Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 25
Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 25 or NMCB 25 is a Navy Reserve Seabee unit that is headquartered at Port Hueneme, CA. Its World War II predecessor was one of three CBs transferred to the Marine Corps in the late summer of 1942 as combat engineers. Those three battalions were attached to composite Marine Engineer Regiments as the third battalion of their respective regiment. All of them remained with the Marine Corps for the next two years before they were released and returned to the Navy. At the end of World War II the battalion was decommissioned. In 1961, it was recommissioned in the Naval Construction Force Reserve where it remains today.
History
World War II
On 13 September 1942, the 25th Naval Construction Battalion was commissioned at Camp Bradford, Virginia and sent to Ports Hueneme. Headquarters and A, C & D Companies were transferred to the Marine Corps and sent to Camp Elliot, San Diego on 31 October. Camp Elliot was the home of the Fleet Marine Force Training Center, West Coast. "Its mission was the training of individual replacements for combat duty". Marine battalions had a four company format which is why one company was released. B Company was transferred to the NCB Replacement Group, FMF-TC and used as the core for the 53rd NCB. As history would have it, the 25th and 53rd have been paired from then on. Both were assigned to the Marine Corps and deployed to the same places. The rest of the 25th was posted to the Third Marine Division, FMF and re-designated as the Third Battalion of the 19th Marines. The Marines had three battalions to a regiment. The first battalion had Companies A, B, & C, while the second had Companies D, E, & F and the third battalion had Companies G, H, & I.G Company and 1/5 Hq Company 1 January 1943 transferred to 9th Marines, Third Marine Division, arrived Auckland, New Zealand in February H Company and 1/5 Hq Company 25 January 1943 transferred to 21st Marines, Third Marine Division, arrived Auckland, New Zealand in February I Company and 1/5 Hq Company 15 February 1943 transferred to Hq Amphibious Corps Fleet Marine Force via: Pago Pago, Tutuila and American Samoa arrived Auckland New Zealand 28 May. This company was later attached to the 3rd Marines.In June, the battalion was detached from the Marines and returned to battalion administration of a headquarters and three construction companies. They were sent to Guadalcanal in preparation of the Bougainville campaign. On 1 November 386 men and 15 Officers landed there under fire. By 28 November an additional 317 men and 6 Officers had landed. On Bougainville the 25th worked with the 53rd and 71st NCBs. The battalion returned to Guadalcanal in early January 1944. The 19th Marines were decommissioned with the 25th released from the administrative control of the 3rd Marine Division on 11 April. They were again redesignated the 25th NCB. However, the battalion was then attached to III Amphibious Corps, FMF for administrative purposes and to the 3rd Marine Division operationally.
- 3rd Marine Division Order of Battle of Bougainville:
- *3rd Marine Regimental Combat Team – C, F, & I Companies 19th Marines
- *9th Marine Regimental Combat Team – A, D, & G Companies 19th Marines
- *21st Marine Regimental Combat Team – B, E, & H Companies 19th Marines
- 3rd Marine Division Order of Battle of Guam (1944):
- *9th Marine Regimental Combat Team – A, D, & G Companies 19th Marines
- *21st Marine Regimental Combat Team -B, E, & H Companies 19th Marines
- *3rd Marine Regimental Combat Team – C, F, & I Companies 19th Marines
Another former USMC CB, the 53rd was assigned to the 27th NCR as was the 2nd Separate Marine Engineer Battalion.
The 25th was decommissioned in November 1945 with the 133rd NCB taking over its work orders on Guam.
Note: 25 NCB was the only unit to serve with Army, Navy and Marine Corps formations during WWII.
1960s to present
The battalion was recommissioned in October 1961 at Davisville, RI. From 1995 until 2014, NMCB 25's homeport was Fort McCoy, Wisconsin, where it had moved from Glenview, Ill. Its headquarters has since moved to Port Hueneme, CA, where it is still listed as a reserve unit.- Deployments:
- *Iraq 2006
- *Guantanamo Bay 2009–2010
- *Haiti earthquake 2010
- *[War in War in Afghanistan (2001–2021)|Afghanistan (2001–2021)|Afghanistan] 2014
- *Afghanistan 2019
Unit awards
- Unit Letter of Commendation from Lt Col Fojt, Commanding Officer 19th Marines, for action on Guam and the Marianas
- 1996, 2006, 2019 Admiral Perry Award
- Unit Letter of Commendation from Secretary of the Navy
- 2014 Citizens Patriot Unit Award
- Navy "E" Ribbon: – U.S. Atlantic Fleet Battle "E". 9 times: 1996, 1998, 2005, 2006, 2009, 2012, 2016, 2019, 2020
note: On Guam the 3rd Combat Team was awarded a Presidential Unit Citation. That award has the standard statement at the bottom "and all those attached to or serving with". Not all of the units attached to or serving with the 3rd Marine Regiment received that PUC including I Co 19th Marines
note: On Guam the 21st Combat Team was awarded a Naval Unit Citation. That award has the standard statement at the bottom "and all those attached to or serving with". Not all of the units attached to or serving with the 21st Marine Regiment received that NUC including H Co 19th Marines
Campaign awards
- Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Medal with the FMF and two arrowheads
- World War II Victory Medal
- Global War on Terrorism Service Medal
- Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Medal
- Afghanistan Campaign Medal