Sóc Trăng Airfield was a French colonial, Imperial Japanese Army, United States Marine Corps (USMC), United States Army (US ARMY) and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) and Republic of Vietnam Air Force (RVNAF) base located in Sóc Trăng in southern Vietnam.
United States Marine Corps (USMC) United States Army (US Army)
Site history
Built
1940(1940)
Inuse
1940-1975(1975)
Battles/wars
Vietnam War
Airfield information
Identifiers
IATA: SOA
Elevation
10 feet (3m) AMSL
Runways
Direction
Length and surface
03/21
3,200 feet (975m)Asphalt
History
Vietnamese troops with an HMM-362 UH-34Transfer ceremony, 4 November 1970
Sóc Trăng Airfield was originally established in the French colonial era, it was subsequently used by the Japanese forces from 1940 to 1945.[1]
HMM-362 with Sikorsky UH-34s codenamed Operation Shufly was the first USMC helicopter unit to serve in Vietnam arriving on 15 April 1962. Sóc Trăng was selected for the deployment because it had one of the few hard-surfaced runways in South Vietnam. HMM-362's mission was to provide transport and resupply for ARVN units throughout the Mekong Delta.[2]:56–67 On 1 August HMM-163 replaced HMM-362. In early September HMM-163 began moving north to Da Nang Air Base, completing the redeployment by 20 September.[2]:73–4
Other units stationed at Sóc Trăng included:
121st Aviation Company (Airmobile Light) from late 1962.[3]:24
336th Assault Helicopter Company
Detachment A, 57th Medical Detachment (Helicopter Ambulance), Provisional with Bell UH-1B Hueys from March 1964.[3]:134
82nd Medical Detachment (Helicopter Ambulance) from November 1964.[3]:137
On 4 November 1970, the control of Sóc Trăng was passed to the RVNAF.[4]
Accidents and incidents
On 19 May 1967, two UH-1D Iroquois (#64-13521 and #66-01154) of the 336th AHC collided on approach to Sóc Trăng causing both helicopters to crash killing all 4 crewmen on one helicopter and 1 crewman on the other[5]
On 12 August 1972, Lockheed C-130E Hercules #62-1853 of the 776th Tactical Airlift Squadron was shot down on takeoff from Sóc Trăng, killing 30 of 44 passengers and crew on board[6]
Current use
The airfield remains visible on satellite images.
References
Kelley, Michael (2002). Where we were in Vietnam. Hellgate Press. pp.470–1. ISBN978-1555716257.
Whitlow, Robert (1977). US Marines in Vietnam: The Advisory And Combat Assistance Era, 1954-1964. History and Museums Division Headquarters United States Marine Corps. ISBN9781494285296. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
Dunstan, S (1988). Vietnam Choppers. Osprey Publishing Ltd. ISBN0-85045-572-3.
"Headquarters MACV Monthly Summary November 1970"(PDF). Headquarters United States Military Assistance Command, Vietnam. p.xi. Retrieved 16 March 2020. This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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