Monthly Archives: January 2015

What’s your favorite Glock Generation?

When first introduced thirty year ago, the polymer-framed Glock safety action pistol was one of the most innovative handguns of the 20th Century. Now, well into the 21st, the Glock has evolved over four full generations (and several partial ones) to keep up with the times and give the public what they want. With that in mind, which is your favorite?

I’ll give you a hint, mines got an RTF2 in the designation..

Glock Model 19s of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th generations from left to right.

Glock Model 19s of the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th generations from left to right.

Read the rest in my column at Glock Forum

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Anton Otto Fischer

Much as once a week I like to take time off to cover warships (Wednesdays), on Sunday, I like to cover military art and the painters, illustrators, sculptors and the like that produce them. -Christopher Eger

Combat Gallery Sunday : The Martial Art of Anton Otto Fischer

Remembered by many in the art community as being just a “Saturday Evening Post illustrator” there were few maritime artists in modern memory that captured the sea and what it was like to sail upon it in ships of wood and steel than Anton Otto Fischer.

Born February, 1882 in Regensburg, then in the Imperial German Empire, Anton was orphaned at an early age and ran away, like many enterprising young men could at the cusp of the 20th Century and fled to sea. Signing on to a German merchantman as a cabin boy/apprentice sailor at the tender age of 15, he saved his money and bought out his contract once the ship was in a U.S. port, but then promptly signed on to an American ship and remained at sea through his earlt adult life. Those years under sail and steam, shoveling coal and patching canvas, were to serve as inspiration for coming decades.

By 25, the young man was in Paris, reinventing himself by studying at the Academie Julian, an art school that specialized in educating young students established by Rodolphe Julian. The Julian school taught many Americans and often competed for the the Prix de Rome. Fischer worked in oils on canvas and hit his stride.

In 1909 Fischer was back in the U.S., where he started selling illustrations for a number of popular variety magazines such as the Saturday Evening Post, the Country Gentleman, Life, Popular Magazine, and others.

Saturday Evening Post cover by Fischer. In all he did over 400 illustrations for the magazine

Saturday Evening Post cover by Fischer. In all he did over 400 illustrations for the magazine

Saloon Shootout by Anton Otto Fischer, 1919. Note the surprised expression on the Tomato's face...priceless

Saloon Shootout by Anton Otto Fischer, 1919. Note the surprised expression on the Tomato’s face…priceless

The Grand Army of the Republic vs the American Expeditionary Force by Anton Otto Fischer. The GAR was the veterans organzation of the Union Civil War vets, and is apparently isnt too happy with the WWI doughboy from the 42nd Rainbow Division of Maj.Gen McArthur.

The Grand Army of the Republic vs the American Expeditionary Force by Anton Otto Fischer. The GAR was the veterans organization of the Union Civil War vets, and is apparently isn’t too happy with the WWI dough boy from the 42nd Rainbow Division of Maj.Gen MacArthur.

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Viewing an Illustration, 1919. Such detail...

Viewing an Illustration, 1919. Such detail…

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SEP cover

SEP cover

Besides becoming a regular at the Post, he worked art for ad copy for steel firms, locomotive manufacturers, and illustrated a number of popular classics of the time to include Moby Dick, 20,000 Leauges Under the Sea and Treasure Island. From 1910-39 he had produced literally thousands of illustrations.

John Paul Jone's Bonhomme Richard vs HMS Serapis, 23 September 1779. Artwork of Anton Otto. Fischer. From the US Navy Art Collection

John Paul Jone’s Bonhomme Richard vs HMS Serapis, 23 September 1779. Artwork of Anton Otto. Fischer. From the US Navy Art Collection

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Anton Otto Fischer - The Perils of Pauay-Phillipine Islands-

Anton Otto Fischer – The Perils of Pauay-Phillipine Islands-

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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea - art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – art by Anton Otto Fischer4

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Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea - art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Seaplane down at sea

Seaplane down at sea

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea - art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea - art by Anton Otto Fischer4

Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – art by Anton Otto Fischer4

But it was always the sea that called Fischer. His naval and maritime art, which he produced in great volumes during World War I to assist in the general patriotic propaganda push, was well received and by the time a Second World War had come, the men in charge of the warships had as boys already grown up with a love of the fleet through Fischer’s paintings.

According to an expose in the Post written in 2009, by the time WWII started, the sea services considered Fischer a national treasure.

U.S. Navy Commander Lincoln Lothrop had once written to the artist: “My two lads, one of whom is now a twenty-two-year-old lieutenant in the Navy … used to cut out your pictures and pin them on the walls of their rooms. … You are responsible for recruiting many a seagoing lad.” They must have been brave lads, for Fischer’s paintings not only depicted the majestic beauty of the oceans, but the terrors they held as well.

Fischer was invited to lunch one day by none other than Vice Admiral Russell Waesche, Commandant of the Coast Guard for the purpose of recruiting. The January 9, 1943, Post describes it thus: “Did the admiral know that he was an anti-New Dealer? The admiral didn’t know—or care. But did the admiral know that he was born in Germany? Oh, yes, the admiral knew that, all right; his record had been checked.

“That record included, among other things, the fact that young Fischer had come to America as a deck hand on a German vessel, that he sacrificed two months’ pay to obtain his freedom, and then sailed on American ships for three years.”

By late that same afternoon, Fischer was sworn in as a lieutenant commander in the Coast Guard. “His duties? Putting on canvas some of the heroic deeds of our Merchant Mariners and Coast Guardsmen—the least-publicized men, perhaps, in all of our armed forces.”

