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Saigon Naval Shipyard is a former French Navy, Republic of Vietnam Navy (RVNN) and Vietnam People's Navy (VPN) base in Saigon Vietnam.[1]

Saigon Naval Shipyard
Ba Son Shipyard
The shipyard in 1968
Coordinates10°46′59″N 106°42′29″E / 10.783°N 106.708°E / 10.783; 106.708 (Saigon Naval Shipyard)
TypeNavy
Site information
Controlled byVietnam People's Navy
Republic of Vietnam Navy
French Navy
Site history
Built1788
In use1788–2015
Battles/warsVietnam War

The 57-acre (230,000 m2) base, located on the southwest bank of the Saigon River about 30 miles (48 km) from the South China Sea, represented the largest single industrial complex in South East Asia.

History

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The shipyard was originally created around 1788 by Lord Nguyễn Phúc Ánh as the Chu Su Naval workshop. With help from French engineers Lord Nguyen built a fleet of ships that helped him defeat the Tây Sơn dynasty and establish him as Emperor Gia Long. The naval workshop was progressively expanded and after the French conquered Cochinchina in 1862 they expanded the area as the Port de la Marine (Naval Port) under the control of the French Navy.[2]: 251 

The French Navy expanded the base facilities making it the Navy headquarters and home to the Naval Artillery and barracks. In 1864, the Navy expanded the Chu Su Naval workshop into the Naval Arsenal and Shipyard which by 1888 had modern facilities including a 168m drydock. In 1902, the base became the headquarters of the Naval Forces of the Oriental Seas under the command of a Vice Admiral who controlled 38 ships and over 3800 officers and sailors. By 1918, the shipyard was capable of building vessels of up to 3500 Deadweight tonnage (DWT).[2]: 252 

With the departure of the French the base passed to the control of the RVNN. In 1955 the shipyard was renamed the Ba Son Shipyard and it was capable of building vessels up to 10,000 DWT and repairing vessels up to 35,000 DWT.[2]: 252 

Starting in 1965, the shipyard built 90 Yabuta junks for the Junk Force to replace their wooden junks. Mr. Yabuta, a Japanese engineer at the shipyard in 1961, originally designed the 57 feet (17 m) junk. Armed with a .30-caliber machine gun, it featured a 110-horsepower diesel engine capable of generating ten knots of speed and was built entirely out of fiberglass, which obviated the need to treat the hulls for wood-boring Teredo worms. Wooden junks, by contrast, needed to have their hulls scraped, blow-torched and resealed every three months. The U.S. Military Assistance Program provided funds for building materials and engines, and the Vietnamese paid the wages of the shipyard laborers who built the junks. After the first Yabutas were completed, output slowed significantly. In 1966 the shipyard built only nine junks and in 1967, just 15. Production went from three junks a week in 1965 to one every five weeks in 1967 as private construction firms lured shipyard workers away with salaries, on average, three times higher than what the government had paid them.[3]: 47–8 

At 03:00 on 31 January 1968 at the start of the Tet Offensive, twelve Viet Cong (VC) sappers approached the base in two civilian cars, killing two guards at a barricade at Me Linh Square and then advanced towards the base gate. The sound of gunfire alerted base sentries who secured the gate and sounded the alarm. A .30-caliber machine gun on the second floor of the headquarters disabled both cars and killed or wounded several sappers while the Navy security force organized a counterattack. Simultaneously a U.S. Navy advisor contacted the U.S. military police who soon attacked the VC from adjoining streets, the resulting crossfire ended the attack, killing eight sappers with two captured.[3]: 284 

Post-Vietnam War

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The shipyard in 2014, viewed from Saigon River

With the Fall of Saigon the base was taken over by the VPN which continues to use the barracks at 1A Ton Duc Thang (10°46′34″N 106°42′22″E / 10.776°N 106.706°E / 10.776; 106.706) to the present day. In 2015, the Ba Son Shipyard was closed and sold to a private developer who later demolished all the facilities to make way for apartment development.[2]: 252–3 

References

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  1. ^ Kelley, Michael (2002). Where we were in Vietnam. Hellgate Press. p. 454. ISBN 978-1555716257.
  2. ^ a b c d Doling, Tim (2019). Exploring Saigon-Cholon – Vanishing Heritage of Ho Chi Minh City. Thế Giới Publishers. ISBN 9786047761388.
  3. ^ a b Sherwood, John (2015). War in the shallows: U.S. Navy Coastal and Riverine Warfare in Vietnam 1965-968. Naval History and Heritage Command. ISBN 978-0-945274-76-6.Public Domain  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.