Category Archives: littoral

Navy sets the record straight, 72 years after the fact

One of the longest standing bits of USCG lore was that the sea service chalked up the only U-boat victory ever in the Gulf of Mexico when on 1 Aug, 1942, Coast Guard Grumman J4F-1 Widgeon, No.V-212, piloted by Chief Aviation Pilot Henry Clark White, Coast Guard Aviator No. 115, along with crewman RM1c George Henderson Boggs, Jr., were patrolling about 100 miles south of the air base at Houma, Louisiana, at an altitude of 1,500 feet. They spotted a U-boat on the surface and immediately dove on the target. The U-boat crash dived but at just 250 feet, White released all of his ordnance, a single depth charge into the dark Gulf water below. Afterward the crew saw a slick on the surface and reported the attack on RTB.

Well after the war, the Navy awarded the kill, that of U-166 commanded by one Oberleutnant zur See Hans-Gunther Kuhlmann, which went missing about that time with her entire 52 man crew according to German records. White was awarded the Distinguished Flying Cross and Boggs was awarded the Air Medal.

Grumman J4F-1, No.V212 of the United States Coast Guard preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at Pensacola, Florida

Grumman J4F-1, No.V212 of the United States Coast Guard preserved at the National Museum of Naval Aviation at Pensacola, Florida

Well, it turned out that in 2001, U-166 was found– right next to her last victim, the SS Robert E Lee which she sank on 30 July, 1941– the day *before* White and co bombed their credited submarine.

You see, in the end, the Navy realized that a little 173-foot subchaser, PC-566, which was escorting the Lee and attacked a periscope it saw directly after her charge was sent to the bottom, were in fact responsible for scratching the unterseeboot in question.

The craft, one of the 343 (not a misprint) PC-461-class submarine chasers built between 1941-44, was a light 450-ton ship who, powered by a pair of diesels, could barely break 20-knots, but they were built to escort much slower merchantmen such as the Lee. Armed with a single 3″/50 a 40mm gun mount, 3 20mm guns, and depth charges, they were built to bring the pain to German and Japanese subs. Manned by a 65-man crew PC-566 was commanded by LCDR Herbert Gordon Claudius, USNR, on that fateful day.

Photo from The Ted Stone Collection, Mariners' Museum, Newport News, VA via Navsource

That’s 173-feet of sub-killer right there. Photo from The Ted Stone Collection, Mariners’ Museum, Newport News, VA via Navsource

Now, long after Commander Claudius has left us and PC-566 was scrapped (in 1978, after being transferred to Venezuela in 1961), SECNAV Ray Mabus, with CNO Adm. Jonathan Greenert in tow, posthumously awarded the Legion of Merit with combat “V” to the patrol coastal skipper and set the record straight last month.

Oh and White’s attack? According to records by the Germans, another boat, U-171, was attacked but survived by a flying boat in the Gulf around that time and location. So yes, the Coasties did attack a German sub, but it was the Navy, in the end, that brought down U-166.

And Herbert Gordon Claudius, Jr. has the medal to prove it.

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Warship Wednesday January 21, 2015: A Teutonic Heavy in two World Wars

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 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 January 21, 2015: A Teutonic Heavy in two World Wars

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Here we see the a pre-WWI image of the Deutschland-class Linienschiff SMS Schleswig-Holstein, the last predreadnought battleship of the Kaisherliche Marine of Imperial Germany as she sails with a serious bone in her teeth and heavy coal smoke from all three of her stacks.

Kaiser Wilhelm II, that oh so malfeasant warlord of almost comic proportions, was enamored with the concept of producing a naval force second to none as a matter of national prestige. Taking the small coastal defense navy of the late-19th century, whose primary focus was to prevent British landings on the German North Sea coast and send the occasional gunboat to African, American and Asian ports to wave the flag, ole Willy set a course to build a first class High Seas Fleet to challenge Britannia (and anyone else) for worldwide mastery of the waves.

1909 naval race puck battleship

One of the initial rungs on this ladder was to order construction of the five Deutschland-class battleships in the early 1900s.

The Five Deuschland class battle-wagons leading the fleet, 1908

The Five Deutschland-class battle-wagons leading the fleet, 1908

These hardy ships, when designed, were mammoth 418-foot vessels of some 14,200-tons. Heavy and beamy, they needed some 26 feet of water to float while mountains of coal required teams of stokers working round the clock to shovel into her 12 steam watertube boilers to feed her trio of 5600 ihp expansion engines, one for each shaft. At top speed, they could be expected to push 18-knots, which was not terribly fast but they weren’t designed to run– they were designed to fight.

If you think 11-inch guns are puny, take a closer look

If you think 11-inch guns are puny, take a closer look

Four 11-inch (280mm) L/40 guns in two twin turrets capable of hurling a 500-lb. shell some 20,000-yards. This was backed up by 14 6.7-inch secondary and respectable 22 88mm tertiary battery pieces gave her a punch far in excess of any 1900-era cruiser that could catch up to her while up to 11-inches of cemented Krupp armor helped protect her from large caliber hits from English battlewagons of the day (and by day we mean 1901).

Note her three funnels

Note her three funnels

Ordered from Germaniawerft, Kiel, 11 June 1904, just after the outbreak of hostilities between the Tsar of Russia and the Empire of Japan, the last of five ships of the class was given the name Schleswig-Holstein, after the land captured from Denmark in 1864, during her christening on 17 Dec. 1906. In departure from the typical Prussian fashion, she was commissioned by a woman, the German Empress Augusta Victoria, but still in front of an all-male audience that included her hubby, the Poseidon of the Baltic Adm. Tirpitz with his great beard, and the good Herr Krupp himself.

However, even before she was to be completed on 6 July 1908, the brand-new Schleswig-Holstein was woefully obsolete.

The Russo-Japanese War had shown the folly of 1900s era battleship design limits and around the world, modern navies were taking these lessons and using them to produce improved, all-main gun fast battleships such as the HMS Dreadnought which could outrun, outfight, and outmaneuver legacy ships such as the German Deutschland-class. Worse, ships that made the Dreadnought herself look like small fry were already on the drawing boards from Tokyo to Washington, London, Paris, and St. Petersburg.

As such, the group was largely put out to pasture by the very navy that championed them only scant months before, ridiculed as being able to only last “five minutes” in combat against the modern British ships.

Schleswig-Holstein‘s peacetime pre-WWI service was uneventful and when the guns of August came in 1914, the six year old warship was, along with her four sisters Deutschland, Hannover, Pommern, and Schlesien, along with the even slower Braunschweig-class predreadnought SMS Hessen, part of the II Battle Squadron of the High Seas Fleet, which despite its grand name was largely relegated to coastal defense.

In December 1914, they sailed as part of the raiding force that bombarded the English coast and made a few pushes into the North Sea in 1915. Then, at Jutland, the slow Deutschland-class ships hampered Scheer’s tactics and they often had to fall out of line, risking being left behind several times during that epic naval clash. In the battle, Schleswig-Holstein, a midget wrestler in the middle of an MMA competition, fired only a dozen or so shells and luckily suffered only one minor hit (from a 12-inch gun on HMS New Zealand) on her topside in return.

German Navy's battle ship SMS Schleswig-Holstein fires a salvo during the Battle of Jutland

German Navy’s battle ship SMS Schleswig-Holstein fires a salvo during the Battle of Jutland

Royal Navy destroyer HMS Obedient, ending the battle, dispatched her sister, SMS Pommern, in a hail of torpedoes at 0315. She was the only battleship lost in the engagement for either fleet and took her entire crew to the bottom.

Following Jutland, Schleswig-Holstein, along with her remaining sisters, were unceremoniously withdrawn from fleet service. Her sailors, needed to operate U-boats, were largely reassigned, and the ship was tasked with berthing, guard ship, and submarine tender duties for the rest of the war.

As the German Imperial fleet went apeshit in the last weeks of WWI and raised a red flag from the masts of its ships, the old battleships were left behind when the bulk of the fleet was interned by the Allies at Scapa Flow. As part of the draconian Versailles Peace Treaty, the magnanimous Allies let the new Wiemar government keep eight old ships, four of the Deutschland-class and four of the even more obsolete Braunschweigers. These ships served in one form or another the new German Reichsmarine.