Thus commissioned into the Coast Guard at age 60, Fischer shipped out on the 327-foot Treasury-class cutter USCGC Campbell (WPG-32) and covered the war at sea for Uncle classified as a JO (Journalist.)

Fischer, a LCDR in his 60s, and at war.

Fischer, a LCDR in his 60s, and at war.

While on a convoy escort in the North Atlantic, the ships wardroom was giving “Papa Anton” a party on the occasion of his 61st birthday when a U-boat surfaced, and all hell broke lose.

On that night, 21 February 1943, Campbell was escorting the 48-ship Convoy ON-166 when the convoy was surrounded by a U-Boat “wolf pack”. U-92 and U-753 torpedoed and sank the NT Nielsen Alonso. Dispatched to assist, Campbell rescued fifty survivors and then turned to attack U-753, damaging it so badly that it had to withdraw.

Throughout the 21st and 22nd, Campbell attacked several U-Boats inflicting damage and driving off the subs. Later on the 22nd, U-606, having sustained heavy damage, surfaced in the midst of the convoy attempting a surface attack. Campbell struck the sub a glancing blow that gashed Campbell‘s hull in the engine room below the waterline, but continued to attack, dropping two depth charges which exploded and lifted the sub out of the water. The crew brought all guns to bear on the subs, fighting on until water in the engine room shorted out all electricity. As the ship lost power and the searchlights illuminating the sub went out, the U-Boat commander ordered the sub abandoned. Campbell ceased fire and lowered boats to rescue the sub’s survivors. Campbell, disabled in the attack, was towed to port nine days later, repaired and returned to escort duty.

The story appeared, with extensive illustrations by Fischer, in the July 1943 issue of LIFE

Burning Tanker of the North Atlantic, Feb 1943. Fischer saw this first hand from the Campbell.

Burning Tanker of the North Atlantic, Feb 1943. Fischer saw this first hand from the Campbell. Note the signature (as with all these, big them up to see better)

Captain At Sea, Anton Otto Fischer. Click to big up to appreciate the skipper's joy and misery.

Captain At Sea, Anton Otto Fischer. Click to big up to appreciate the skipper’s joy and misery.

Atlantic Carrier Escort Group

Coast Guard Cutter Campbell by Fischer.

Coast Guard Cutter Campbell by Fischer.

Formosa Patrol by Anton Otto Fischer. British sloop getting some post-WWII action

Formosa Patrol by Anton Otto Fischer. British sloop getting some post-WWII action

"Fight to the Last oil"on canvas by Anton Otto Fisher, Coast Guard Artist, USCG collection

“Fight to the Last oil”on canvas by Anton Otto Fisher, Coast Guard Artist, USCG collection

He was the artist laureate for the Coast Guard during the war and dutifully, each painting done while on the list of commissioned officers bears the carefully signed script “LCDR Anton Otto Fischer, USCGR” to denote his wartime service.

Chase of the CONSTITUTION, July 1812 Painting by Anton Otto Fischer, depicting the boats of U.S. Frigate CONSTITUTION towing her in a calm, while she was being pursued by a squadron of British warships, 18 July 1812. NHHC Photo NH 85542-KN - See more at: http://www.navyhistory.org/2012/05/new-video-series-on-the-war-of-1812/#sthash.4bezdSre.dpuf

Chase of the CONSTITUTION, July 1812 Painting by Anton Otto Fischer, depicting the boats of U.S. Frigate CONSTITUTION towing her in a calm, while she was being pursued by a squadron of British warships, 18 July 1812. NHHC Photo NH 85542-KN

Clipper Ship at Sea. Oil on canvas, circa 1950. One of FIscher's last works, done in his late 60s. By then he was just painting what he wanted and you can see an old man's thoughts of a young man's sailing years at the turn of the Century.

Clipper Ship at Sea. Oil on canvas, circa 1950. One of FIscher’s last works, done in his late 60s. By then he was just painting what he wanted and you can see an old man’s thoughts of a young man’s sailing years at the turn of the Century.

"Crew of the Revenue Cutter Bear ferrying stranded whalemen," By Anton Otto Fischer. From the USCG Collection

“Crew of the Revenue Cutter Bear ferrying stranded whalemen,” By Anton Otto Fischer. From the USCG Collection

Mustered out in 1945, he returned to civilian life but continued working until 1956. He passed away quietly in 1962 at age 80. His works are modern classics and many of them hang in prominent galleries and in private collection.

However, they are also in the possession of the U.S.Navy Museum, the U.S. Army collection, and that of the U.S. Coast Guard. In fact, no less than four are hanging at the USCG Academy, where new Coast Guard officers are minted.

He likely would have liked idea that the most.

After 200 years, part of Britain remains in the swamps

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This, is the very definition of tactical advantage

This week two hundred years ago, some 11,000 British soldiers, marines and sailors advanced through the swamps to the southeast of New Orleans, the recently acquired crown jewel of the young United States’ vast Louisiana Territory. There, in the thick wilderness that is now Chalmette, Louisiana, they collided with an entrenched force of some 4700 rag-tag Americans  consisting of a small group of regulars of the 7th and 44th U.S. Infantry, a detachment of U.S. Marines, men from the 1st U.S. Dragoons, two loose brigades of Tennessee militia, one of Kentucky militia, Jean Lafitte’s swashbuckling pirate crews fighting on shore, two battalions of local Free Men of Color under Monsieurs Lacoste and Daquin, Major Plauche’s battalion of creole French led by New Orleans gentlemen (which included a number of veterans from Napoleon’s armies and true to their roots, two of the companies wore uniforms based on French Imperial Guard’s Grenadiers), Jugeant’s Choctaw warriors, and last but not least, a force of mounted Mississippi Dragoons under Colonel Hinds.

