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Dam Neck FCTCA

Since 2004, Dam Neck has been part of a larger center called Training Support Center Hampton Roads. It is not a support for training missions as part of the Navy’s “Revolution in Training”  For more information on Training Support Center Hampton Roads go to the bottom of the page.

Location

Dam Neck can be found  five miles south of the Virginia Beach downtown resort area on the Atlantic coast. The 3.2 miles covers over 1,100 acres of highlands, marshes, coastal beaches and sand dunes.


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History

TSC Hampton Roads is located at NAS Oceana, Dam Neck Annex. Dam Neck is located in an area rich in history. In 1607, the Jamestown colonists landed just south of the entrance to the Chesapeake Bay at what is now Fort Story. By 1617, the settlers expanded east of the Elizabeth River, and built homes near present-day Dam Neck by the 1630’s.

The name Dam Neck became firmly established in 1881 when it was given to a life-saving station built where the Bachelor Officer Quarters are now located.The Coast Guard purchased the life-saving station in 1930, and used it as a signal station until the Navy bought the land during World War II.

On November 6, 1941, Lieutenant Phillip D. Gallery received orders to report to the “Anti-Aircraft Range, Norfolk.”No one could tell him anything about his new duty station, so Gallery did some checking.He discovered that District Public Works was in the process of constructing two small frame buildings near a Coast Guard station about five miles south of Virginia Beach on the Atlantic coast.This was the beginning of Anti-Aircraft Range, Norfolk.

The base originally housed a firing line, one control tower, one magazine, one office and one shop. There were no quarters or messing facilities.

On April 4, 1942, the activity was commissioned as the Anti-Aircraft Training and Test center with Lieutenant Gallery as Commanding Officer.The first barracks building, a mess hall and early classrooms were completed, and the staff consisted of two officers and approximately 40 enlisted men.

Lieutenant Gallery solicited trainees from ships at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard and the Naval Base Piers.Enormous interest in the center developed immediately after the assault on Pearl Harbor, and plans were made to establish many other similar activities throughout the nation.

By 1944, Lieutenant Gallery was promoted to the rank of commander, and was awarded the Legion of Merit for his initiative and service to the Anti-Aircraft Range.He went on to become Commanding Officer of U S S Pittsburgh during the Korean conflict, and retired as Rear Admiral.

Before and during World War II, several shipwrecks occurred off the Virginia Beach Coast. One is marked by a quick, flashing red buoy located nine miles east of the drone launching pad and labeled “Dam Neck Wreck Lighted Bell Buoy.”The 5,700-ton U.S. tanker TIGER was torpedoed and sunk there by a submarine on April 3, 1942 with 64,000 barrels of Navy fuel oil aboard.

After World War II, the fate of Dam Neck was in question for several years.All of the anti-aircraft training centers in the United States were closing, but somehow Dam Neck survived.Between the years 1945 and 1949, the center rested uneasily in a stagnant period expecting each year to be its last.Then a Fire Department was established at the center in March 1947, giving hope to the staff that the base would remain commissioned.

Operational training continues today on all major weapons systems.As newer systems have been introduced to the fleet, they have been added to an ever-expanding curriculum, keeping the training tradition alive at Dam Neck.

Mission

Dam Neck’s mission is to attain the highest levels of fleet readiness by anticipating, developing, and providing the most effective specialized training and support services in response to fleet requirements.

“Strengthening Our National Defense Through Innovative Solutions for Our Warfighters.”

Combat Direction Systems Activity, Dam Neck

“Face to the Force”

NAS Oceana Dam Neck Annex (Base Operator) (757) 492-6234

FAP – Dam Neck (757) 492-6342

Fleet and Family Support Center Dam Neck Annex

Navy Lodge Dam Neck: Call (757) 437-8100 or visit https://www.navy-lodge.com

TSC HR was established April 2004 as a shore activity headquartered at Naval Air Station Oceana-Dam Neck Annex. TSC-HR operates five regional support offices in Hampton Roads located at NAS Oceana, Naval Air Station Oceana-Dam Neck Annex, JEB Little Creek – FT Story, NSA Northwest Annex, and Naval Station Norfolk. The Norfolk Office also operates three satellite Service Centers located at the Norfolk Naval Shipyard, Saint Julien’s Creek Portsmouth and NSA Norfolk.

Browse the history of these bases and locations below.

NAS Oceana Dam Neck AnnexNaval Station Norfolk

Nas Oceana Master Jet Base

NSA Norfolk and NSA Northwest AnnexJEB Little Creek – FT Story

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