HSC-2

Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 2 (HELSEACOMBATRON 2 or HSC-2) (previously Helicopter Combat Support Squadron 2 (HC-2)), also known as the "Fleet Angels" (previously the "Circuit Riders"), is a helicopter squadron of the United States Navy based at Naval Station Norfolk operating the Sikorsky MH-60S Seahawk. The Fleet Angels are a Fleet Replacement Squadron providing trained MH-60S crew to units on the East Coast.

the original squadron insignia of HC-2 "Circuit Riders"
Two HC-2 helicopters: A VH-3A (behind) and SH-3G (foreground) at Oceana in 1991
Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron 2
HELSEACOMBATRON 2
(HSC-2)
Active1 April 1987 - present
Country United States of America
Branch United States Navy
TypeNavy Helicopter Squadron
Garrison/HQNorfolk
Nickname(s)"Fleet Angels"

History

Two of HSC-2's MH-60S helicopters

HSC-2 was established as the second squadron designated Helicopter Combat Support Squadron TWO (HC-2) on 1 April 1987 from components of several helicopter squadrons, specifically; HC-6's Atlantic Fleet VIP det flying the VH-3A Sea King, HM-12's Vertical Onboard Delivery (VOD) det flying the CH-53E Super Stallion, and HS-1's Sea Det flying the SH-3G Sea King in support of the Commander U.S. 6th Fleet in Gaeta Italy and the Commander Middle East Force (what would eventually become 5th Fleet) in Manama Bahrain. The Manama detachment was affectionately known as the "Desert Ducks".[1] The squadron originally named itself the Circuit Riders but in 1994 it adopted the name Fleet Angels from the first HC-2, which had been established as HU-2 on 1 April 1948 and was disestablished on 30 September 1977. Later in the squadron's history it replaced its SH-3G Sea Kings with the UH-3H and UH-3H(ET-Executive Transport) versions and it replaced its CH-53E Super Stallions with the Sikorsky MH-53E Sea Dragon.[2] HC-2 provided detachments to the Persian Gulf in 1990 and 1991 in support of Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm, conducting search and rescue, medical evacuation, and prisoner transportation flights, as well as assisting in the search for naval mines and providing other assistance to the fleet.

Civilian assistance was rendered in the aftermath of Hurricanes Dennis and Floyd during which two members of the squadron would be awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal for their heroism in rescuing stranded people in North Carolina. Unit citations received over the years have included both a Battle Efficiency Award and a Meritorious Unit Commendation as well as the Chief of Naval Operations Aviation Safety Award in honor of more than 60,000 flight hours without an accident.[2]

In 1997 HC-2 assumed the H-3 Fleet Replacement Squadron (FRS) role in addition to its other missions when HS-1, which by that time was the Navy's sole H-3 FRS was disestablished that June.

The venerable H-3 was finally retired from Navy squadron service by HC-2 in January 2006 and replaced with the Navy's new multi-role combat support helicopter, the MH-60S Seahawk. On 1 January 2006 the squadron was redesignated Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron TWO (HSC-2) and became the East Coast Fleet Replacement Squadron for the MH-60S.[2]

Aircraft

Aircraft operated by HSC-2 and HC-2 include (bold indicates active aircraft types):

gollark: Technically, yes.
gollark: No, FLOPS is just FLoating point OPerationS.
gollark: Floating point operations a second.
gollark: Mine has int4s and int8s and whatever but I don't know what it can do with those, and it's really recent.
gollark: Bitops? Do those exist whatsoever on GPUs *either*?

See also

References

  1. "Navy Aviation Squadron Lineage List" (PDF). Naval History & Heritage Command.
  2. "HSC-2 'Fleet Angels'". seaforces.org. Retrieved 11 November 2014.
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