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Camp Carroll was a United States Marine Corps artillery base during the
Vietnam War. It was located 8 km southwest of the town of Cam Lo. Camp
Carroll was also at the centroid of a large arc of the strategic Highway
9 corridor south of the demilitarized zone, which made it a key
facility. The camp was named after Navy Cross recipient Captain J.J.
Carroll who was the commanding officer of Kilo Company, 3rd Battalion,
4th Marines. He was killed by friendly tank fire on October 5, 1966
during Operation Prairie. The camp was commissioned on November 10, 1966
and became home for the 3rd Marine Regiment. It was one of nine
artillery bases constructed along the DMZ and had 80 artillery pieces
including M107 175mm guns from the United States Army. From a tactical
perspective, therefore, the 175mm self-propelled gun was the most
important weapon at Camp Carroll. The 175mm guns put Camp Carroll on the
map, particularly the tactical maps of the North Vietnamese forward
observers. The most powerful American field artillery tube, the 175mm
could fire a 150-pound projectile 32,690 meters and effectively return
fire on any enemy gun that could hit it.
Camp Carroll diminished in significance after the 1968 Tet Offensive.
The 3rd Marine Division began relying on highly mobile postures rather
than remaining in their fixed positions as sitting targets.
On April 2, 1972, Colonel Pham Van Dinh
surrendered the facility to the North Vietnamese Army. At present the
land belongs to Xi Nghiep Ho Tieu Lam, the Vietnamese state-operated
pepper enterprise. |