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The Brits were some of the most professional soldiers in the entire world at the time and their legions included the famed green-uniformed 95th Rifles, 1st and 5th West India Regiments made up of freed Caribbean slaves who had seen much campaigning, the blue-coated 14th Light Dragoons who left their horses behind and fought on foot, the 4th Kings Own Regiment, 7th Royal Fusiliers, 21st Royal Scots Fusiliers, 43rd Monmouth, 44th East Essex Foot, as well as the 93rd Sutherland Highlanders (who, contrary to popular myth, did not fight in kilts that day). These men were volunteers, not, as in many European armies, draftees. They were long-serving career men who had taken up arms as a skilled trade. Most had been well-bloodied in the ongoing series of colonial campaigns and wars on the European, African and American continents. Rule of thumb on an assault is to have the attacking force enjoy a 3:1 superiority, which the Brits did. Comparatively, the scratch force of Americans were neophytes in warfare, having rarely met modern army in set battle.

The line at Chalmette. Jackson's headquarters was the McCarty House, which fell into ruins after the war. The Mansion seen in the distance is commonly known as the Beauregard mansion, built in the 1840's for a Spanish nobleman, the Marquis de la Trava, by the famous architect, Gallier, and was originally called "Bueno Reposito." Shortly after its construction for De la Trava the estate became the property of Rene Beauregard, a nephew of General Pierre Beauregard of Civil War fame and became part of the National park in 1938

The line at Chalmette. Jackson’s headquarters was the McCarty House, which fell into ruins after the war. The home seen in the distance is commonly known as the Beauregard mansion, built in the 1840’s for a Spanish nobleman, the Marquis de la Trava, by the famous architect, Gallier, and was originally called “Bueno Reposito.” Shortly after its construction for De la Trava the estate became the property of Rene Beauregard, a nephew of General Pierre Beauregard of Civil War fame and became part of the National park in 1938. The the battlefield’s 100-foot-high obelisk, seen to the right, was placed after that.

Things went bad for the British on Jan, 8, 1815 from the start. The King’s army, led by Major Sir Edward Pakenham, had been halved by leaving guard forces around the rear and sending a strong force down the West Bank of the river to try to flank Jackson’s army. This left them only 6,970 men to attack the Americans. While still more numerous, it was nowhere near the 3:1 rule of thumb, and many speculate that the Royal Navy, in overall command of the landings, forced Pakenham’s avenue of approach.

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Further, vital equipment needed to scale the American fortifications and pass over the bayou were left behind, slowing progress. Starting the assault some 12-hours late, the British began almost immediately taking heavy casualties while trying to make a brave, but futile attack.

The 16-gun sloop USS Louisiana, fighting the river current, sailed down the British lines and raked them in enfilade fire from her 24-pounders filled with grapeshot (this plucky 99-foot wooden warship performed yeoman service and her contribution to the battle goes largely forgotten). Trying to encourage their men and lead from the front, Pakenham was killed, followed by many other key senior officers. Nevertheless, the Brits kept pressing the attack.

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One unit, the Highlanders,  actually came close to turning the American lines but withered under harsh fire, earning some 557 casualties that included their colonel. The battle had cost 2,042 British casualties that included 291 killed. The Americans suffered just 71 and retained the field in a stunning victory– the only such large set battle of the War of 1812 that could be counted as such.

In the end, the British recoiled and, contrary to myth, withdrew in good order, fighting a rear guard engagement until they were evacuated by the Royal Navy ten days later from Villere.

With this in mind, here are some more images from that battlefield that I took on a somber trip.

The site is also home to the Chalmette National Cemetery.

The site is also home to the Chalmette National Cemetery.

Began during the Civil War some 16,000 are interred there with the bulk (75%) coming from that conflict. There are four graves from War of 1812 vets to include one who fought at the Battle of New Orleans.

Began during the Civil War some 16,000 are interred there with the bulk (75%) coming from that conflict. There are four graves from War of 1812 vets to include one who fought at the Battle of New Orleans. The small square markers are for unknowns.

Sadly, many of the markers have been consumed by oaks over time and most are for soldiers unknown but to god.

Sadly, many of the markers have been consumed by oaks over time and most are for soldiers unknown but to god.

Nevertheless, the very soil of that cold, wet field, venerated with the life's blood of over 2000 of His Majesty's fighting men, there will always be a part of Louisiana that will forever be British.

Nevertheless, the very soil of that cold, wet field, venerated with the life’s blood of over 2000 of His Majesty’s fighting men, there will always be a part of Louisiana that will forever be British.

 

Kauffman walking the final mile

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Of the 51 Oliver Hazard Perry-class (FFG-7) class frigates delivered into the U.S. Navy in the 1980s, USS Kauffman (FFG-59) will be the last standing. Commissioned 28 February 1987, she is named after two Admirals, father and son, who were instrumental in developing the USN’s sub-busting tactics and doctrine and founding the Navy’s EOD and UDT/SEALs respectively.

Kauffman , some 28 years young next month, is set to start her final deployment Friday after being twice delayed this week due to weather and mechanical problems.

The Navy just has ten of the old Perry’s left in the “ghetto navy” and the other nine have completed their effective careers, just waiting to be decommissioned.

Kauffman ‘s patrol will be the final one of her class under a U.S. Navy Jack as well as the last of any American frigate as the type officially doesn’t exist anymore, replaced by either destroyers or littoral combat ships.

She is set to decommission in October. When that happens it will be the first time in more than 70 years that the fleet will be without a “frigate” somewhere on the Navy List.

