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I came on board the U.S.S. Rainier AE-5 in October of 1967 and was
one of the last crew men to walk her decks after her engines
failed, during sea trials prior to returning to Vietnam in July of
1970. She was decommissioned at Mare Island Naval Repair Facility
in Vailejo, California in August of 1970 and Rainier slipped into
naval history. Her crew truly lived up to the code of, Honor, Duty
and Country and Rainier''s history became a large part of a select
few who walked her decks while enduring the depravation from loved
ones, the exhausting work, the severe living conditions and the
fear of ridding into battle on 500 tons of live ammunition. During
her deployment to Vietnam the Rainier was awarded the Vietnamese
Service Medal, the Vietnamese Combat Medal (with four bronze combat
stars), the Meritorious Unit Citation, two Battle Efficiency
Citations and the Vietnam Navy/Marine Combat Action Medal. Her crew
was also recognized by COMSERVPAC 7(l) Fleet for outstanding
achievement during Operational Readiness Training before each of
her two 11 month deployments to the gun lines of Vietnam. The crew
T spent 22 months in Vietnam with may not have been the most naval
appearing crew in the fleet and the Rainier may not have been the
most sleek looking naval vessel in Vietnam, but we did live up to
the motto, We Deliver You Fire We also set the standard for all AE
sailors in the fleet for the future of naval operations. We were
truly a Band of Brothers doing our best for Honor, Duty and
Country, This book is dedicated to those who walked Rainier''s
decks before me while setting the standards and to those sailors I
served with who Continued ttic tradition. Special thanks to William
Freeman, QM-3, for starting the Rainier web site at
www.fainier.com.
I came on board the U.S.S. Rainier AE-5 in October of 1967 and was
one of the last crew men to walk her decks after her engines
failed, during sea trials prior to returning to Vietnam in July of
1970. She was decommissioned at Mare Island Naval Repair Facility
in Vailejo, California in August of 1970 and Rainier slipped into
naval history. Her crew truly lived up to the code of, Honor, Duty
and Country and Rainier''s history became a large part of a select
few who walked her decks while enduring the depravation from loved
ones, the exhausting work, the severe living conditions and the
fear of ridding into battle on 500 tons of live ammunition. During
her deployment to Vietnam the Rainier was awarded the Vietnamese
Service Medal, the Vietnamese Combat Medal (with four bronze combat
stars), the Meritorious Unit Citation, two Battle Efficiency
Citations and the Vietnam Navy/Marine Combat Action Medal. Her crew
was also recognized by COMSERVPAC 7(l) Fleet for outstanding
achievement during Operational Readiness Training before each of
her two 11 month deployments to the gun lines of Vietnam. The crew
T spent 22 months in Vietnam with may not have been the most naval
appearing crew in the fleet and the Rainier may not have been the
most sleek looking naval vessel in Vietnam, but we did live up to
the motto, We Deliver You Fire We also set the standard for all AE
sailors in the fleet for the future of naval operations. We were
truly a Band of Brothers doing our best for Honor, Duty and
Country, This book is dedicated to those who walked Rainier''s
decks before me while setting the standards and to those sailors I
served with who Continued ttic tradition. Special thanks to William
Freeman, QM-3, for starting the Rainier web site at
www.fainier.com.
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