Category Archives: military history

That time (Not During the 1860s) that the War Department Bought 128,000 Sabers

“Some Cavalry weapons.” Left to right: M1913 Saber, M1903 Rifle, M1917 Browning Machine Gun, M1918 Browning Automatic Rifle, and M1911 pistol. Taken at the Cavalry and Light Artillery School, Fort Riley, Kansas, between 1919 and 1934.

Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-99216

2nd LT George S. Patton (USMA 1909) was only 27 when his saber design, the straight Model of 1913 Cavalry Sword, which took cues from French military sabers of the 19th Century, was adopted to replace the curved and polished Model 1906 “Ames” Light Cavalry Saber, the latter of which was basically just a Civil War holdover.

The Patton:

Patton saber M1913 compared to officers’ sword of 1902/03 165-WW-392B-003

The 19th-century standard:

Union trooper with stocked Colt pistol carbine, Remington revolver, and cavalry saber identified as Private Amos Reese of Company E, 10th Kentucky Cavalry Regiment (Johnson’s), circa 1862. Liljenquist Collection, LOC, LC-DIG-ppmsca-32685

While the saber in American service wasn’t typically used on campaign after 1865, the Plains Wars being more an affair of carbine and revolver backed up by the occasional Gatling gun and mountain howitzer, cavalry regiments duly stocked and practiced with the “long knives.”

For example: Saber Exercises, Troop “L,” 1st Cavalry, Ft. Custer, Montana, 1892. Note that Troop L was typically the Indian Scout section in U.S. Cavalry regiments from 1866 onward.

Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-104128

The Patton Saber was carried on-horse, rather than the Civil War-era blades mounted on the body.

3d U.S. Cavalry Officer and trooper, equipped for the field. Horse is “Reno,” a four-year-old officer’s charger. Note the M1913 on the saddle and the “3” regimental marked saddle pad. Photo taken at Army Carnival, Washington, D.C., September 1928. 111-SC-95373

Cavalry horse with full pack. Fort Myer, Virginia, 1920. Note the Patton saber 111-SC-68811

26th Colonel of the 3d U.S. Cavalry Regiment, Col. Kenyon A. Joyce, mounted portrait taken at Fort Myer, Virginia, 1933. Note his Patton Saber.

Some horse officers, especially on parade, elected to carry their 1902 pattern officer’s sword instead, or 1906 Ames sabers, a right allowed by command and an easy nod to the fact that officers typically purchased their own swords. A Mess Cape/Boat Cloak kind of thing.

Example: “Draw Saber”, Machine Gun Troop, 10th Cavalry, Ft. Meyer, Va. 1931, with rank and file using Patton sabers and the two officers with 1902s

111-SC-96745

Inset

Note the M1902 officer’s sword. Review of the Cavalry and Field Artillery at Fort Myer, Virginia. A well-trained cavalry horse “Ditto” ridden by Captain Thayer, 3rd Cavalry, 30 April 1920. 111-SC-68437

As detailed by Dieter Stenger in AH90, the Army’s Springfield Armory manufactured at least 35,000 Patton model sabers between 1913 and 1918– a number which seems quite a stretch for the 17 regiments of regulars (two of which had only been formed in 1916) and the National Guard’s three cavalry regiments, 13 separate cavalry squadrons, and 22 separate cavalry troops, a force that, when mobilised, would be only around 18,000 troopers.

All these initial Pattons were stamped “SA,” with the Ordnance stamp (flaming bomb), and date on one side of the ricasso, with the other side stamped “US” and serialized. SA No. 1 is currently in the Army’s Museum system.

An additional 93,000 wartime production sabers were contracted to the firm of Landers, Frary and Clark of New Britain, Connecticut, in 1917 and 1918. These are marked LF&C and were delivered through 1919, with the latter date the most commonly seen.

An LF&C Patton, as seen in a July 1918 Ordnance Corps photo:

That’s a lot of sabers, especially when it is considered that U.S. cavalry troops on the Mexican border did not use the saber in the field, and only two regiments, the 6th and 15th U.S. Cavalry, served in France in 1918, and were sent to the trenches as dismounted infantry.