The rare Grendel R-31 22 Magnum Rifle

With the new Kel Tec CMR-30 carbine hitting the streets, now is a perfect time to reflect on its earlier half-brother, the beautiful and often overlooked Grendel R-31 rifle of the 1990s.

In 1990, Kel Tec founder George Kellgren was running its predecessor, Grendel firearms in Rockledge, Florida. Known for his innovative polymer framed guns, Kellgren introduced a very interesting semi-auto pistol chambered in .22WMR. This simple blowback handgun, with a 5-inch barrel, had the benefit of a detachable Zytel plastic magazine that you could cram an amazing 30-rounds into while still retaining the capability to fit completely inside the pistol grip.

This handgun, the P30, looked funny but was ground breaking. (And wound up being rebooted in 2009 as the Kel Tec PMR-30).

With that being said, if a handgun were good, a carbine with a 16-inch barrel using the same action would be great, right? Well GK apparently thought so because that’s what came out next.

r31 w scope
Read the rest in my column at the KTOG

Coups on a shoestring: Fox and Dave play lets kick out Mini Idi Amin

While I was sitting back on Dec. 30/31, 2014 celebrating my 40th birthday (yaay me, still have all my own teeth and hair!), a group of expatriate Gambians were (allegedly, everyone is innocent until proven guilty) fighting for their lives in that West African country’s capital city.

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You see a Gambian-born former U.S. Army (SSGT, Service and Support battalion) vet who had also been in the USAF (in a ARW) then went on to be an IT guy in Minnesota, was leading 10-12 other ethnic Gambians in a firefight with AR-15s he smuggled into the country wrapped in blankets from the Frozen Land of 10,000 Lakes.

This leader of these Dogs of War went by the codename “Fox” while the money-man behind the adventure, an investor from Texas and hopeful for the next spot as President of The Gambia, went by the codename “Dave” who allegedly financed the ill-fated op to the tune of $220K.

(Dave’s not here)

The goal was to relieve this guy:

President Yahya Jammeh of Gambia inspecting Gambian troops the Telegraph

From power.

Here you see one “His Excellency Sheikh Professor Alhaji Dr. Yahya Abdul-Azziz Jemus Junkung Jammeh“, the defacto king dictator President of Gambia since he relieved the last Democratically-elected President of his employment in a 1994 military coup.

In case you haven’t heard of this character, he claims to hold a colonel’s commission in Kentucky, an Admiral’s in Nebraska, threatened to cut of the heads of any homosexuals in the country, claimed he can cure AIDS with bananas, survived a dozen attempts to dethrone him both real and imagined, and has had over 1,000 of his subjects citizens kidnapped re-educated after they were accused of being witches.

Anyway, things didn’t go too well for Fox and Dave who managed to get the fcuk out of the Gambia with their skin while apparently many others did not. However the FBI now has them in custody and the DOJ is throwing the book at them. Seems nobody can take a joke anymore.

The rest in my column at Guns.com

Hot Rod v Corsair on Lady Lex

And now for something completely different:

Don Garlits Hot-Rod on the Deck of USS Lexington.

Don Garlits Hot-Rod on the Deck of USS Lexington.

From NavSource Online, John C. Driskill –

“In 1972, I was stationed on the Lexington (CVT-16) as a PH3. President Richard Nixon asked Don Garlits to do a “Fly Navy Promo” with his car the Swamp Rat 16. We photographers mates were allowed to photograph the scene while assisting the photographers from “Hot Rod” Magazine. We had to swear we would not sell the photographs we took to any other magazines. This is my shot of the Swamp Rat 16 on the flight deck of the Lexington,” [ready to race an A-7E Corsair II of VA-81 “Sunliners.”]

William Carter Fields adds: “The Catapult Officer is LCDR Mckinney, Flight deck Photographer (back to camera) is PH2 John Signaigo, Phone Talker is AN Parrish. I was Flight Deck Control Phone talker when the photo shoot was done.”

And a full color scan from River City Cruisers.

Click to big up

Click to big up

Lexington, the last of the Essex-class carriers in the fleet, was retired in 1991 and currently serves as a museum ship in Texas.

Second African Hamilton reports for duty

When the Alexander Hamilton-class (WHEC-715)  high endurance cutters of the United States Coast Guard were designed in the early 1960s, the 3250-ton 378-foot light frigates were extremely advanced for their time. In fact, they pioneered the use of a CODAG engineering plant and fleet use of gas turbines.

A full dozen of these ships were commissioned (although they were originally supposed to be over 32 hulls strong) and they gave yeoman service in Vietnam and on the old Ocean Stations before both of those faded into history. Refit and modernized for Cold War service in the late 1980s they are, with some five decades on their hulls now, being replaced by the new National Security Cutter. However, in true small surface combatant tradition, they are being farmed out to other countries for a couple more decades of use.

The Philippines have already picked up two since 2011 : BRP Gregorio del Pilar (ex-Hamilton) and BRP Ramon Alcaraz (ex-Dallas)  and wants a third while Nigeria just had their second ship of the class show up for service.

NNS OKPABANA F94

NNS OKPABANA F94. Doesn’t she look funny without the racing stripe?

As reported by the local media there, NNS Okpabana, formerly USCGC Gallatin (WHEC-721), arrived in Nigeria Friday and is to soon begin work fighting oil smuggling, piracy and terrorist groups in the local littoral. Although the ship was donated to Nigeria by the US government, the navy spent about 8.5 million dollars in refurbishing the vessel and emplacing its armament.