Post refit, note the two funnels, one for oil fired boilers, the second for coal. The fact that she could move around on domestic coal during WWII kept her in service when other oil-fired ships were laid up.

Post refit, note the two funnels, one for oil fired boilers, the second for coal. The fact that she could move around on domestic coal during WWII kept her in service when other oil-fired ships were laid up.

In the Kiel Canal post-refit

In the Kiel Canal post-refit

Overhead shot 1930s

Overhead shot 1930s

Class leader SMS Deutschland was retired 1920 and scrapped, in favor of keeping a fifth Braunschweiger while Hannover was kept as fleet flag for a couple years before her lay up in 1927 along with the Braunschweigers, leaving the fleet very short of capital ships.

Schleswig-Holstein was then reboilered with a hybrid coal/oil suite, and modernized, as much as the cash-strapped Germans could afford, to become fleet flag following her this refit 31 January 1926.

Das deutsche Linienschiff SMS Schlesien im Panama-Kanal 1938 sister to Schleswig-Holstein. These ships got around a good bit in the 1920s and 30s

Das deutsche Linienschiff SMS Schlesien im Panama-Kanal 1938 sister to Schleswig-Holstein. These ships got around a good bit in the 1920s and 30s

For the next decade, the old ship and her similarly refitted sister Schlesien were the pride of the tiny but efficient German fleet, and traveled the world on goodwill missions including visits in many former enemy ports. They had to, being the last two operational Teutonic battleships on Earth at the time.

Looking from the German battleship Schleswig Holstein on Arkansas (BB-33) arriving in Kiel, Germany. Note German sailors standing at attention, 5 July 1930

Looking from the German battleship Schleswig Holstein on Arkansas (BB-33) arriving in Kiel, Germany. Note German sailors standing at attention, 5 July 1930

On 22 September 1935, at age 27 and with a World War, a revolution, and a peaceful generation of summer cruises behind her, Schleswig-Holstein was relieved of her flag duties and turned into a training ship for naval cadets in the new Kreigsmarine, some 175 of which would make up her crew.

Linienschiff "Schleswig-Holstein" 1939 boarding Marines...

Linienschiff “Schleswig-Holstein” 1939 boarding Marines…

In 1939, with tensions escalating between Poland and Hitler’s Germany, Schleswig-Holstein was dispatched to protect German interests in the Free City of Danzig (now Gdansk) after commemorating the 25th anniversary of the WWI loss of the old Imperial cruiser SMS Magdeburg to the Russians. Upon docking, she was pushed to within 150-meters of the Free City’s border with Poland (cue ominous music).

It was there, at 04:47 on 1 Sept 1939, she fired the first rounds of World War II when she opened up on the Polish customs house and ammo depot at the Westerplatte to cover the assault of a force of 225 marines of the Marine-Stoßtrupp-Kompanie under Lieutenant Wilhelm Henningsen on the ersatz defenses.

This action as described by her deck logs :

0447: Open fire!
0448-0455: Eight 280mm heavy artillery shells and fifty-nine 150mm light artillery shells hit the southwestern section of the Westerplatte wall – not to mention 600 rounds from C30 machine-guns. The battleship approaches the target with her bow directed slightly against the slope of the docks, the tug Danzig at her stern. Numerous harbor buildings are hit and set ablaze.
0455: Suddenly two or three breaches in the wall can be seen. Hold fire! Red rockets!
0456: The assault company commences its attack. Soon explosions can be heard from the right wing, where the railway gate has been destroyed. Machine-gun fire is heard from Westerplatte, some rounds passing over the battleship’s bridge.

 

The conflict begins" portrait of Schleswig-Holstein firing the opening shots of the Second World War on the Westerplatte, Gdansk, Poland on September 1, 1939. (Photo courtesy of Sejar Bekirow and www.sejar-kunst-malerei.de via Maritime Quest)

The conflict begins” portrait of Schleswig-Holstein firing the opening shots of the Second World War on the Westerplatte, Gdansk, Poland on September 1, 1939. (Photo courtesy of Sejar Bekirow via Maritime Quest)

German battleship Schleswig-Holstein is bombing a Polish military transit depot at Westerplatte in the Free City of Danzig

German battleship Schleswig-Holstein is bombing a Polish military transit depot at Westerplatte in the Free City of Danzig

0447 hours Schleswig-Holstein opened fire at the Polish positions on the Westerplatte starting WWII

0447 hours Schleswig-Holstein opened fire at the Polish positions on the Westerplatte starting WWII

Following her week-long support of the attack on the Westerplatte, and joining her sister Schlesien in bombarding other Polish army positions for a few weeks, Schleswig-Holstein was withdrawn and used next in the invasion of Denmark, where she lay off Copenhagen on April 8/9, 1940, ready to deliver rounds from her battery onto the city if needed. She wound up not firing a shot and the German flag flew over the capital by lunch of the next day.

Linienschiff "Schleswig-Holstein" off Denmark April 9, 1940

Linienschiff “Schleswig-Holstein” off Denmark April 9, 1940. Embarrassingly, she ran aground

The rest of the war, as in the first, passed uneventfully for Schleswig-Holstein. She was relegated to the Eastern Baltic where she received extra AAA batteries to help defend herself against air attack, and served once more as a training ship. Speaking of air attack…

The old girl camo'd up late in WWII

The old girl camo’d up late in WWII to better help against air attack.

Of the 37 battleships (to include WWI-era predreadnought and coastal defense panzerschiffs) sunk in combat during World War II, most were sent to the bottom by air attack. These included a club of 11 that were scratched while in harbor of which the old Schleswig-Holstein, was a member. Her war ended when she was holed by a flight of RAF bombers in Gdynia Harbor on December 19 1944, settling to the bottom in 40-feet of water after suffering 28 killed and 53 were wounded. As such, she was one of the last German capital ships afloat.

Settled on the bottom of Gdyna harbor, Oct. 1945

Settled on the bottom of Gdyna harbor, Oct. 1945

Only the German pocket battleship Admiral Hipper, sunk by RAF bombers in Kiel, April 9 1945 with loss of 32 crew, and Schleswig-Holstein‘s Imperial sister Schlesien, sunk by mine and Soviet bomber attack and then scuttled near Swinemunde in the Baltic, May 5 1945, outlived her on the Kreigsmarine’s Naval list. The only German battlewagon to arguably survive the maelstrom was the pocket battleship Lutzow that was sunk by the Russkies as a target after the conflict.

Schleswig-Holstein-Tallinn-1947

Schleswig-Holstein-Tallinn-1947 under a Soviet flag.Note her topside damage

However, don’t count an old German battlewagon out. Schleswig-Holstein was raised by the Soviets, towed to Tallin where she sat for two years as a floating warehouse, and was then towed to the shallows near the island of Osmussar off the Estonian coast. There, she was regularly pounded by Soviet air and naval forces as a target ship for another twenty years and her superstructure remained above water into the 1970s.

Today she sits in shallow water and is a dive attraction, although she is littered with live German 280mm shells.

Yes, those are unfused 280mm German shells in the racks aboard the old battleship. Image from http://o-fotografii.pl/wraki-podwodne/schleswig-holstein/ dive in 2008

Yes, those are un-fused 280mm German shells in the racks aboard the old battleship. Image from dive in 2008

Specs

 

As commissioned 1908

As commissioned 1908

As she appeared 1943

As she appeared 1943

Displacement: 13,200 t (13,000 long tons) normal
14,218 t (13,993 long tons) full load
Length: 127.6 m (418 ft. 8 in)
Beam: 22.2 m (72 ft. 10 in)
Draft: 8.21 m (26 ft. 11 in)
Installed power: 17,000 ihp (13,000 kW)
Propulsion: three shafts, three triple expansion steam engines, 12 boilers
Speed: 18 knots (33 km/h)
Range: 4,800 nautical miles (9,000 km); 10 knots (20 km/h)

Complement:
35 officers
708 enlisted men

Armament: At construction:
2 × 2 – 28 cm SK L/40 guns
14 × 17 cm (6.7 in) SK L/40 guns (casemated)
22 × 8.8 cm (3.5 in) SK L/45 naval guns (shielded/casemated)
6 × 45 cm (18 in) torpedo tubes (submerged)

Armament in 1926:
2 × 2 – 28 cm SK L/40 guns
12 x 15 cm SK L/45 guns (casemated: removed 1940)
8 × 8.8 cm (3.5 in) SK L/45 naval guns (shielded)
4 × 50 cm (20 in) torpedo tubes (casemated)

