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11th Marine Expeditionary Unit

'Pride of the Pacific'

Camp Pendleton, CA

Goodbye CH-46

By Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan | 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit | February 22, 2013

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MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Marines with Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 prepare to receive graduation honors as part of an HMMT 64 graduation ceremony here,  Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized the CH-46 Sea Knight since 1964.( Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl Demetrius Morgan/released)

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Marines with Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 prepare to receive graduation honors as part of an HMMT 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized the CH-46 Sea Knight since 1964.( Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl Demetrius Morgan/released) (Photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan)


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MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Melei Nguyen Kelly and her mother Thai Nguyen pose for a photo in front of a CH-46 helicopter, after a Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. Kelly and her mother Nguyen were both transported out of Vietnam, their home country, to the United States during the Vietnam War on April 27, 1975. The CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter was used to transport them safely and because of this event Kelly  and her mother were invited to the ceremony by HMMT 64.(Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released)

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Melei Nguyen Kelly and her mother Thai Nguyen pose for a photo in front of a CH-46 helicopter, after a Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. Kelly and her mother Nguyen were both transported out of Vietnam, their home country, to the United States during the Vietnam War on April 27, 1975. The CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter was used to transport them safely and because of this event Kelly and her mother were invited to the ceremony by HMMT 64.(Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released) (Photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan)


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MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Maj. Gen. Steve Busby, commanding general of 3rd Marine Air Wing, gives his speech as part of the Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized the CH-46 Sea Knight since 1964.(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released)

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Maj. Gen. Steve Busby, commanding general of 3rd Marine Air Wing, gives his speech as part of the Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized the CH-46 Sea Knight since 1964.(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released) (Photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan)


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MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Maj. Gen. Steve Busby, commanding general of 3rd Marine Air Wing presents eight Marines with their certificates certifying them as aircrew chiefs, during a Marine Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized this helicopter since 1964.(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released)

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. - Maj. Gen. Steve Busby, commanding general of 3rd Marine Air Wing presents eight Marines with their certificates certifying them as aircrew chiefs, during a Marine Helicopter Training Squadron 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. The eight Marines made history and became the last trainees to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight and will transition from using the CH-46 to the MV-22 Osprey. The Marine Corps has utilized this helicopter since 1964.(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released) (Photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan)


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MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. Lance Cpl. Alex Sosa III, an aircrew chief and honor graduate with Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64, poses for a photo after the HMMT 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. During the ceremony, Sosa was the honor graduate an alphabetically last Marine to be awarded which made him the last Marine in history to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters The Marine Corps has utilized this helicopter since 1964 and it will be replaced with the MV-22 Osprey(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released)

MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. Lance Cpl. Alex Sosa III, an aircrew chief and honor graduate with Medium Helicopter Training Squadron 64, poses for a photo after the HMMT 64 graduation ceremony here, Feb. 20. During the ceremony, Sosa was the honor graduate an alphabetically last Marine to be awarded which made him the last Marine in history to graduate with the CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters The Marine Corps has utilized this helicopter since 1964 and it will be replaced with the MV-22 Osprey(Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan/released) (Photo by Lance Cpl. Demetrius Morgan)


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Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton -- As time goes by, rules, ideas and even traditions are subject to change at any given moment. The Marine Corps, over the years, has gone through many changes to either enhance fighting capabilities or to evolve as a rapid reaction military force.
On Feb 20, 2013, Eight Marines with Medium Helicopter Training Squadron received their wings and became aircrew chiefs. Unfortunately with this momentous occasion, came the realization that the CH-46 Sea Knight that these new chiefs trained on will no longer be utilized by the Marine Corps.
"We are here to recognize these eight Marines as the last aircrew chiefs to graduate using the CH-46," said Maj Gen. Steve Busby, the commanding general of 3rd Marine Air Wing. "These Marines are now responsible for continuing the legacy of this aircraft and are now forever a part of history."
The mission of the CH-46 is to provide helicopter transport of personnel, supplies and equipment for the landing force. Its primary task is to transport Marine Corps troops to designated areas and since 1964, Marines have ensured that the CH-46's primary mission was upheld.
It's now the end of the CH-46 era and its passing affects many different parties. Busby, an Akron, Oh., native, has had a lot of experiences with the CH-46.
"I've had a lot of memories with this helicopter," said Busby. "I've been on two deployments with this helicopter and during the tsunami effort, I was on this thing almost every day witnessing the destruction the tsunami had caused."
Marines were not the only ones who were impacted by this event. Melei Nguyen Kelly and her mother Thai Nguyen are some of the many people who this helicopter has affected by accomplishing its primary mission.
"It's very sad to see them go," said Kelly. "It reminds us of when we first came to this country on them. The man taking me said to look down from the helicopter and he said that it will be the last time I see my country."
A 12-year-old Kelly and her mother were transported from Vietnam to the United States on April 27, 1975 on CH-46s to escape, what was then, a hostile environment during the Vietnam War.
The CH-46 Sea Knight will be replaced by the MV-22 Osprey in the near future. Although the CH-46 will not be utilized, Marines who have operated it and others who have been helped by it will forever remember what the CH-46 has done for them.

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