Gallatin, decommissioned 31 March 2014 in Charleston, was turned over to the Nigerian Navy this Spring and rechristened under her new name. With a crew of 117 ratings and 29 officers, Okpabana made port calls in Port of Spain in Trinidad and Tobago, Dakar in Senegal and Tema in Ghana on the way to its new home from the U.S.

Her sistership, NNS Thunder F90 (formerly the ex-USCGC Chase) has been in Nigerian service for two years and sports a natty haze gray scheme.

NNS Thunder F90

NNS Thunder F90

NNS Thunder F90

NNS Thunder F90

Rare Semi-Auto: The Open Bolt Marlin Model 50

Odds are, you either cut your teeth on or have at least at one point in your life fired a Marlin semi-auto .22LR rifle. Today, the tube-fed Model 60 and its detachable-magazine Model 70 half-brother are the benchmark for rimfire auto-loaders around the world. Who would have thought that this all started in 84-years ago with the humble Model 50.

Marlin, coming out of the “Roaring 20s” was a company looking to change. It had established itself with lever-action rifles and had even branched out into some pump-guns before the Great War forced it to switch production for the military. In an effort to reboot production following the end of that conflict, they brought back a smaller catalog of classic designs that the gun-owning public knew and loved– but they needed something fresh.

Competitors such as Remington and Winchester had semi-auto rifles on deck such as the Winchester Model 1903 (it a unique .22 Win Auto loading) which were a hit with small game hunters and target shooters.

Marlin thought they could do better and the result was the holy grail of modern Title II firearms collectors:

The legal and transferable open-bolt semi-auto rifle.

marlin model 50 23
Read the rest in my column at Marlin Forum

 

Warship Wednesday Jan.7, the Coasties on Point

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period (sometimes reaching past that as with today’s post) and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger.

Warship Wednesday, Jan.7, the Coasties on Point


Here we see the United States Coast Guard Cutter Point Hudson (WPB-82322) racing into action “somewhere off the coast of South Vietnam” in 1966. Commissioned in 1961, Point Hudson had but four years of stateside service based in Panama City, Florida, before she was made part of Division 13/Coast Guard Squadron One, where she served for five years before her transfer to the Republic of Vietnam Navy as RVNS Đặng Văn Hoành (HQ-707) on 11 Dec 1969. Her story, as is that of the other legion of her class, is rather interesting.

In the 42+ years between 5 October 1960 and 28 March 2003, the US Coast Guard commissioned and used 79 “Point” class patrol boats (WPB). The U.S. Coast Guard defines a “Cutter” as a vessel over 100 feet in length, having crew accommodations for extended operations. As these 82-foot vessels met all of those requirements sans length, they were only given hull numbers until 1964, when the service changed its mind and began to issue names to cutters larger than 65 feet. Therefore, all were named after various geographical “Points” in the country.

Points at rest 1965. Note the 20mm forward. At the time, These two boats, Point Welcome and Point Ellis, went to Vietnam in 1965 as part of Div 12/CGS1, and never .eft, being turned over to the Vietnamese as RVNS Nguyễn Hấn (HQ-717) and VNS Lê Ngọc Thanh (HQ-705) respectively. these were some of the only US ships to carry the WWII-era Oerlikon. Most others carried the Mk16 20mm gun.

Two Points at rest, 1965. Note the 20mm forward. These two boats, Point Welcome and Point Ellis went to Vietnam in 1965 as part of Div 12/CGS1 and never left, being turned over to the Vietnamese as RVNS Nguyễn Hấn (HQ-717) and VNS Lê Ngọc Thanh (HQ-705) respectively. These were some of the only US ships to carry the WWII-era Oerlikon. Most others carried the Mk16 20mm gun.

These 60-ton craft, capable of floating in just 6 feet of seawater, were armed at first with WWII surplus Oerlikon 20 mm cannons and equipped with a pair of 600hp Cummins diesels that could putter them around at 16-ish knots. That was the 1959 design concept. This was later increased to a pair of 800hp diesels (which increased speed to over 22 knots when clean), and one hull (Point Thatcher) had an experimental pair of Saturn gas turbines with 1100 HP each, manufactured by Solar Aircraft Co, that could break over 25.

Steel-hulled and with a then-novel aluminum superstructure, these hardy boats replaced the old 83-foot splinter boats that were leftover from the War. Designed for search and rescue and law enforcement missions, they were soon sent around the world to a combat zone. Capable of putting to sea with just a 4-man crew, they typically had one twice that size to enable boarding parties.

Point Class Cutters of USCG Squadron ONE stand out of Subic Bay in July 1965 for duty in Vietnamese littoral waters as part of Operation Market Time [2080×1662]

During Vietnam, 26 of the class were sent overseas to RVN waters where they formed Coast Guard Squadron One in three divisions.

To up their armament in their combat mission to control the Vietnamese littoral, these boats were given 5 M2 heavy machine guns (.50 cals), painted 20 shade grey, issued more sidearms to include M3 grease guns, the new M16 rifle, and Thompson submachine guns (not normally seen on Coast Guard cutters stateside),

USCG gunner at the ready of his 50-cal aboard an unamed Point of CGS1 in Vietnam,1970 USN photo

USCG gunner at the ready of his 50-cal aboard an unnamed Point of CGS1 in Vietnam,1970 USN photo

Gun locker in the galley of the Point White in Vietnam. A lot of tasty vittles there!

Gun locker in the galley of the Point White in Vietnam. A lot of tasty vittles there! I count at least four M1911 pistols, 3 M1 carbines, an unidentified pump-action shotgun, and 2 M1 Thompson submachine guns.

…and were even fitted with a piggyback 81mm mortar.

