World War II at
Nijmegen, 30 September 1944. The DUKW was supplied to the U.S. Army, U.S. Marine Corps and
Allied forces, and 2,000 were supplied to Britain under the
Lend-Lease program; 535 were acquired by Australian forces, Some DUKWs used in WWII were reported to have capsized while landing at
Omaha Beach during the Normandy invasion. DUKWs were also used in Lake Garda in Italy by the
10th Mountain Division in the final days of the war. One sank while crossing from
Torbole sul Garda to
Riva del Garda on the evening of 30 April 1945, drowning 25 out of the 26 onboard. A documentary about the event,
The Lost Mountaineers, premiered in 2023. Two other DUKWs used in operation sank without casualties.
After the war After World War II, reduced numbers were kept in service by the United States, Britain, France, and Australia, with many stored pending disposal. Australia transferred many to
Citizens Military Force units. The U.S. Army reactivated and deployed several hundred at the outbreak of the
Korean War with the 1st Transportation Replacement Training Group providing crew training. DUKWs were used extensively to bring supplies ashore during the
Battle of Pusan Perimeter and in the
amphibious landings at Incheon. Ex-U.S. Army DUKWs were transferred to the French military after World War II and were used by the
Troupes de marine and
naval commandos. Many were used for general utility duties in
overseas territories. France deployed DUKWs to
French Indochina during the
First Indochina War. Some French DUKWs were given new hulls in the 1970s, with the last being retired in 1982. Britain deployed DUKWs to Malaya during the
Malayan Emergency of 1948–60. Many were redeployed to
Borneo during the
Indonesia–Malaysia confrontation of 1962–66.
Later military use The
Royal Marines used five of these vehicles for training at 11 (Amphibious Trials and Training) Squadron, 1 Assault Group Royal Marines at
Instow, North Devon. Four were manufactured between 1943 and 1945. The fifth is a DUKW hull copy manufactured in 1993 with unused World War II-vintage running gear parts. In 1999, a refurbishment programme began to extend their service life to 2014. DUKWs were removed from service in 2012. The DUKWs were used for safety, allowing all ranks to undertake training drills for boat work for the landing craft ranks, and drivers undertaking wading drills from the
Landing Craft Utility.
Principal military users • United States • Australia – 535 • Argentina • Brazil • Canada – about 800 • Dominican Republic • France • Philippines • Iraq • Soviet Union – 586 • United Kingdom – about 2,000 ==Developments==