Nonetheless, post-Versailles, the Army soon formed 20 full National Guard horse cav regiments (101st to 123rd, skipping the 111th and 118th) in four divisions (21st, 22nd, 23rd, and 24th) while the Army Reserve amazingly had 24 brand new horse cavalry regiments, numbered 301st through 324th, in six divisions (!) numbered the 61st through 66th, all established between 1921 and 1927.

Wyoming National Guard’s 115th Cavalry Regiment in its final format, circa 1940, with jeeps and trucks augmenting the regimental band and horse soldiers

If ever fleshed out (pun intended) to their full wartime strength, these 10 Army NG and Reserve cavalry divisions would amount to 47,960 cavalrymen in the field (not counting support units such as artillery and engineers), joining the regular Army’s 1st, 2nd, and 3rd (paper) Cavalry Divisions.

It was almost as if the War Department felt that, since they had 93,000 new sabers on hand, they needed to find 93,000 troopers to hold them!

Nonetheless, the Army officially retired the Model 1913 Cavalry Sword as a standard-issue U.S. military weapon in April 1934, and thereafter were deleted from the TO&E.

With so many M1913s on hand in Army armories in the 1940s, many were cut into sections and converted into a wide variety of fighting knives made by Anderson, San Antonio Iron Works, and others, while the OSS purportedly had some converted for their own use in dropping behind the lines.

Each Patton Sword could make three blades: tip, middle, and handle.

M1913 Patton sabers made into fighting knives. Souce

Thus, if you find an intact M1913 saber on the collectors market, keep in mind the use it has on it likely came after it hit the surplus market in well-cared-for, gently used condition.

As for fighting knife conversions, well, buy the knife, not the story.

Cauntering around

Some 85 years ago today.

How about these great shots of an Australian-manned Vickers Light Tank Mk VIB in Syria, 11 June 1941, dressed in British Caunter camo, a staple of the Desert Campaigns.

Photo by James Jarche, Australian 6th Division, Cavalry Regiment, IWM E 3154E

Photo by James Jarche, Australian 6th Division, Cavalry Regiment, IWM E 3149E

Created by Colonel John “Blood” Caunter of the 4th Armoured Brigade during its Desert Rats period, the pattern was essentially an arid/desert take on the “dazzle” camouflage created by British artist Norman Wilkinson in 1917 for ships. Caunter-flauge was typically used from July 1940 to October 1941

A13 Cruiser Mk IVA tank being checked over shortly after arrival in Egypt, 1 November 1940. Note ‘Caunter’ camouflage and pith (Foreign Service) helmet on the fender. No. 1 Army Film and Photo Section, Army Film and Photographic Unit IWM (E 1004)

As a sidenote, Somerset-born Caunter was a Sandhurst man who was captured by the Germans near Ypres in 1914, then released himself on his own recognizance, arriving back in England via the Netherlands still clad in his POW uniform before wrapping up his Great War service on the Salonika front.

Finishing his career in the CBI against the Japanese, he later became a noted shark angler in his retirement, which figures.

Brigadier John Alan Lyde Caunter, CBE, MC & Bar, passed away in 1981, aged 91.

Decisively Samudravijaya, or, Starting a New Career at 58

The ex-USCGC Decisive (WMEC 629), a B-Type Reliance-class 210-foot gunboat/cutter, is now in active service as SLNS Samudravijaya (SLS P 628) in the Sri Lankan Navy. I guess SLS P 629 was already taken or something.

Note she now carries a twin Bofors 40mm L70 mount forward, an upgrade from the MK 38 25mm chain gun she carried for the past 30 years with the USCG, while, arguably, still short of the 3″/50 MK 22 Decisive, which she was commissioned with in 1968.

A simple ship with twin diesel engines and almost zero automation, she joins class member SLNS Samudura (P261)/ex-USCGC Courageous, which has been in service with the force since 2005, and two former 378-foot Hamilton-class cutters transferred in recent years, SLNS Gajabahu (P626)/ex-USCGC Sherman, and SLNS Vijayabahu (P627)/ex-USCGC Munro.

She self-deployed 14,775nm to her new home from the USCG Yard at Curtis Bay, ironically, where she was built in the 1960s.

