Gonzo Station Camel Corps 1979-1980 Patch — Iranian Hostage Crisis Era Navy Deployment Embroidered Patch
Gonzo Station — the forgotten watch in the Arabian Sea.
The "Gonzo Station" Camel Corps patch commemorates one of the most tense and prolonged naval deployments of the Cold War era — the 1979–1980 deployment of U.S. Navy carrier battle groups to the Arabian Sea and Gulf of Oman during the Iranian Hostage Crisis. When Iranian revolutionaries seized the U.S. Embassy in Tehran in November 1979, the Navy rushed aircraft carriers including USS Midway (CV-41), USS Constellation (CV-64), and USS Ranger (CV-61) to the waters off Iran, establishing what sailors grimly nicknamed "Gonzo Station" — a seemingly endless patrol in the scorching heat of the Arabian Sea.
The "Camel Corps" nickname reflected the sailors' dark humor about being stationed in the desert waters of the Middle East with no end in sight. For months, carrier crews operated at a punishing tempo, maintaining combat readiness while the diplomatic crisis dragged on. The experience of Gonzo Station shaped a generation of Navy personnel and foreshadowed the decades of continuous U.S. naval presence in the Persian Gulf that would follow. This patch is a rare piece of Cold War naval history, honoring the sailors who endured that grueling watch.
Perfect For: Gonzo Station veterans, sailors who served aboard CV-41 Midway, CV-61 Ranger, or CV-64 Constellation during 1979–1980, Iranian Hostage Crisis historians, Cold War Navy collectors, and military patch enthusiasts who value deployment-specific insignia.
Gonzo Station — the Camel Corps held the line.