Chief Warrant Gunner Elmer L. HICKS, USCG and his 81mm/ M2 piggyback combo

Chief Warrant Gunner Elmer L. HICKS, USCG, and his 81mm/ M2 piggyback combo were emplaced onshore

A closer look at the 81/.50 mount as emplaced on a Vietnam-bound Point. Note the ready ammo boxes installed.

A closer look at the 81/.50 mount as placed on a Vietnam-bound Point. Note the ready ammo boxes installed. Also, note the Coastie’s cracker jacks are virtual copies of those used by the USN– except note the shield on the right arm– this denotes a USCG uniform.

Rel. No. 6135: USCGC POINT LOMAS FIRED AT SUSPECTED VIET CONG CAVE HIDEOUT: An 81mm mortar shell fired from the 82-foot U.S. Coast Guard Cutter POINT LOMAS (WPB-82321) shatters rocks over the entrance to a suspected Viet Cong cave hideout along a beach in a Viet Cong controlled area near Danang. Rounds from a .50 caliber machine gun, mounted piggyback on the mortar gun also were fired into the cave. Commanding the POINT LOMAS is Lieutenant Keith D. Ripley, USCG of Baltimore, Md. The 82-footer was stationed at Port Aransas, Texas, before reporting for duty with Coast Guard Squadron One's Division 12, based at Danang, Vietnam, in July 1965. There are eight 82-footers in that

Rel. No. 6135: USCGC POINT LOMAS FIRED AT SUSPECTED VIET CONG CAVE HIDEOUT: An 81mm mortar shell fired from the 82-foot U.S. Coast Guard Cutter POINT LOMAS (WPB-82321) shatters rocks over the entrance to a suspected Viet Cong cave hideout along a beach in a Viet Cong-controlled area near Danang. Rounds from a .50 caliber machine gun mounted piggyback on the mortar gun were also fired into the cave. Commanding the POINT LOMAS is Lieutenant Keith D. Ripley, USCG of Baltimore, Md. The 82-footer was stationed at Port Aransas, Texas, before reporting for duty with Coast Guard Squadron One’s Division 12, based at Danang, Vietnam, in July 1965. As a twist of fate, this cutter would serve both the South Vietnam Navy from 1970-75 and then that of the Peoples Republic from 1975-88, being the last former U.S. vessel on the naval list of that country.

Point Glover, note her extensive .50 cals

USCG Coast Guard Vietnam WPB Point class 82 foot patrol boats on station likely An Thoi, S. Vietnam USS Floyd County (LST-762)

Refueling CGC Point Young (WPB-82303) en route to Vietnam

USCG Coast Guard Vietnam WPB Point class 82 foot patrol boats Market Garden On station An Thoi, S. Vietnam USS Floyd County (LST-762) Point Clear WPB-82315. Note the Bofors on the LST

USCG Coast Guard Vietnam WPB Point class 82 foot patrol boats Market Garden On station An Thoi, S. Vietnam USS Floyd County (LST-762) Point Clear WPG-82315

USCG Coast Guard Vietnam WPB Point class 82-foot patrol boats Market Garden On station An Thoi, S. Vietnam USS Floyd County (LST-762) 

September 19, 1965 — Cutter Point Glover (WPB 82307) of Coast Guard Squadron One (RONONE) made the first capture of an enemy junk in Vietnam.

USCGC Point Grey (WPB-82324) note her M2/81mm piggyback forward, at least three M2s over the stern, and nearly a dozen Coasties on deck preparing the away boat

USCGC Point Dume (WPB-82325) in Vietnam, 1967. Note her piggyback 81mm/M2 .50 along with the ready ammo boxes and the crew in flip-flops and shorts. 

According to the USCG Historians Office, from which most of these pictures are drawn:

By the end of 1966 the twenty six 82 foot cutters of Squadron One, their eleven man crews and the support staff who kept the cutters and crews running, had reduced the estimated 70% of enemy’s supplies arriving by sea to less than 10 percent (U.S. Navy Proceedings June 1984, C.G. Reservist November 1996). This forced the enemy to transport most of their supplies over the more difficult and rugged Ho Chi Minh Trail. Fewer than 400 men made up USCG Squadron One in 1965 and 1966, yet in less than eighteen months, they had cut off 60 percent of the enemy’s total supplies that were arriving by sea. A remarkable job, when you think about it.

Seven Coast Guardsmen were killed and 59 were wounded in South Vietnam. These included those who were involved in the tragic friendly fire incident on the Point Welcome.

While on a patrol in the waters near the mouth of the Cua Viet River, about three-quarters of a mile south of the demilitarized zone, the cutter was attacked by U.S. Air Force aircraft and repeatedly strafed. As a result, the cutter’s commanding officer, Lt. j.g. David Brostrom, along with one crewman, Petty Officer 2nd Class Jerry Phillips, was killed. Also wounded in this friendly fire were Point Welcome’s executive officer, Lt. j.g. Ross Bell; two other crewmen, Petty Officer 2nd Class Mark D. McKenney and Fireman Houston J. Davidson; a Vietnamese liaison officer, Lt. j.g. Do Viet Vien; and a freelance journalist, Timothy J. Page.

Bridge Close-up of damage on Point Welcome, Vietnam

Close-up of cannon-hole damage on Point Welcome, Vietnam

Point Welcom's superstructure riddled with USAF cannon rounds. Friendly fire isn't.

Point Welcome’s aluminum superstructure is riddled with USAF 20mm cannon rounds. Friendly fire isn’t. Note the Wile E. Coyote mascot painted on the bridge even got a round right in the ass.