Armament in 1939:
2 × 2 – 28 cm SK L/40 guns
10 x 15 cm SK L/45 guns (casemated: removed 1940)
4 × 8.8 cm SK L/45 anti-aircraft guns
4 × 3.7 cm (1.5 in) guns (2×2)
Augmented 1943 with extensive flak batteries

Armor:
Belt: 100 to 240 mm (3.9 to 9.4 in)
Turrets: 280 mm (11 in)
Deck: 40 mm (1.6 in)

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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

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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Mine Baby Samuel B Roberts back home for good…

“Frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG 58) Returns to Naval Station Mayport. Courtesy HD Video | Navy Media Content Services | Date: 12.15.2014. Family and friends welcome back the guided-missile frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts (FFG 58) to Naval Station Mayport. Samuel B. Roberts returned from deployment to the U.S. 6th Fleet area of responsibility in support of U.S. national security interests in Europe and Africa. The ship is scheduled for decommissioning on May 22, 2015. (U.S. Navy video by Mass Communication Specialist Seaman Nathan Lang/Released)”

If the ship sounds familiar, the Sammy B was in the very last batch of Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG-7) class frigates to commission in April 1986. You could still smell the new paint on board when she was sent to the Persian Gulf to stand guard between Saddam’s Iraq and the Iranian rogue state. It was there on 14 April 1988, as part of  Operation Earnest Will, the escort of re-flagged Kuwaiti tankers during the Iran–Iraq War, that she struck a Soviet-made M-08 naval mine in the central Persian Gulf. The mine blew a 15-foot hole in her, knocked her GE LM2500 turbines off their mounts, and broke her keel.

16 April 1988: Dubai - A view looking through the hole in the hull of Samuel B. Roberts sustained when the ship struck a mine while on patrol in the Persian Gulf. The ship is in dry dock undergoing temporary repairs. (U.S. Navy photo DVID #DN-SN-93-01451 by PH2 Rudy D. Pahoyo)

16 April 1988: Dubai – A view looking through the hole in the hull of Samuel B. Roberts sustained when the ship struck a mine while on patrol in the Persian Gulf. The ship is in dry dock undergoing temporary repairs. (U.S. Navy photo DVID #DN-SN-93-01451 by PH2 Rudy D. Pahoyo)

 

30 July 1988: Newport RI- An aerial view of the Dutch heavy lift ship Mighty Servant II transporting the guided missile frigate Samuel B. Roberts. (U.S. Navy photo DVID #DN-ST-89-01414 by PH2(SW) Jeff Elliott)

30 July 1988: Newport RI- An aerial view of the Dutch heavy lift ship Mighty Servant II transporting the guided missile frigate Samuel B. Roberts. (U.S. Navy photo DVID #DN-ST-89-01414 by PH2(SW) Jeff Elliott)

Normally, this would have been a death sentence for such a small “tincan”. However Sammy was rebuilt, the Iranians, whose mine it was, were plastered in Operation Preying Mantis which sank the Iranian frigate IS Sahand (F74), and things got back to being normal.

Unlike most of the Perrys that are being decommed, the 29-year old Sammy B will not be going overseas as Foreign Aid to some needy third world fleet.

She will be scrapped after her planned decommissioning in May.

Iceland on the scene

When I was about 11, I devoured Tom Clancey’s Red Storm Rising. As I had previously red Sir John Hackett’s August 1984 , I was familiar with what to expect. If you haven’t read RSR, a good bit of it takes place in the NATO battleground country of Iceland, the only alliance member who had no armed forces and since then, I have had at least a passing interest in that nation’s defense. You see the Danes were responsible for the island defense up until WWII when the Allies occupied it and, by 1949, that legacy occupation became a NATO operation until the U.S. pulled out of Keflavik in 2006.

However, just because Iceland doesn’t officially have a military, doesn’t mean they don’t have rough viking-type guys out running about in uniform for the greater good.

Last night a 239-foot long 40 year old livestock carrier by the name of Ezadeen, sailing under a flag of convenience (Sierra Leone) lost power off the South East Coast of Italy while her crew beat feet. However, instead of cattle, the Ezadeen was packed with over 400 illegal migrants, mainly Syrian refugees, hoping to get to Europe by any means necessary.

Ezadeen under tow my Icelandic Coast Guard in the Med

Ezadeen under tow my Icelandic Coast Guard in the Med

The rescuer? The Icelandic Coast Guard ( Landhelgisgæsla Íslands) gunboat Tyr, who, in conjunction with the Italian Coast Guard, lowered a crew by helicopter to help get the ship under control and then took it under tow to the nearest port where immigrations and customs officials were waiting.

The Icelanders weren’t just passing through the Med on an extra long patrol, they, since December, have been part of an expeditionary force of EU member nations under the aegis of that organizations Frontex Border Security Agency called Operation Triton to put up a picket fence 30 miles southeast of Italy’s furthest coast consisting of two fixed wing surveillance aircraft, three patrol vessels, as well as seven teams of guest officers for debriefing/intelligence gathering and screening/identification purposes. The task: to stop illegal immigration by human traffickers from North Africa (the failed nation of Libya) and the Middle East (Syrian refugees).

The Icelanders have rescued four ships in the past month and have done yeoman service.

The 200-member coast guard, active since even before the island’s independence from Denmark in 1944, has long been the country’s sole military force. Equipped with just three offshore patrol vessels, one DHC-8 patrol aircraft, and a few helicopters, the ICG has consistently punched out of its weight class.During the Cold War, their ships constantly pulled up Soviet hydrophones and listening gear while trailing large Warsaw Pact ‘trawlers’ that conveniently passed very near NATO shore bases.

Speaking of trawlers…

In the 1960s and 70s, the plucky Icelanders fought the British Navy, then arguably the third largest in the world, to a virtual standstill over cod (The Cod Wars!)

You see, foreign trawlers were in Iceland’s waters scooping up all the fish which led to the Coast Guard deploying net cutting devices which severed the trawls of some 82 invasive vessels– most of them British, who sent in warships to stop the Icelandic gunboats.

RN Frigate HMS Scylla rams ICG guboat Odinn. (Credit-Ian-Newton)

RN Frigate HMS Scylla rams ICG guboat Odinn. (Credit-Ian-Newton) The size difference between the 208-foot/925-ton Icelandic ship and the 371-foot/3,300-ton Brit is amazing.

Armed with 1898-era Hotckiss 57mm popguns using fifty year old ammunition, the Icelanders instead chose to ram the Royal Navy frigates sent to protect British cod fishermen in disputed waters.

Icelandic patrol boat Tyr circles round for a run at HMS Scylla

Icelandic patrol boat Tyr circles round for a run at HMS Scylla

In the end the Brits withdrew, leaving the ICG as the dominant cod champions in the EEZ around the island.

In non-fish related combat, since the 1950s the organization has provided peacekeepers that have roamed from Palestine to the Congo under the UN while contributing small contingents of land-based specialists to Iraq and Afghanistan as part of the Global War on Terrorism and ISAF missions while others went to Kosovo under NATO.

They are masters of fooling with old sea mines, having to defuse thousands of them that have bobbed up in Icelandic waters since WWII.

As for the Tyr herself, she is a rather interesting little ship. Named after the one-armed Norse god of war and law(he lost his other hand to the giant wolf Fenrir), she was built in 1975 by Aarhus Flydedok, Denmark, is 1200-tons in displacement and 233-feet overall.

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Even though a little ship, she has a helicopter deck and hangar, and both surface search radar and hull-mounted sonar. Armament: a 40mm/70 Bofors dating back to WWII, and small arms.

You have to admit, that looks like fun, and the GMGs can double as firefighters on their day off

You have to admit, that looks like fun, and the GMGs can double as firefighters on their day off

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She is coming up on her 40th birthday with no plans to replace her or her even older sistership Aegir as of yet. As it was, during the Cod Wars she tangled with several British ships, even surviving a ramming by the Rothesay-class frigate HMS Falmouth (twice) while she herself was credited with tagging HMS Scyilla and HMS Juno among others. All of these she has long outlived.

And it seems at least, that 400 Syrian refugees are grateful for Tyr‘s firm hand this week.

