance, gunnery, demolitions,
pyrotechnics, and meteorology were among the the courses taught. Beach
Jumpers were also cross-trained to handle all crew positions. The Beach
Jumpers were assigned Ten 63-foot Air-Sea Rescue Boats, (ASR). These
ASRs were double hulled, plywood construction, powered by either twin
Hall-Scott 750 UP or Packard engines, and operated with an Officer and a 6
man crew. The ASRs were equipped with twin 50 caliber machine guns and
carried the unit’s deception gear and equipment. The boats also had ten,
five on the port and five on the starboard bow, 3.5 inch window rockets,
smoke generators or smoke pots and floating, time delay explosive packs.
The unit’s specialized deception equipment included: the multi-component
heater consisting of a wire recorder; 5-phase amplifier; 1000 watt, 12 horn
speaker; 3 UP Ohm generators for power and Naval balloons, ZKM and MK-
6 models, to which strips of radar reflective window had been attached and
could be towed behind the boats. Later, different models of jammer
transmitters, such as the APT-2 (Carpet); APQ-2 (Rug); AN/APT-3
(Mandrel); AN/SPT-4; AM-14/APT; AM-18/APT; and AN/SPT-1 (DINA), were
in operation.
Now there are several stories as to how the Beach Jumpers got there name.
One story has it that it was due to their capability of quickly hitting the beach
and causing confusion with the enemy due to their harassment and
deception operations. Perhaps the best theory as to how they got their
name came from Harold Burris-Meyer, Theater and Sound Research
Director for the Stevens Institute of Technology. The Stevens Institute was
working on a Navy contract to study the physiological and psychological
effects of sound on men in warfare. During a high level conference, Mr.
Burris-Meyer responded to a question concerning the purpose of their work
by stating: "To scare the be-jesus out of the enemy". His engineering team
used the "BJ" factor thereafter in their planning which is said to have led to
the inspiration for the cover name Beach Jumpers.
Unfortunately for Fairbanks, as a Lieutenant he did not have the rank to
command such a unit. Anthony L. Rorschach, Captain, USN arrived at
Camp Bedford on 15 May 1943 to take Command of the forming Beach
Jumpers. However, Lieutenant Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. was given the
assignment to develop, supervise, and coordinate all the plans with the
British. Upon his return he was assigned as Special Operations Officer and
Assistant Chief of Staff and Operations Officer to Captain Charles L.
Andrews who had assumed the Command of all Beach Jumper activities. As
Special Operations Officer Fairbanks was responsible for the supervision,
training, supplying, and planning for all Beach Jumper activities: all raids,
special assault landings, and special operations. As Assistant Chief of Staff
and Operations Officer Fairbanks was granted a security clearance level
which allowed him access to any information the Beach Jumpers might
need.
The Beach Jumpers mission would be to conduct deception operations in
which they would simulate amphibious landings with a very limited force.
Utilizing their deception equipment the Beach Jumpers would lure the
enemy into believing that theirs was the location of the amphibious beach
landing, when in fact the actual amphibious landing would be conducted at
another location. Beach Jumper Unit-1 (BJU-1) did not have to wait long to
be tested. Their first operation was to be "HUSKY", the assault on Sicily.
"Navy Beach Jumpers, the inception", source:
"Seaborne Deception - The History of U.S. Navy Beach Jumpers"
by John B. Dwyer
(Praeger Publishing 1992)
Reprinted w/permission
On the night of 10 July 1943, Beach Jumper Unit-1 was ordered to conduct a
diversion off Cape San Marco, 100 miles west of the HUSKY landing area. The first
attempt was recalled due to hazardous seas. On D+1, the weather was better and
the operation began at 2200 hours. At 3,000 yards off shore, three of the ASRs
prepared their heaters, one ASR proceeded a thousand yards ahead and began to
lay smoke. As the sound boats prepared to make their run parallel to the beach, a
searchlight from Cape San Marco illuminated the area, accompanied by small
arms and artillery fire. At 0230 the sound boats were ordered to secure their
heaters and close the beach, which they did, firing guns and rockets. All boats
retired on a course back to there home port at Pantelleria, Sicily at 0730 hours.