In true USCG fashion, the Point Welcome was patched up, and even Wily was given first aid and returned to service. (Image provided courtesy of ET2 Terry W. Hill., from USCG Historian's office http://www.uscg.mil/history/WEBCUTTERS/Point_Welcome.asp)

In true USCG fashion, the Point Welcome was patched up, and even Wily was given first aid and returned to service. (Image provided courtesy of ET2 Terry W. Hill., from USCG Historian’s office)

During their five years in South Vietnam the men of Squadron 1 put in yeoman’s work fighting armed junks and sampans, wearing out their diesels in constant patrol, and getting in intense firefights with shore-based troops:

-Patrolled 4,215,116 miles
-Detected 839,299 vessels
-Boarded 236,396 vessels
-Inspected 283,527 vessels
-Detained 10,286 personnel
-Engaged in 4,461 naval gunfire support missions
-Damaged or destroyed 1,811 vessels, including several heavily armed NVA SL4-class trawlers
-Killed or wounded 1,232 enemy
-Damaged or destroyed 4,727 structures.

Things stayed pretty hot for the Coasties in Vietnam

Recreation was a matter of debate.

Beard growing contest by crewman of USCG 82-footer Division 11, An Thoi, by PHC Frank Borzage, 1965

Beard growing contest by the crew of USCG 82-footer Division 11, An Thoi, by PHC Frank Borzage, 1965

Profile view of Point Cypress showing 50-caliber machine guns mounted on the fantail and amidships with 81mm mortar/50-caliber combination mounted on the bow. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.

Profile view of Point Cypress showing 50-caliber machine guns mounted on the fantail and amidships with 81mm mortar/50-caliber combination mounted on the bow. Photo courtesy of Gordon M. Gillies.

Crew on board Point White with weapons confiscated from a Vietnamese junk sunk in a battle with this 82 footer

The crew onboard Point White with weapons confiscated from a Vietnamese junk sunk in a battle with this 82-footer

USCGC Point Marone (WPB-82331) inshore in Vietnam. These boats could float in feet of water.

United States Coast Guard Cutter (USCGC) Point Orient (CG82319) docked in Vietnam during the deployment of a contingent of RAN Clearance Diving Team 3 (CDT3). AWM 78, Clearance Diving Team Three, Report of Proceedings, March 1970.) AWM P05714.024

Point class cutter refueling from USCGC Dallas in Vietnam

When the Coast Guard pulled out of Vietnam in 1971, the veteran Points there were handed over to the RVN Navy.

The first 14 turned over. The RVN sailors who took them over were given 13 weeks of training, much of it under the USCG’s hand. In all, 26 were given to the Vietnamese

One of which, the former Point Clear escaped to the Philippines in 1975 as the RVNS Huynh Van Cu and was used for several years by the Navy of the Philippines before being hulked at Subic Bay.

Coast Guard Division 12 of CGS1 being decommissioned and her ships turned over to the short-lived use of the South Vietnamese navy

Coast Guard Division 12 of CGS1 is being decommissioned, and its ships are turned over to the short-lived use of the South Vietnamese Navy

The People’s Republic of Vietnam kept the 25 remaining Points in their possession, slowly disposing of them until the last of the group, Ngo Van Quyen (ex-USCGC Point Lomas), was cut up in 1988.

Post-Vietnam, the 53 remaining USCG Points were updated and kept in service. Their 20mm gun was replaced by a pair of single M2 mounts forward, and then by the 1980s just carried sidearms.

Point class cutter as they appeared in the 1980s. Note the two 50s forward and the new racing stripes

Point class cutters as they appeared in the 1980s. Note the two 50s forward and the new racing stripes.

They fought the war on drugs, saved countless lives, patrolled the border areas and Florida Straits for refugees, and even had a few uncomfortable standoffs with Cuban warships from time to time.

USCGC Point Swift (WPB-82312) likely off Florida in the 1980s, note the 50 cals

Of the 80 Points built for the Navy and Coast Guard, 54 were completed at the Coast Guard Yard in Curtis, 1960-70, while the balance of 26 ships was completed by J.M. Martinac Shipbuilding Corp., 1966-67.

A group of five Points from around Puget Sound, 1980s. Pt. Glass 82336 Gig Harbor, WA, Pt. Bennett 82351 Port Townsend, WA, Pt. Doran 82375 Everett, WA, Pt. Richmond 82370 Anacortes, WA, Pt. Countess 82335 Port Angeles, WA.

By 1990, the newest Point was over twenty years old and, even though re-engined with fresh Caterpillar Diesels, was still showing signs of hard use. I remember touring the old Point Estero in Gulfport, where she spent her entire 27-year career, with my NJROTC unit and sailing around Ship Island on her. She creaked and rolled even in shallow, still water and low seas.

Still, the ship was professional, and her crew told of numerous incidents of running down illegal longliners, patrolling nearby naval yards for the possibility of Soviet mini-subs (this was during the late 80s), tense confrontations with drug runners, and sad tales of searching for those lost at sea. When you take this and multiply it by a factor of 50, you can see how beneficial these little crafts were.

It was then that the USCG started replacing these craft with the 87-foot Marine Protector series, and what I like to call the “Great Point Giveaway” started. In May 1991, the thirty-year-old Type A Point Hope was transferred to Costa Rica, starting the floodgates. Over the next thirteen years, another 39 cutters would follow in that process, given as foreign aid to 17 Countries, of which about half are still in some sort of service:

Antigua- 1
Argentina- 2
Azerbaijan 1
Colombia- 4
Costa Rica- 4
Dominican Republic – 3
El Salvador – 1
Georgia – 2 (which narrowly escaped destruction by the Russians in 2008)
Ecuador – 1
Jamaica – 2
Mexico- 2
Panama- 5 (to help rebuild their navy following the 1989 invasion)
St Lucia- 1
Philippines – 2
Trinidad – 4
Venezuela- 4
Turkmenistan – 1

Venezuela CG Point class cutter still in service

Venezuela CG Point class cutter still in service

Two former Coast Guard Points, Point Countess and Point Baker, on transfer to the Georgian Coast Guard

Two former Coast Guard Points, Point Countess, and Point Baker, on transferred to the Georgian Coast Guard. Notably, they have had their .50 cal mounts reinstalled– Russian repellent.