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Warship Wednesday Dec. 31, 2014 the Mystery of the St Anne, Flying Dutchman of the Arctic

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 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 Dec. 31, 2014 the Mystery of the St Anne, Flying Dutchman of the Arctic

Saint Anne by Eugene Voishvillo

Saint Anne by Eugene Voishvillo

Here we see the Russian 145-foot arctic survey ship Svyataya Anna (formerly HMS Newport) as she pokes through the far north, the last of her class of Royal Navy Philomel-class gunvessel. Have you seen her?

She has been on a milk carton for the past 100-years.

In the 1860s, the Royal Navy needed a class of fairly fast but economical naval vessels that could run around coastal waters waving the flag in far-off colonial ports. The answer to this problem was the Philomel-class of ‘steam schooners’.

The steam yacht Jeannette, formerly HMS Pandora, HMS Newport's sistership at Le Havre, France, in 1878, prior to her departure for San Francisco, CA. She is flying the US Yacht Ensign and would become the USS Jeanette.

The steam yacht Jeannette, formerly HMS Pandora, HMS Newport’s sistership at Le Havre, France, in 1878, prior to her departure for San Francisco, CA. She is flying the US Yacht Ensign and would become the USS Jeanette.

These shallow-draught (13-foot at full load) schooner-rigged ships with an auxiliary 2-cyl. horizontal single-expansion steam engine to push a screw when in doldrums were capable of crossing the globe while their 145-ft. oal allowed them to enter even the smallest of colonial backwater harbors. Even though they had wooden hulls, they were triple oak planking sheathed with copper, which made them exceptionally strong.

Armed with a 68-pdr muzzle-loading smooth-bore gun (later upgraded to an impressive 110-pounder 7-inch breechloader) as well as a pair each of 20 and 24-pounders, their 60-man crew could make an impression on wayward natives, chase down maritime outlaws, and in times of war capture enemy merchant ships when found.

Best yet, since they were just armed and well-built merchantmen themselves, they could be constructed at private yards rather than tying up the navy’s larger dockyards. Class leaders Ranger and Espoir were ordered on April Fools Day 1857 and within the next four years some 26 of these hardy little craft were in the works at no less than 9 yards (8 private and one military) around the UK.

One of these, ordered 17 September 1860 from H. M. Dockyard Pembroke in Wales, was HMS Newport. Put on hold for an extensive period as the Royal Navy redirected its efforts to large men-of-war during a period of tension between both the Tsar and the United States and the UK during the Civil War, she wasn’t completed until April 1868.

Like the rest of her class, of which just 20 ultimately saw service, Newport spent her time under the red ensign in colonial service. While her sisterships saw Hong Kong, Australia and the West Indies, Newport was destined for African and Mediterranean service where she was under the helm of Cdr. George Nares (later Vice Admiral Sir George, a famed arctic explorer and surveyor who would later be a part of the Challenger expedition).

While under Nares’s watch, Newport became the first ship to cross through the French-built Suez Canal in November 1869, much to the chagrin of the French who had that coveted honor supposedly in the bag. It would not be the Newport‘s last brush with an arctic explorer by far.

Yacht Blencathra (formerly HMS Newport)

Yacht Blencathra (formerly HMS Newport)

Technology passed the Philomel-class in the 1870s as steel-hulled ships proved faster and less high-maintenance. This led to their rapid replacement in Her Majesty’s Navy and by 1882 all but HMS Nimble, which was herself to be relegated to RNR training duties at Hull until being paid off in 1906, were pulled from the line and sold. Newport was disarmed, pulled from the Naval List in May 1881 at age 13, and sold to British arctic explorer Sir Allen Young who had used Newport‘s sistership HMS Pandora in the 1870s to search for the lost Franklin expedition.

He had sold that ship to another would-be explorer, James Gordon Bennett, Jr. who would enter her into U.S. Naval service as the USS Jeannette, who would famously be lost at sea above Siberia in June 1881, crushed by drifting ice floes. Even triple oak sheathed in copper cannot stand up to millions of tons of ice.

Fresh out of boats and enamored with the Philomel-class design, Sir Allen picked up the now-surplus Newport and renamed her Pandora II (that sounds lucky). He lobbied hard for a British Antarctic Expedition, of which he would be the leader and Newport/Pandora II would be the flagship of, but that proved not to pan out and by 1890 Sir Allen sold his would-be polar survey ship to one F W Leyborne-Popham who (wait for it) wanted to take her to explore the far Arctic north of Siberia. It seems that in the last part of the 19th century, polar exploration was the ‘in’ thing to do.

Renamed the Blencathra, Leyborne-Popham took his third-hand ship as far as the mouth of the wild Yenisey River in Northern Siberia where he became involved in commerce to help support the new Trans-Siberian railway project before selling the ship to another Englishman, Major Andrew Coats, who in turn (this is going to shock you) used it for polar exploration, meteorological research and a good bit of commercial seal hunting in the Arctic ranging from Spitsbergen to Novaya Zemlya, the frozen Siberian island chain. Somewhere around this time her elderly Civil War-era engine had been replaced by a 41hp low-power plant.

HMS Newport as Svyataya Anna in St Petersburg, 1912

HMS Newport as Svyataya Anna in the Neva River,St Petersburg, 1912

It was then, at age of 43, that the old gunboat Newport/Pandora II/Blencathra found herself bought by an enterprising Imperial Russian Naval Officer, Senior Lt. Georgy Lvovich Brusilov in 1912. If the name sounds familiar, our story’s newest polar explorer was the nephew of the same General Alexei Alekseevich Brusilov (1853-1926) who later led the offensive in 1916 that very nearly knocked Austria out of World War One.

Endeavoring to make his own name in the history books, the younger Brusilov was competing for fame with no less than two other Russian polar expeditions outfitting at the same time,that of Vladimir Rusanov in his ship “Hercules,” and Lt. Georgy Sedov in his ship the “St Foka,” — both of which would end in abject failure in the frozen hell of the Arctic and their leader’s death. Rusanov tried to reach the far North and survey for coal deposits along the way, while Sedov was meaning to dog sled to the North Pole and Brusilov wanted to sail the Northwest Passage from St. Petersburg to Vladivostok.

With so many expeditions vying for fame (and funding), Brusilov had to make do with his elderly schooner and find a crew outside the normal naval channels for the great First Russian Northern Sea Route Expedition.

Brusilov, 28, had been to the Arctic before aboard the Navy’s icebreakers Taymyr and Vaygach so he at least had some knowledge of what he was up against. Wisely, he chose an experienced polar navigator, 31-year old Valerian Albanov for his crew. A classmate of Brusilov’s, Albanov had paid his own way through the Naval Academy by tutoring and selling model ships and the two were of vastly different backgrounds.

Georgy Brusilov and Valerian Albanov (left to right)

Georgy Brusilov and Valerian Albanov (left to right) Dont let the mustaches fool you, these men were two different sides of the same coin

The bulk of the two-dozen members of the expedition were mainly seal hunters as Brusilov counted on selling a hold full of seal pelts and walrus tusks in Vladivostok to cover the cost of the expedition, which had been fronted by friends and relatives. The crew was rounded out by  a few random St. Petersburg adventurers, a couple of professional mariners to do the heavy lifting, and, when no doctor could be conned, one 22-year-old female nurse, Yerminia Zhdanko. She was a society lady, the daughter of Port Arthur hero and then-head of the Imperial Hydrographic Bureau Gen. Ermin Zhdanko.

Yerminia Zhdanko, Saint Anna in background

Yerminia Zhdanko, Saint Anna in background. The ultimate fate of both ladies shown has been subject of much speculation in the past 100-years.

With time spent refitting his new ship, named Svyataya Anna (after the 14th Century Russian Saint Anna of Kashin) and assembling his supplies, Brusilov wasn’t ready to leave St. Petersburg until August– just weeks before the advent of winter.

Pro-tip: this is not the best time of year to try the Northwest Passage!

Soon, the Newport/Pandora II/Blencathra/Svyahtaya Anna was starting to bump into hard Arctic ice floes in the Kara Sea and by October 28, 1912 was locked in off the west coast of the Yamal Peninsula in Siberia. Brusilov had expected as much and laid in a huge stock of canned canned fish and meats enough to last through 1915 if needed. It was.

