The Vietnam War: The Higgins Boat (LCV)

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The Higgins boat, other wise known as an LCVP (Landing Craft Vehicle Personnel) played a major role in attacks upon shallow beaches throughout the war. The Higgins boat is a very rugged rectangle boat with a bow that lowers down like a ramp in order to deposit troops or vehicles on shore. The LCVP also had a tunnel that protected the propellers for shallow waters and unsuspected obstructions. The boat is 36’3” long and 10’10” wide, even though it is small it could carry 36 troops or 12 troops and a vehicle. The boat didn’t only play a major role in D-Day but in many attack on Japanese islands as well. This boat was a very important innovation because of it’s unique ability to land on any shore imaginable, from sandy bottom to coral reef. …show more content…

Years later in 1938, the Marine Corps eventually struck a deal with Higgins to produce a boat to help in the war. There were multiple design of the boat before the final version, one which included a much smaller ramp in the front but it would bottleneck the troops which made them an easier to pick off. HIs’s production plants employed over 25,000 people, including many minorities who, all got paid equally and built for than 12,500 LCVP boats throughout the war. The higgins boat was so useful in the war that President Dwight D. Eisenhower said in an 1964 interview that,“Andrew Higgins is the man who won the war for

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