Rosters of WW2 Civilian Sea Bees?

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  • shooterm1
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 141

    #1

    Rosters of WW2 Civilian Sea Bees?

    I am researching the life of a favorite Uncle and I'm having a hard time getting any data on his time in the Navy -

    The family legend says that prior to that he was a Civilian Sea Bee.

    any help in locating good solid infomation would be much appreciated.


    sigpic"Friends come and go, but enemies accumulate" ~ Arthur Bloch
  • 5MadFarmers
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 2815

    #2
    PM me his name and I'll do a quick genealogy search. I generally find what I'm looking for.

    Comment

    • shooterm1
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 141

      #3
      msg sent
      sigpic"Friends come and go, but enemies accumulate" ~ Arthur Bloch

      Comment

      • Oyaji
        Very Senior Member - OFC
        • Oct 2009
        • 4373

        #4
        Recommend liase with the two folks:

        Ms. Lara Godbille, Director
        U.S. Navy Seabee Museum
        99 23rd Ave.
        Port Hueneme, CA 93043-4301
        1-805-982-5167
        lara.godbille@navy.mil

        William C. Hilderbrand, CAPT, CEC, USN (Ret)
        President
        CEC/Seabee Historical Foundation
        PO Box 657
        Gulfport, MS 39502
        228-865-0480
        info@seabeehf.org

        Comment

        • Art
          Senior Member, Deceased
          • Dec 2009
          • 9256

          #5
          My old daddy was a World War II SeaBee. SeaBees were navy personnel by definition. Though I have no doubt that civilian personnel did work with them, a civilian working with the SeaBees would not have been a SeaBee himself any more than a civilian employee of the Marine Corps would be a Marine.

          At the start of World War II the navy used civilian contractors and quickly realized starting with the fall of Wake Island and the capture of it's civilian construction crew that this was a bad idea. This dilemma led to the founding of the SeaBees.

          For an excellent and readable history of the SeaBees in World War II I strongly recomment William Bradfor Huie's "Can Do!" and "Omaha to Okinawa" which trace the founding of the SeaBees and their World War II history.

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