To keep the Germans attention, Commander Robinson was ordered to conduct
another operation on the night of 12 July 1943, using all available craft. This time
the shore batteries were completely alerted. The Germans were convinced that a
landing was about to take place. Salvos of six inch and smaller guns were thrown
at the boats. The operation was a success and no casualties were sustained.
Operation HUSKY accomplished complete surprise due to the uncertainty created
in the minds of some German Commanders by the BJU-1 diversions and strategic
cover and deception operations. BJU-1 was responsible for an entire German
Reserve Division being held in place, as the German Command was unsure where
the actual landing would take place.
Beach Jumpers Unit-4 were assigned to assist Marshal Tito's forces as well as
British Commandos operating in the Adriatic during the later part of 1944. They
were also instrumental in the rescue of Airmen of the 15th Air Force who were
forced to evacuate their aircraft on return to their bases in Italy from missions over
the Polesti oil fields. In addition some of them took part in land combat missions on
several Islands along the Dalmation coastal area.
Beach Jumpers Units ONE, THREE, and FIVE continued to support naval
operations with their deception interventions into the summer of 1944. Their
exceptional diversionary efforts during Operation Bigot-Anvil earned them the
Presidential Unit Citation. For his planning the diversion-deception operations and
his part in the amphibious assault on Southern France, Lieutenant Commander
Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., was awarded the U.S. Navy Legion of Merit with bronze V
(for valor), The Italian War Cross for Military Valor, the French Legion d'Honneur
and the Croix de Guerre with Palm and the British Distinguish Service Cross.
For most of the Beach Jumper Officers and men of Units 1, 3, 4, 5, who served in
the Mediterranean Theater Operations, participation in their specialized brand of
Naval Warfare was over. For some, the future meant service in newly formed BJ
Units which deployed to the Pacific Theater.
The Beach Jumpers had a rough time getting started in the Pacific. BJU-6 and 7,
combined with other Naval Units to form TG 77.11. It sailed on 16 December
1944 for Mindoro in the Philippines aboard the USS Orestes.
On 30 December 1944 at 1655 Hours, a kamikaze struck the water at an angle
and bounced off the surface and then into the starboard side of the USS Orestes,
the planes unexploded bomb was thrown upward and detonated within the ship
resulting in 20 killed and 93 wounded. Unfortunately for Beach Jumpers, most of
TG77.11 top officers were among the killed or wounded. On 1 January 1945,
bombs at the PT Base on Mangarin Bay killed 16 more men who had survived the
kamikaze attack.
BJU-6 conducted their first diversion on 22-23 January 1945, by providing
deception tactics in and around the coastal town of Unisan to the Tablas Strait.
Beach Jumper communications deception followed a script which included a mix of
ad-lib actual conditions at sea, radar and surface search information, orders,
station keeping, references to putting boats into the water and the control of
landing craft. They also broadcasted normal traffic.
The last Beach Jumper mission for WW II was their most ambitious to date. The
effort featured a plan of maneuver and course changes during which rockets would
be fired and smoke screens laid, with all activity ending by 0630 hours when all
units were to rendezvous, change course a final time to 180 degree, reform, and
return to base.
During this deception Beach Jumpers operated a full array of equipment that
included jammer transmitters, radar intercept receivers, and smoke generators.
The diversions proved effective allowing the 34th Regimental Combat team, and
the 38th and 11th Airborne Divisions to land with little or no opposition.
Lieutenant Fairbanks was working on deception schemes to support the scheduled
British landings on Singapore when the war ended. Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., retired
as a Captain, USNR.
Shortly after the end of World War II, all Beach Jumper Units were deactivated.