Arctic expedition George Brusilov on the schooner Saint Anna

Arctic expedition George Brusilov on the schooner Saint Anna

All of 1913 came and went with the St. Anne locked in the ice but unfortunately, the ship was never released. Instead of remaining close to the Siberian coast, it drifted north-northwest, back towards the Atlantic rather than the Pacific. As it did so, the boat past north of 83 degrees latitude and left shore far behind.

By 1914, shit got really out of hand on board.

While the crew still had a ton of canned food, supplemented by seals and bears, they had long ago ran out of fruits and vegetables, which left them scurvy-ridden and in a generally poor attitude about life. Soon Brusilov and many of the crew were so weakened they were bedridden. Fuel grew sparse and the schooner became an icy tomb in which her crew lived off frozen butter and hardtack biscuits in spaces kept warm by burning seal blubber. The bulkheads of the ship’s interior became encased in ice and temperatures in the vessel hovered just a few degrees over freezing, requiring everyone to remain fully clothed at all times, huddled over what meager flame they could find.

Long kept busy by taking met data and soundings through holes cut in the ice compared to celestial readings, monotony turned to rebellion.

This led to a largely peaceful mutiny in which the captain relieved Albanov of his post (which, according to Albanov’s later account, was mutual). Following this the unemployed navigator, taking a copy of the ship’s log book, correspondence from the crew, 500 pounds of biscuits, a shotgun and a few Remington rifles for bear protection, gathered 13 mariners who felt the same way, and left the St. Anne on April 10, 1914 walking on foot for Siberia which he reckoned was a few hundred miles or so to the south.

Pushing homemade kayaks sewn from sailcloth over the ice and alternating snowshoeing and skiing, the group dropped like flies in the inhospitable climate. Whittled down to just Albanov and a single sailor, 24-year old Alexander Konrad, they reached land at an old abandoned camp established by explorer Frederick George Jackson at Cape Flora, Franz Josef Land on July 9. There, the two remained alive on supplies left, coincidentally by the Sedov expedition who had passed there earlier. By stroke of luck, it was the St Foka, sans Sedov himself who was long since dead, who found the two survivors of the St. Anne on July 20.

Valerian Albanov and Alexander Conrad float to the schooner St. Fock in their schooner.

Valerian Albanov and Alexander Conrad float to the schooner St. Fock in their kayak.

Returning to Russia just as World War One was starting, Albanov turned over the logbooks from the St. Anne, which held valuable information on underwater topography, sea currents, ice drift, and meteorological data from the ship’s 18 months trapped in the ice and became something of a minor celebrity.

He wrote of his story of survival as did Konrad, the classic tale of which has been translated into several languages.

Original Russian version of Albanov's book as it appeared in 1916. The sketch was done by him

Original Russian version of Albanov’s book as it appeared in 1917. The sketch was done by him

Its English language version is “In the Land of White Death.”  Truly a bedtime story.

English version of Albanov's book

English version of Albanov’s book

Speaking of books, the story of Brusilov, and also incidentally of Sedov, was turned into a novel by Soviet author Veniamin Kaverin entitled The Two Captains which was one of the bestselling works of the 20th Century behind the Iron Curtain.

What happened to the St. Anne?

As for the St. Anne, rescue expeditions, including the first airplane flights over the Arctic region (by Polish-Russian naval aviator Jan Nagórski), were mounted to find the ship but they came to naught. After Albanov’s party left, Brusilov and some dozen sick men tended to by their female nurse remained aboard, with enough rations remaining to last for another 18 months, which bought them some time.

Untitled

In 1915, a lemonade bottle washed up near Cape Kuysky, not far from Arkhangelsk with a note from the ship signed by Brusilov in 1913 saying that he was feeling fine, which leads to the possibility that he just wanted the troublesome Albanov and his allies off the ship.

The former navigator was haunted by the fact that the St. Anne never appeared. Albanov journeyed to the Yensei area in 1919 and asked former arctic explorer Admiral Kolchack, then the White Army governor of the region, for help mounting a search for the St. Anne. However the Russian Civil War overtook both of these officers and neither lived to see 1920.

Konrad, the sailor who got away with Albanov, likewise remained in the Soviet merchant service and returned often to the Arctic several times before his death during World War II, likely with a weather eye out for the old schooner he walked away from.

In 1928 a story of a woman in Tallinn, Estonia of her long missing cousin, Yerminia Zhdanko coming for a visit from France with her ten-year old son in tow, after a marriage to Brusilov, made it to a local newspaper.

Likewise, a French novel, “In the Polar Ice,” edited by Rene Gouzee and attributed to being the diary of one Yvonne Sherpante , a woman who lived through a love-triangle on the schooner “Elvira” appeared on the market the same year. This of course draws some similarities to the tale of Zhdanko. Was  Yvonne Sherpante actually the still quite-alive Yerminia Zhdanko? Likely not but the story was surely modeled after hers.

All of which leads to the screwball theory that at least the Captain and the nurse escaped destruction and for whatever reason, shame maybe, kept a low profile and their story even lower as they aged. As the elder Brusilov was ill-liked among White Russian émigré circles in France due to his support of the Reds in the Civil War, this is almost believable.

But wait, there’s more!

In 1937 Soviet explorer VI Akkuratov, who coincidentally knew Konrad, landed on Rudolf Island and found a ladies patent leather shoe marked “Supplier of the Imperial Household: St. Petersburg” on it. Since the St. Anne’s nurse was the only known lady of Tsarist society to have ever passed near that icebox, it has been speculated that maybe Yerminia Zhdanko left the ship later with another group or Brusilov was convinced to eventually follow in Albanov’s footsteps. This could have left the unmanned ship to wander at sea alone in the Arctic.

Conceivably, it could have been there for years or even decades before being spit out into the Atlantic as a ghost ship.

This is not so farfetched.

On June 18, 1884, verified wreckage from St. Anne‘s sister USS Jeannette (including clothing with crewmember’s names) was found on an ice floe near Julianehåb (now Qaqortoq) near the southern tip of Greenland although she broke up near the Bearing Strait three years before.

In 1938 the Soviet icebreaker Sedov (yes, named after that Sedov– small world) became locked in the sea ice near the New Siberian Islands and remained there, adrift in the floe for 812 days, until she was broken out by a rescue party between Spitsbergen and Greenland. Had she not been extricated from the ice then, she may have remained there much longer.

Nansen’s Fram followed a similar course when it was icebound 1893-96.

Nansen's planned drift, via Wiki.

Nansen’s planned drift, via Wiki.

This suggests that the ice of the Arctic Ocean was in constant westward motion from the Siberian coast to the North American coast and as such would have eventually pushed St Anne into the Atlantic at some point, likely near Iceland or Spitsbergen, probably sometime around 1918.

In the 1988 Soviet seascape artist and writer Nikolai Cherkashin while visiting the Hanseatic bar in the port city of Stralsund, East Germany, came across a battered old ship’s wheel and a worn Russian icon of the little known Saint Anna of Kashin. Asking about it, he was told an amazing tale.

“The owner of the cellar told that the steering wheel and the icon was found by his father, who immediately after the Second World War, was fishing in the North Sea,” wrote Cherkashin. “In the autumn of 1946, his trawler in dense fog almost ran into an abandoned schooner. Examining this schooner, fishermen found her, a lot of canned meat, and other foodstuffs, which he handled himself and his father took the helm from the schooner and icon.”

On the wheel was a badly worn inscription that could be read in English script “..andor..” which, of course, could be part of,  “Pandora II.”

Its (wildly) conceivable that St Anne, abandoned by her crew, could have washed up along some forgotten glacial ice near Greenland around 1918– which in turn broke free decades later. She could then have drifted as far as the North Sea to be salvaged by a German fisherman before she sank. Stranger things have happened.

Most recently, in 2010, an expedition to Franz Josef Land by the Russian Wildlife Discovery Club found a male skeleton and some 20 artifacts that includes a set of sunglasses made from rum bottle bottoms, early pre-WWI era 208-grain 7.62x54R cartridges and shell casings, a canvas belt, sailor’s knife, dairy, whistle and brass pocket watch along the route that Albanov took.

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It is believed that the body is either sailor Vladimir Gubanov, helmsman Peter Maximov, sailor Paul Humbles, or ship’s steward Jan Regald, the four of the mariners who perished in that area, separated from Abanov. However, it could very well be from a follow-on group that tried to do the same. DNA tests are pending and should prove interesting while further expeditions are planned.