PG 394 BRP Alberto Navarette of the Philippines Navy, ex USCGC Point Evans WPB 82354

PG 394 BRP Alberto Navarette of the Philippine Navy, ex USCGC Point Evans WPB 82354. You can bet this craft and her sister ship, the Point Doran, will be eyeball-to-eyeball with the PLAN in the coming years. Note the twin 50s up front and what looks to be another set over the stern. These ships, with their shallow draft, are useful in combating Islamic terrorists along the huge island chain. Holy Coast Guard Squadron One, Batman!

The last of these transferred, the 1970-commissioned Point Bower, went to landlocked Azerbaijan for use on the world’s largest lake, the Caspian Sea, in 2003, and was also the last Point in commission with the Coast Guard.

It’s amazing how craft deemed by the brass to be no longer worth the effort is quickly snapped up by our overseas allies for another decade or two of service. In fact, Mexico still has one of these boats left over from 1961, the Point Verde (WPB-82311), now in her 24th year of service to that country as the ARM Punto Morro (P 60).

Of the 13 not sent overseas:

3 ships were stripped and scuttled as reefs, with perhaps the Point Swift being the best known of these.

Point Swift being deep sixed

Point Swift is deep-sixed. Photo by NJSCUBA.net

Point Arena was listed as in storage at Coast Guard Yard in Curtis, MD although one source mentions that she was destroyed date unknown in firefighting training.

Point Roberts was transferred to EPA as R/V Lake Explorer based out of Duluth, Minnesota. Decommissioned in July 2005 and sold to Basic Marine, Inc. Escanaba, Michigan she was replaced by the former NOAA R/V Rude. Roberts’s ultimate fate is unknown.

Point Harris, based in Hawaii since 1980, was sold to a private owner in 1992 and it is unclear where she is at this time.

3 were transferred to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in 2001:

Point Glass in her early 2000s NOAA configuration

Two of these ships, the Point Glass and Point Lobos, continued in service until 2006 when they were finally decommissioned and surplused. The Point Monroe was used as the law enforcement patrol vessel for the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, flying NOAA’s flag and carrying armed Florida State Marine Patrol/Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission officers until 201,2 when she was removed from service and put up for private sale.

Point Monroe as she appeared for private sale. Note the hull lines

Point Monroe as she appeared for private sale. Note the hull lines

Point Glass went on to the Flower Garden Banks National Marine Sanctuary and now serves as a Sea Scouts ship in Galveston.

Seattle Maritime Academy's Point

Point Divide as the Seattle Maritime Instructor schoolship

3 were donated to Academic programs- Point Divide to the Washington Maritime Academy,  Point Charles to Texas A&M Maritime Academy. Point Brown was donated to Kingsborough CC in 1991 who used her for research for ten years. After a 2001 refit, she was purchased as a private vessel and renamed Lady B.

Lady B on patrol with the USCGA in NYC

As Lady B, she still flies the Coast Guard jack as her owner and skipper, Auxiliary Coxswain Stu Sunderland, serves with his vessel in the Coast Guard Auxiliary in New York City. She is a frequent sight along the mid-Atlantic coast and has been involved in multiple missions for Sector New York. She just turned 43 years young and is still in semi-regular operation.

An 80th boat, the Sea Scout Ship Point Weber, is still used as part of the Point Weber Youth Maritime program, but she was never a Coast Guard Cutter. Built by the Coast Guard Yard in Baltimore, Maryland, D specifically for the U.S. Navy in 1962, she was used by the Navy on the West Coast as a firing range control vessel and was donated to the organization in the 1980s.

Point Webber in her role as a scout ship. Although the sun is setting on this class of hardy steel-hulled ships, they aren't quite done yet.

SSS Point Webber in her role as a scout ship. Although the sun is setting on this class of hardy steel-hulled ships, they aren’t quite done yet.

Even though long out of federal service, it’s likely the last Point sailor, fighting seasickness, is yet to be born.

Specs:
Displacement: 67 (A series), 69 (B/C Series)
Length: 82 feet
Beam: 17.25 feet
Draft: 6.0 feet
Main Engines Twin 1710 Cummins 1200 HP (Series A) later Twin 800 hp Cummins for 1600HP. Eventually, twin Cat 3412 Diesels
Generators 2 GE 2-71 Diesels
Propellers Twin 42 in. variable pitch
Fuel Capacity 1840 gal. @ 95%
Compliment (1960) 8. (Vietnam) 2 officers, 13 men
Fresh Water Storage 1100 gals
Maximum Speed 22.9 knots (top) by 1980s typically closer to 15
Max Sustained Speed 18.0 knots
Cruise Speed 10.7 knots
Maximum Range 3000 @ 9.4 knots
Radar: SPN-11, CR-103 (1960), or SPS-64
Weapons: single 20mm AAA (as designed) 1 .50 cal/81mm mortar piggyback mount forward, 4 x M2 .50 cal stern, extensive small arms locker (Vietnam ships) 2 x M2 .50 cal forward (1970s stateside ships) small arms only after the 1980s

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