U.S. Navy Beach Jumpers Association
‘Turbo Vestri Hostilis’
(727) 4-USNBJA
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All rights reserved
US Navy Beach Jumpers Assoc. ®beachjumpers.com, usnavybeachjumpers.org, usnbja.org
Website by R-Havekost,
BOD Chairman
- Ocracoke Island Memorial, Loop Shack Hill
- Beach Jumpers Memorial Honor Roll
- Deceased Members Personal Tributes
- CAPT Douglas Fairbanks Jr. USNR
- Members A-F
- Allen, Donovan, EN2, BJU2
- Allen, James LTjg BJU3&8
- Aucoin, Gary RD3, BJU2
- Barber, Richard RM2, BJU2
- Barry, Robert LT, BJU2
- Bartholdi, Joseph RD1, BJU2
- Benjamins, Edwin CRM, BJU6
- Bittner, Burt LT, BJU6
- Bobick, William, RD3, BJU1
- Bohannan, John RD2, BJU2
- Boyea, Henry GM3, BJU1
- Boyum, Danny EN2, BJU1
- Brewer, Charles QM3, BJU2
- Briggs, Ronald RM2, BJU2
- Brown, Donald, LCDR, BJU1
- Bucklew, Phil CAPT, BJU2
- Bullock, Harvey ENS, BJU4
- Burkey, Paul MM/1c, BJU1
- Burkholder, James EN2, BJU2
- Carlson, Ronald LT, BJU1
- Carlton, Jack ENS, BJU6
- Cason, GR RMCS, BJU1
- Casto, John RD3, BJU2
- Casto, Ronald RD3, BJU2
- Chambers, John BMSN, BJU1
- Chapeau, David, ETR3, BJU1
- Chesser, William, SK3, BJU2
- Clark, Curtis CWO3, BJU1
- Clark, Edward RM2, BJU2
- Clemente, Wm. LCDR, BJU2&1
- Cochran,Wilmer, SM2c, BJU6
- Conley, Harold SK3, BJU1
- Conner, William Jr, LTjg, BJU1
- Cook, Kenneth OSCS, BJU1
- Cooper, Dannie ETSN, BJU1
- Costilow, James RM1, BJU1
- Coutinho, Roy LT, BJU1
- Culp, Ralph RM3, BJU2
- Davies, David RMCS, BJU1
- Davis, Charles T., ET2, BJU2
- Denslow, Irving CWO2, BJU2
- DeWeese, Jerry RM1, BJU1
- Dinsmore, G. Chris, RD2, BJU1
- Donaghy, Sam OS1, FCG2
- Doornbos, Robert, CWO4, BJU1
- Driscoll, Frederic RDm1/c, BJU4
- Dunton, Lewis RADM, BJU6
- Eason, Charles DP1, BJU1
- Eiben, Michael, LTjg, BJU1
- English, Lon RD2, BJU1
- Engman, Clayton RM2, BJU1
- Everett, Richard ETN2, BJU1
- Fahey, Edwatd F. RMC, BJU1
- Fallen, David CDR, BJU2
- Fanning, Norris RT/2c, BJU7
- Frankenfield, Warren RD3, BJU2
- Franklin, James OS1, BJU1
- Members G-L
- Gacek, Chester RM3/c, BJU9
- Gallagher, Rodney RMSN, BJU2
- Glaza, David OS2, BJU1
- Grauten, Henry LTjg., BJU7
- Harris, John AE1, BJU11
- Hanlon, Charles RD3, BJU2
- Harvey, C.Felix LT, BJU2
- Havyer, William, ETN2, BJU2
- Hayes, Simon, RD3, BJU2
- Hendry, James CDR, BJU2
- Hennessy, Peter LTjg, BJU2
- Hill, Kenneth L. SKCS, BJU2
- Hoatson, Norman ET2, BJU1
- Hobbs, Jim CAPT, BJU1
- Hoffman, Benjamin LTjg, BJU2
- Hogan, Joseph ENS, BJU6
- Hollers, James PN3, BJU2
- Hower, William LTjg, BJU1
- Johnson, Joe ET2, BJU2
- Johnson, William RMC, BJU1
- Jones, Lynn IC3, BJU1
- Jones, William, RD2, BJU1
- Kenyon, Richard LTjg, BJU2
- Kersting, William CAPT, BJU1
- Kilburn, Franklin SK2, BJU2
- Kisselburg,Ken ETSN, BJU1
- Kittelson,Gary, LTjg BJU2
- Kreske, Malcom RT/3c, BJU9