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“Today we got our last brick of tobacco; the matches ran out long ago,” reads the diary dated May 1913, adding that crew members hunted polar bear to supplement canned supplies.

Its unknown if there is a monument to St Anna in Russia.

The logs from the St Anna, as well as the original diaries of both Konrad and Albanov, are in the collection of the Arctic and Antarctic Museum of St. Petersburg.

A monument to the original HMS Pandora, Newport/St.Anne’s sistership lost as the USS Jeanette is, however, on the grounds of the US Naval Academy.

A number of geographic and landmarks and seabed features in the Arctic region have been named in honor of the St. Anne, Brusilov, Albanov, and Zhdanko.

Their final story, and the ship’s resting place, may never be known.

Specs:

1009466-i_010
Displacement: 570 tons
Length: 145 ft. (44.2 m) oa, 127 ft. 10.25 in (39.0 m) pp
Beam: 25 ft. 4 in (7.7 m)
Depth of hold: 13 ft. (3.96 m)
Installed power: 325 ihp (242 kW)
Propulsion:
Laird Brothers single 2-cyl. Horizontal single-expansion steam engine
Single screw
Auxiliary Schooner sailing rig, later Brigantine rig
Speed: 9.25 knots (17 km/h)
Complement: 60 as a naval vessel
Armament (As built)
1 × 68-pdr muzzle-loading smoothbore gun (replaced with 7-inch gun 1871)
2 × 24-pdr howitzers
2 × 20-pdr breech-loading guns
After 1881:
Smallarms

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Warship Wednesday December 17, 2014, the Catfish of the Falklands

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, 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, December 17, 2014, the Catfish of the Falklands

(Courtesy of CDR Chester C. Culp Jr & submitted by Chris Culp, son of the EB “official” boat photographer of the Catfish (SS-339) from 1945-1953.Photo via Navsource) Click to big up.

Here we see the Balao-class submarine USS Catfish (SS-339) “swim” at Portland, Oregon, 27 October 1946. In this picture, she submerged in the Willamette River to permit the flowers placed on her deck in honor of the naval dead to float to sea with the outgoing tide. These 311-feet long fleet boats could float in as little as 15-feet of water, swim as above with her decks awash in just over 25 feet, and completely submerge in 50.

(*Note the USS Blueback SS-581, the last U.S. diesel sub to be decommissioned, has since 1994 been a museum ship near where this very picture was taken.)

Back to the Catfish

As part of the huge U.S. submarine build-up in World War II, Catfish was a member of the immense 120-ship Balao-class, the largest class of submarines in the United States Navy. US subs, unlike those of many navies of the day, were ‘fleet’ boats, capable of unsupported operations in deep water far from home. Able to range 11,000 nautical miles on their reliable diesel engines, they could undertake 75-day patrols that could span the immensity of the Pacific. Carrying 24 (often unreliable) Mk14 Torpedoes, these subs often sank anything short of a 5000-ton Maru or warship by surfacing and using their deck guns. They also served as the firetrucks of the fleet, rescuing downed naval aviators from right under the noses of Japanese warships.

We have covered ships of this class in the past here at LSOZI (the plucky Perch and Archer, the giant killer), but don’t complain, they have lots of great stories.

Laid down 6 Jan 1944 at Electric Boat Company in Groton, Catfish (SS-339) was commissioned 19 March 1945 with less than six months left in the war. By the time she was accepted and transited to the Pacific, she only appeared in Japanese-controlled waters in August 1945, just days before the cease-fire. By the end of September, she was back on the West Coast, based out of San Diego with one battle star for her very quiet World War II service.

Catfish (SS-339) off Mare Island on 9 June 1947, USN photo. Note her WWII profile as commissioned.

Catfish in San Fran, with bluejackets pulling out puppies to make friends. Note the camo’d 40mm Bofors

In 1948-49, she was given a ten-month-long extensive modernization to upgrade her to a more Atomic-era GUPPY II profile. This involved streamlining her hull, having a new sail installed, removing her topside armament, and giving her sensors an update. Her auxiliary engines were removed, her batteries doubled, and a snorkel fitted.

Post guppy Catfish (SS-339) starboard view, underway, probably in Pearl Harbor, HI

USS CATFISH (SS-339) off the Mare Island rock wall following her GUPPY conversion in 1949.

June 1950 found her on a routine West Pac cruise when the Korean conflict broke out and, along with USS Pickerel, was the first submarine to make war patrols under a UN flag. Like her WWII service, Korea proved a quiet war for the Catfish, making two combat patrols in the area, keeping a sharp eye out for encroaching Chinese and Soviet ships.

In January of 1951, the recently GUPPY’d Catfish slipped into San Francisco Bay underwater and remained in the harbor for three days, taking photos of the Bay Area through their periscope in daylight as part of an authorized mission to see if they could do it with a minimum of civilian reaction. The mission was successful to a degree, as no one called SFPD or the military, as reported by the San Fran Chronicle.

Over the next two decades, she made regular cruises and by 1968 had conducted her 6,000th dive. She was used both as a fleet boat and as a training platform for Naval Reserve bubbleheads. Notably, she was one of the few submarines that were given the chance to sink a warship in peacetime when she sent the retired Barnegat-class seaplane tender ex-USS Suisan (AVP-53) to the bottom in an October 1966 Sinkex just after her last refit. At the time, she had augmented her WWII-era MK 14 fish with more modern Mk 37 ASW torpedoes against submarines.

USSCATFISH

Fresh off her sinking, she made an appearance in a third U.S. war, spending time in the Vietnamese waters from January to October 1967 and again from March to September 1970. She engaged in lifeguard duty for aircrews lost at sea, as well as hung close (within 100 yards, close enough to catch mortar rounds according to VA records) to shore for reasons likely still classified.

Speaking of classified, Catfish had already been there unofficially in 1962, laying off Dong Hoi, North Vietnam, keeping tabs on that country’s navy in Operation Wise Tiger, quietly transmitting intelligence information that would, in turn, be used by the CIA to run a group of Nasty boats and armed sampans in black ops all along the coast.

By 1971, the aging 27-year-old smoke boat had seen better days, and the U.S. Navy was increasingly all-nuclear when it came to submarines.

Under new management

However, she still had some life left in her, and on 1 July 1971, the same day she was decommissioned and struck from the Naval List, officers and men of the Argentine Navy took possession of their newest submarine through the Military Assistance Program, which they promptly renamed the ARA Santa Fe (S-21).

As ARA Santa Fe

As ARA Santa Fe. Note this is her final sail design, added after 1960.

Porpoising in Argentine service

Porpoising in Argentine service

The Argentines also took possession of Catfish‘s sister ship, USS Chivo SS 341, which they renamed ARA Santiago Del Estero (S-22). Already extensively worn out, the two ships sailed for Argentine waters for another decade of service without the benefit of a refit. During that time, they extensively prowled the areas around the Islas Malvinas (otherwise known as the Falklands), which Argentina had an increasingly militant claim towards.

Argentine submarine ARA Santa Fe (S-21) in Ushuaia, Tierra del Fuego, 1978. Via Postales Navales

By 1981, sistership Chivo/Santiago Del Estero was laid up with bad batteries and was increasingly cannibalized to keep the Catfish/Santa Fe afloat as two new German-designed diesel attack boats were to replace the pair within a year or two. In fact, Santa Fe was scheduled to be decommissioned in August 1982, but history had a funny story to tell before that could happen.

Falklands!

ARA Santa Fe in Argentine service

ARA Santa Fe in Argentine service

In the first part of 1982, the Argentine military junta decided that it would be an easy walkover to quickly occupy the Falkland Islands from an ailing British military machine. The colony only had a garrison of 40 Royal Marines, and its guardship, a supped-up supply boat with a red hull by the name of Endurance, was slated for retirement. The Brits had little power-projection capability, having scrapped their full-size aircraft carrier just years before, and were planning to sell even their tiny new Harrier carrier, HMS Invincible, to Australia. Further, the Brits were 8,000 miles away, while the Argentines were just 400.

With that, a military expedition was launched in which a small Argentine force set up shop on remote (and unoccupied) South Georgia Island, a frozen extension of the Falklands, and, when the Endurance and a small Marine detachment sailed for Hoth, a much larger Argentine task force seized the Falklands.

