4th Force Reconnaissance Company Contents History External links Navigation menu4th Force Reconnaissance Company4th Force Reconnaissance Co.e

United States Marine Corps Force ReconnaissanceCompanies of the United States Marine Corps


Force ReconnaissanceUnited States Marine CorpsAlamedaMarine Corps Base HawaiiMarine Forces Reservedeepamphibious reconnaissance1st Marine Expeditionary BrigadeThailandPhilippinesHugh W. HardyIraq War

















4th Force Reconnaissance Company

4th Force Reconnaissance Company insignia (transparent background) 03.png
4th Force Reconnaissance Company insignia.

Active1952 - Present
CountryUnited States
Allegiance
Department of Defense and Navy
BranchUSMC
TypeReconnaissance
RoleThe company specializes in deep reconnaissance and amphibious reconnaissance for the Marine Air-Ground Task Force.

4th Force Reconnaissance Company (4th Force Recon) is a Force Reconnaissance unit of the United States Marine Corps. The company is located in Alameda, California, with a detachment at Marine Corps Base Hawaii (MCB Hawaii). The Hawaii detachment represents the only Marine Forces Reserve unit in the state.




Contents





  • 1 History

    • 1.1 Lineage


    • 1.2 1990s


    • 1.3 2000s



  • 2 External links




History



Lineage


The company was activated 10 November 1952 at San Bernardino, California, as the 32d Special Infantry Company, U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. On 31 October 1957, it was redesignated the 32d Infantry Company and redesignated again on 1 November 1959 as the 4th Reconnaissance Company. On 1 July 1962, it was assigned to Force Troops, Fleet Marine Force. In October 1971, it was relocated to Marine Barracks, Pearl Harbor, and again in April 1973 to Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Center, Honolulu, Hawaii. In November 1996, it was relocated to MCB Hawaii with a detachment in Reno, Nevada. The company headquarters was moved to Alameda, California, with a detachment remaining in Hawaii.



1990s


4th Force Recon Company provided deep and amphibious reconnaissance support to 1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade until the MEB was stood down from Hawaii in the mid-1990s. The unit also cross-trained with reconnaissance units from other countries during Cobra Gold in Thailand and Balikatan in the Philippines. In 1992, the unit crossed trained with the 61st Philippine Marine Recon Company in Ternate, Cavite, Philippines. In 1993, two teams conducted deep reconnaissance in support of 1st MEB during Operation Ke O'A Koa. In 1994, 4th Force won the General Hugh W. Hardy Superlative Performance Award for the Outstanding Marine Forces Reserve Unit.



2000s


4th Force Reconnaissance Company deployed to Iraq during the Iraq War.



External links




  • 4th Force Reconnaissance Company

  • 4th Force Reconnaissance Co.








Companies of the United States Marine Corps, United States Marine Corps Force ReconnaissanceUncategorized

Popular posts from this blog

Creating 100m^2 grid automatically using QGIS?Creating grid constrained within polygon in QGIS?Createing polygon layer from point data using QGIS?Creating vector grid using QGIS?Creating grid polygons from coordinates using R or PythonCreating grid from spatio temporal point data?Creating fields in attributes table using other layers using QGISCreate .shp vector grid in QGISQGIS Creating 4km point grid within polygonsCreate a vector grid over a raster layerVector Grid Creates just one grid

Nikolai Prilezhaev Bibliography References External links Navigation menuEarly Russian Organic Chemists and Their Legacy092774english translationRussian Biography

How to link a C library to an Assembly library on Mac with clangHow do you set, clear, and toggle a single bit?Find (and kill) process locking port 3000 on MacWho is listening on a given TCP port on Mac OS X?How to start PostgreSQL server on Mac OS X?Compile assembler in nasm on mac osHow do I install pip on macOS or OS X?AFNetworking 2.0 “_NSURLSessionTransferSizeUnknown” linking error on Mac OS X 10.8C++ code for testing the Collatz conjecture faster than hand-written assembly - why?How to link a NASM code and GCC in Mac OS X?How to run x86 .asm on macOS Sierra