- Krolak, John, RM3, BJU2
- Kropf, Robert ETCS, BJU1
- Lando, Robert CDR, BJU4
- Lane, Charles RD3, BJU1
- LaPointe, Norman, ET3, BJU2
- Lasell, Max CAPT, BJU2
- Lee, Thurman ENCS, BJU2
- Long, John P, CDR, BJU2
- Members M-S
- MacGilvray, Bruce RD2, BJU1
- Maguire, Robert GM/1c, BJU4 & 11
- Manfield Jr, John J, QM3, BJU2
- Marco, Thomas RD3, BJU1
- Marino, Al ENFN, BJU1
- Marscher, John LTjg, BJU2
- Matula, George GMG1, BJU2
- McAndrew, James QM1, BJU2
- McBride, Robert LT., BJU2
- McCormack, Elmer LCDR, BJU1
- McCue, George BM1, BJU2
- McGath, Arthur, EN3, BJU2
- McGregor, James RM2, BJU1
- McLeod, John EMC, BJU1
- McQuade, Patrick EN3, BJU1
- Miller, Donald EN2, BJU2
- Miller, Herman RMC, BJU2
- Miller, Wayne EM2, BJU2
- Mohn, Larry ETN2, BJU1
- Mohler, Phillip GSCS, BJU1
- Moncrief, Phillip LTjg., BJU1
- Moore, Charles EN3, BJU2
- Moore, Frank SFM2, BJU2
- Morrissey, James ET3, BJU2 & 1
- Mullen, George LCDR, BJU9
- Mulqueen, Jerry RD2, BJU2
- Munro, Robert EN3, BJU1
- Murphy, Chester CDR, BJU2
- Nagel, Roger FN, BJU1
- Newberg, Gary ETC, BJU1
- Niederer, Otto LT, BJU1 & 2
- Oden, Dickie RM2, BJU1
- O'Donnell, William EM1, BJU2
- Olney, Austin LT, BJU6
- Peterson, Thomas PN3, BJU2
- Placek, Donald RD2, BJU2
- Price, Robert, CDR, BJU2
- Prince, Michael OSCS, BJU1
- Pollock, Charles LT, BJU2
- Rainie, Robert CRM, BJU1&9
- Ramsey, Homer RM3, BJU1
- Reynolds, Charles, SFM2, BJU2
- Richter, Philip RD1, BJU2
- Rodolfich, Steve, RM3, BJU1
- Root, Larry YN3, BJU1
- Ross, Clyde BM3, BJU2
- Roy, Robert ETM2/c, BJU6
- Rumfield, Stanley, CTM2, BJU1
- Sandwick, John QM/2c, BJU3
- Ryan, Edward SN, BJU2
- Sander, Louis LTjg, BJU2
- Scott, James SK2c, BJU10
- Seekins, Pearley, EM3, BJU2
- Seymour, George ETCM, BJU1
- Skinner, William SM /2c, BJU1
- Skorheim, Robert LTjg, BJU2
- Slattery, Ernest BM1, BJU2
- Smither, Danny IC3, BJU1
- Stambaugh, Carl RM1, BJU1
- Stamper, Michael SFM3, BJU2
- Stanley, Eugene, RD2, BJU2
- Steffen, Werner CDR, BJU1
- Stuber, Richard RMC, BJU1
- Summa, Raymond ET3, BJU2
- Sutherland, Donald RD3, BJU1
- Swanson, Raynor EWCM, BJU1
- Members T-Z
- Thomas, Stephen LT, BJU2
- Timmons, Edward, RMC, BJU1
- Toti, Frank RD3, BJU1
- Tucker, Bruce ENFN, BJU2
- Tumey, John W. ET2, BJU1
- VanWinkle, Daniel, LT, BJU1
- Vorndran, Charles RM/2c, BJU5 & 9
- Watson, David OSCM, BJU1
- Wall, James E. GM3, BJU1
- Watson, Richard RMC, BJU1
- Wenzlaff, George OSCS, BJU1
- Willis, Berry CDR, BJU1
- Witherspoon, Charles CDR, BJU1
- Wolf, Bernard LTjg, BJU2
- Woods, Larry SFM3, BJU1
- Wootten, Thomas CDR, BJU1
- YellowEagle, James ADJ3, BJU1
- Zeiger, Steve ETR2, BJU2
- - - - -Honorary Associates- - - -
- John B. Dwyer, Author, History of Navy Beach Jumpers
- Earl O'Neal, Ocracoke Island Historian
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