On the early morning hours of April 2, 1982, Santa Fe, by nature of her shallow draft for a large submarine, helped to land some 120 Buzos Tácticos, an elite force of Argentine naval commandos, just outside Port Stanley. These commandos assaulted the (empty) Royal Marine barracks at Moody Brook and took prisoner after a short series of lop-sided skirmishes, the Royal Marines in Port Stanley.

Santa Fe landed these Argentine commandos (Seen left with Sterling submachine gun) in this infamous photo of Royal Marines surrendering

Santa Fe landed these Argentine commandos (Seen left with a Sterling submachine gun) in this infamous photo of Royal Marines surrendering

After this, Santa Fe headed to South Georgia Island to reinforce the Argentine garrison there after HMS Endurance had left the area. LCDR Horatico Bicain, commander of the submarine, which had last seen a dry-dock in the 1960s and had been advised his Mk14 torpedoes were so deteriorated that they were more dangerous to his submarine than to a British ship, was ordered to lie low and keep out of the way.

However, the Brits would be back just three weeks later and in force.

While the Argentines had four submarines in the stable and more on the drawing board, somehow, Santa Fe was the best fully operational boat they had. After all, the even more worn out Chivo/Santiago Del Estero was laid up, the countries best and most experienced submariners were training for forthcoming new boats in West Germany, and the Type 209 submarine San Luis was crewed largely by inexperienced officers and men and had so many cranky systems that it was combat ineffective, even though it was able to close with the RN to within torpedo range. 

The mismatch between Argentine and British submarines, Falklands 1982

In the opening moves of recapturing the Falklands, the Royal Navy took South Georgia, where Santa Fe was held up with a small Argentine garrison, first.

From Lieutenant Chris Parry, Flight Observer of a Westland Wessex helicopter (XP142 #406- “Humphrey”) from the destroyer HMS Antrim off South Georgia on Sunday, April 25, 1982:

It’s a submarine,’ said our pilot, Lieutenant Commander Ian Stanley. ‘You’re joking,’ I said.

I quickly worked out the ballistic calculations for the movement of the submarine. He was heading 310 degrees northwest at eight knots. Talk about making it easy for us: we could just fly along the submarine’s track – and, when we were above, release. I fused both the depth charges.

Ian then spoiled it for everyone: ‘Are you sure that it is not one of ours? It could be Conqueror (one of our nuclear-powered subs).’

I was craning my neck and head trying to see. Frustrated, I asked, ‘Has he got a flat casing and a tapering flat fin?’

‘It’s the Argie, no doubt about it,’ came the reassuring call from Stewart in the left-hand seat. ‘OK,’ said Ian, ‘are you sure that we have the RoE [Rules of Engagement]?’

‘Of course,’ I replied, reflecting the briefing of the previous night. ‘He’s fair game.’

What a moment. It is every Observer’s dream to have a real live submarine caught in the trap with two depth charges ready to go! I thought about the men we might be about to kill, but Ian started calling down the range.

As Ian called: ‘On top, now, now, now,’ I saw the fin of a submarine pass under the aircraft through the gap around the sonar housing and I released both charges.

Ian flipped the cab around violently to starboard to see the results. As we turned, the whole of the aft section of the submarine disappeared and two large explosions detonated either side of it. Plumes of water shot up.

It looked as if she was in the process of diving when we struck her, but the explosions lifted her aft end up and out of the water. She then began careering violently as I reported back to Antrim.

Simultaneously, I asked Plymouth to launch her Wasp helicopter armed with AS-12 missiles, since the submarine still posed a threat.

The low cloud was lifting, as if a curtain was being raised on a stage, to reveal a stunning backdrop of peaks and glaciers. Antrim and the frigates Brilliant and Plymouth were closing at high speed from the northeast.

Plymouth’s Wasp fired an AS-12, which hit the submarine aft on the casing, causing a number of plates to fly off. The submarine was also attacked by Wasps from Endurance. We returned to Antrim, refueled, and relaunched with one depth charge to witness the final stages of the submarine flopping alongside the British Antarctic Survey jetty and the Grytviken whaling settlement on South Georgia. It was obvious that the submarine was no longer a threat and her ship’s company was streaming ashore. So we returned to Antrim and everyone was in a high state of excitement. It was all Boy’s Own Annual stuff!

In all, the hardy little diesel smoke boat was subjected to a combined attack from six (6) Royal Navy helicopters: one Westland Wessex, one Westland Lynx (from HMS Brilliant), and four Westland Wasps.

Wasp HAS.1, hanging AS.12 wire-guided missiles, presumably for anti-small boat work from HMS Minerva 1960s

The wonky-looking Wasp HAS.1, hanging a few AS.12 wire-guided missiles, presumably for anti-small boat work. While this picture is from HMS Minerva in the late 1960s, Catfish/Santa Fe faced a nearly identical foe in 1982.

These aircraft attacked the sub with machine guns, two depth charges (that did the most damage), one MK-46 torpedo, and eight AS-12 missiles, several of which peppered the topside of the Sante Fe, including breaching her sail, thus making it impossible to submerge.

"The Hunt" Painted by Daniel Bechennec shows the moment the Westland Wasp HAS.1 XS527 from HMS Endurance launches a AS-12 missile on the submarine ARA Santa Fe This hardy helicopter, crewed by Tony Ellerbeck and David Wells, attacked the Santa Fe three times in quick succession, firing a total of 6 AS-12s at the boat.

“The Hunt” Painted by Daniel Bechennec, shows the moment the Westland Wasp HAS.1 XS527 from HMS Endurance launches an AS-12 missile on the submarine ARA Santa Fe. This hardy helicopter, crewed by Tony Ellerbeck and David Wells, attacked the Santa Fe three times in quick succession, firing a total of 6 AS-12s at the boat.

Amazingly, with her sailors firing back at the slow British helicopters with small arms from her frozen decks, the crippled boat made it back to Grytviken harbor on South Georgia and landed her 76-man crew without a loss while setting booby traps on board the abandoned sub. They surrendered along with the rest of the Argentine garrison later that night.

Lt Chris Sherman (RN) and WO2 Lawrence Gallagher (D Squadron 22SAS), next to the Argentine submarine ARA Santa Fe (S-21) in South Georgia. The photo was taken on 25 April 1982. WO2 Gallagher died when the Sea King Helicopter he was travelling in crashed into the sea on 19 May 1982. This terrible accident would result in the loss of 21 lives and the deletion of decades of training and experience from the SAS

"Off Limits" per HMS Endurance

“Off Limits” per HMS Endurance

The Brits, afraid the battered hulk would sink at the only dock on the island, allowed some of her crew, under guard, to board her and move the sub to a more isolated shallow area at the old whaling jetty where she could settle on the bottom in peace. Tragically, when Argentine Navy Machinist First Class Felix Oscar Artuso moved too fast for the likes of a Royal Marine commando on board, he was shot and became the Catfish/Santa Fe‘s only wartime fatality in four conflicts over 38 years of service.

LCPL Jeremy “Rocky” Rowe, the then-23-year-old Royal Marine who shot Artuso, later had to sell his South Atlantic Medal and General Service Medal at auction after spending his savings while he recovered from cancer.

In 2019, Mr. Rowe, 60, said:

‘The shooting was a split second decision to stop him from throwing levers at the forward end of the control after receiving a phone call from the fin end holding his captain.

‘What was gong through my mind was a precarious position with many possibilities that could go wrong, i.e prisoners could pick up a weapon, fire a torpedo, it was listing and smoke coming out of it.

“It was claustraphobic and many things were happening.I had a Browning automatic pistol and warned him to touch nothing in the room clearly.I had received instructions from a naval officer about the levers which would sink the sub, which had open hatches. Artuso leapt for them so I shot him. Sometime after I was told our officer had the levers the wrong way round.”

Another view of her battered sail

Another view of her battered sail

Santa Fe hundido gacetamarinera

Her crew removed, the old girl technically became a British war prize but was dead in the water, full of moody munitions and old batteries.

Royal Navy Divers work to re-float the ARA Santa Fe (S-21)

Sunk hard

Sunk hard. This photo was as she was being lifted post-war by the RN

Grytvken South Georgia in the Background with the Sante Fe under tow

ARA Santa Fe (S-21) was towed to the beaching point

They towed her to a more out-of-the-way location in June 1982 after the Falklands conflict ended, and then, in Operation Okehampton, she was raised by the Brits. and in February 1985, towed “about 12 miles out from the mouth of Cumberland Bay, she lurched to starboard and started taking on water. The tow line broke, and she sank to a depth of about 1,176 feet… and lies there today.”

SANTA FE being towed out on 21 FEB 1985 from King Edward Cove

SANTA FE being towed out on 21 FEB 1985 from King Edward Cove

The grave of Felix Artuso, ARA, is in Grytviken, where he was buried with full military honors and is maintained by the British government.

gd09bm

There is a USS Catfish Association that keeps her memory alive in the U.S., while in Argentina, several Malvinas groups treasure the memory of that country’s lost submersible.

Eight Balao‘s are preserved in the country, making them the most popular submarine museum ship class.

USS Batfish (SS-310) at War Memorial Park in Muskogee, Oklahoma
USS Becuna (SS-319) at Independence Seaport Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
USS Bowfin (SS-287) at USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park in Honolulu, Hawaii
USS Clamagore (SS-343) at Patriots Point in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina
USS Ling (SS-297) at the New Jersey Naval Museum in Hackensack, New Jersey
USS Lionfish (SS-298) at Battleship Cove in Fall River, Massachusetts
USS Pampanito (SS-383) at San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park
USS Razorback (SS-394) at the Arkansas Inland Maritime Museum in North Little Rock,

Further, when in the UK, you can visit Humphrey when at the Royal Navy’s Fleet Air Museum, where he is preserved and has quite the war record on her fuselage.

MoS2 Template Master

Humphrey’s observer, Chris Parry, retired in 2008 as a Rear Admiral in the Royal Navy and is unlikely to forget the Catfish of the Falklands any time soon.

(Sources: Histarmar.com.ar, elsnorkel.com.ar, DANFS, Navsource, USS Catfish Assoc homepage, and Revista Defensa)

Specs:

DibGuppyI-II

Displacement, Surfaced: 1,526 t., Submerged 2,242 t.
Length 311′ 9″
Beam 27′ 3″
Draft 15′ 3″
Speed, Surfaced 20.25 kts, Submerged 8.75 kts
Cruising Range, 11,000 miles surfaced at 10kts
Submerged Endurance, 48 hours at 2kts; Patrol Endurance, 75 days.
Operating Depth, 400 ft.
Complement 6 Officers, 60 Enlisted (WWII) 75 Post-Guppy
Propulsion, diesel-electric reduction gear with four main generator engines, General Motors diesel engines, HP 5400, Fuel Capacity 118,000, four General Electric motors, HP 2,740, two 126-cell main storage batteries, two propellers. (As commissioned)
Post Guppy: three GM 16-278A diesel, 2 direct drive motors of 2700 HP each, 504-cell battery bank.
Armament (fish) ten 21″ torpedo tubes, six forward, four aft, 24 torpedoes,
Guns: One 5″/25 deck gun, one 40mm gun, one 20mm gun, two .50 cal. machine guns; (All removed in Guppy conversion)

If you liked this column, please consider joining the International Naval Research Organization (INRO), Publishers of Warship International

They are possibly one of the best sources of naval study, images, and fellowship you can find http://www.warship.org/

The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

Nearing their 50th Anniversary, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

I’m a member, so should you be!

USCG Finally gets some drones

So the Coast Guard acquired 20 Aerovironment WASP III systems from the Marine Corps last year to test them out on smaller cutters (those without their own helo decks) such as the new 154-foot Sentinel class, 87-foot Maritime Protector class and so forth.

If you are unfamiliar with the WASP, its one of the smaller unmanned air vehicles (UAV- drones) out there and in fact the manufacturer calls them a “micro air vehicle.” WASP is used by the Marines down to the company level and by USAF Combat Controllers/TACP guys to see what’s just over the horizon. The WASP III is equipped with an internal Global Positioning System / Inertial Navigation System, autopilot and two onboard cameras. The entire system can function autonomously from takeoff to recovery, or be controlled by one operator using a handheld remote control unit. A little over 2-feet in wingspan and 1.25-feet long, these 1-pound UAVs can fly up to 40mph and putter out to about 2 nautical miles away.

Lt. j.g David Steele from Sector Miami Response prepares to launch a WASP III while Dr. Andrew Niccolai and Timothy Ledbetter man the ground control station. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Luke Clayton (Click to big up)

Lt. j.g David Steele from Sector Miami Response prepares to launch a WASP III while Dr. Andrew Niccolai and Timothy Ledbetter man the ground control station. U.S. Coast Guard photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Luke Clayton (Click to big up)

From the Coast Guard’s blog:

Testing conditions the first day were optimal with seas less than one foot and minimal relative winds. Niccolai and Timothy Ledbetter, both from the Coast Guard RDC, successfully launched the WASP off the starboard bow, and the aircraft soared into the sky, marking the first time a sUAS deployed from a non-flight deck equipped cutter. The ground control station was able to receive real-time video from the wing-mounted cameras. After a 30-minute flight, the WASP was brought in for a water landing off the starboard beam, and the cutter’s crew recovered the aircraft and prepped a second airframe for launch.

Navy has a 100-pound UUV dressed like a fake shark, no really

From a release by the Navy Friday:

The U.S. Navy completed tests on the GhostSwimmer unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV) at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek-Fort Story (JEBLC-FS), Dec. 11.

GhostSwimmer is the latest in a series of science-fiction-turned-reality projects developed by the chief of naval operations’ Rapid Innovation Cell (CRIC) project, Silent NEMO.

141211-N-KE519-014 VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (Dec. 11, 2014) The GhostSwimmer vehicle, developed by the Chief of Naval Operations Rapid Innovation Cell project Silent NEMO, undergoes testing at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek - Fort Story. Project Silent NEMO is an experiment which explores the possible uses for a biomimetic device developed by the Office of Naval Research. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Edward Guttierrez III/Released)

141211-N-KE519-014
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (Dec. 11, 2014) The GhostSwimmer vehicle, developed by the Chief of Naval Operations Rapid Innovation Cell project Silent NEMO, undergoes testing at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek – Fort Story. Project Silent NEMO is an experiment which explores the possible uses for a biomimetic device developed by the Office of Naval Research. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Edward Guttierrez III/Released)

Silent NEMO is an experiment that explores the possible uses for biomimetic, unmanned underwater vehicles in the fleet.

Over the past several weeks, Boston Engineering’s tuna-sized device has been gathering data at JEBLC-FS on tides, varied currents, wakes, and weather conditions for the development of future tasks.

“GhostSwimmer will allow the Navy to have success during more types of missions while keeping divers and Sailors safe,” said Michael Rufo, director of Boston Engineering’s Advanced Systems Group.

141211-N-KE519-009 VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (Dec. 11, 2014)  A variant model of the GhostSwimmer vehicle developed by the Chief of Naval Operations Rapid Innovation Cell project Silent NEMO, awaits testing during a demonstration at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek - Fort Story. Project Silent NEMO is an experiment which explores the possible uses for a biomimetic device developed by the Office of Naval Research. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Edward Guttierrez III/Released)

141211-N-KE519-009
VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (Dec. 11, 2014) A variant model of the GhostSwimmer vehicle developed by the Chief of Naval Operations Rapid Innovation Cell project Silent NEMO, awaits testing during a demonstration at Joint Expeditionary Base Little Creek – Fort Story. Project Silent NEMO is an experiment which explores the possible uses for a biomimetic device developed by the Office of Naval Research. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Edward Guttierrez III/Released)

The GhostSwimmer was developed to resemble the shape and mimic the swimming style of a large fish. At a length of approximately 5 feet and a weight of nearly 100 pounds, the GhostSwimmer vehicle can operate in water depths ranging from 10 inches to 300 feet.

“It swims just like a fish does by oscillating its tail fin back and forth,” said Rufo. “The unit is a combination of unmanned systems engineering and unique propulsion and control capabilities.”

Its bio-mimicry provides additional security during low visibility intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) missions and friendly hull inspections, while quieter than propeller driven craft of the same size, according to Navy Warfare Development Command (NWDC).

The robot is capable of operating autonomously for extended periods of time due to its long-lasting battery, but it can also be controlled via laptop with a 500-foot tether. The tether is long enough to transmit information while inspecting a ship’s hull, for example, but if operating independently (without a tether) the robot will have to periodically be brought to the surface to download its data.

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