Once upon a time, she was stationed at CGS Pascagoula, formerly NAVSTA Pascagoula, directly across from Ingalls on Singing River Island– where I was very familiar with the “Swamp Rats” and toured her for an article in Sea Classics before her final assignment to Pensacola in 2017.

A bit of Decisive remains on the Gulf Coast.

One of Decisive’s 26-foot Mark V Motor Surfboats (MSB), DEC1 is preserved as part of the USCG static display at the Battleship Alabama Park in Mobile.

This circa 1994 MSB MKV replaced one of Decisive’s original 1960s-era wooden-hulled 26-foot Monomoy surfboats and was used aboard while the cutter was stationed at Pascagoula. It was the go-to when having to conduct boardings or rescues in heavy seas.

Dubbed a “bathtub” for obvious reasons, these craft were self-righting and self-bailing. The MSB MKV was built by Ocean Technical Services in Harvey, Louisiana, and used a Cummings 4BT3.9M diesel to push it at 18 knots.

Typically manned by three, it could carry 10 passengers or 15 survivors in a pinch, depending on size.

The exhibit includes not only the surfboat but also a 41-foot UTM, a S-61/HUS-1G/HH-52A Seaguard (1371), and a S-55B/HO4S-2/HH-19G (1258), the latter two sourced from the National Museum of Naval Aviation to honor the nearby CG Aviation Training Center (ATC), which has trained the service’s pilots and aircrew since 1966.

Warship Wednesday 10 June 2026: Tough Trolle

Here at LSOZI, we take a break every Wednesday to explore the old steam/diesel navies from 1833 to 1954, profiling a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger. 

If you enjoy my always ad-free Warship Wednesday content, you can support it by buying me a cup of joe at https://buymeacoffee.com/lsozi As Henk says: “Warship Coffee – no sugar, just a pinch of salt!”

Warship Wednesday 10 June 2026: One Tough Trolle

Via the National Library of Norway

Above we see the class-leading Danish kystforsvarsskibet Herluf Trolle some 120 years ago this month at the coronation of Prince Carl of Denmark and his wife as King Haakon VII and Queen Maud of Norway on 22 June 1906 in Trondheim, Norway.

A ship of peace, Herluf Trolle had a long, quiet career, save for some tense wartime service, but is nonetheless a fascinating subject.

The Trolles

In the 1890s, Denmark was in need of a new, modern navy with steel hulls, steam propulsion, torpedoes, and breechloading weapons.

The country’s prototype “bathtub battleship,” Skjold (Shield), was ordered in 1893. A 2,200-ton ship, she was stubby at 227 feet overall and drew 14 feet under her steel hull.

Danish armored coastal defense ship Skjold

Using a three-stroke engine with water-tube boilers, which were quick to fire, and with her single 9.4″/40 main gun’s rotation and ammunition supply handled by electric motors (which, for the time, was revolutionary), Skjold was modern and capable of 13 knots when summoned. Further, with up to 11 inches of armor, she could take a beating.

The Danes then moved forward with a three-pack of improved coastal battleships with the lessons learned from Skjold, with emphasis on more guns and better speed, coupled with the ability to remain in the shallows.

What resulted was the Trolle class, which was nearly half again as heavy as Skjold (3,750 tons), not to mention over 50 feet longer (283 feet oal), yet could still float and fight in 16 feet of water.

Herluf Trolle circa 1908 via Kalundborg Maritim formidling

They were designed to carry two main guns very similar to those of the larger (328-foot, 7,000-ton) Chilean battleship Capitan Prat, which was built in France at FCM in 1889-91.

Chilean battleship Capitan Prat, Engineering Magazine, Jan 4, 1895, gun diagram

While Prat had four 9.4″/35 Canet guns, Trolle would carry two improved 9.4″/38 L/40 Canets dubbed M/96 models in Danish service. These had a better rate of fire (1.3 rounds per minute) than the guns mounted on Skjold (one round every two minutes) and, of course, there were two of them. Plus, the Canets were good out to 11,500m while Skold’s gun had a maximum range of 9,800 even with its slightly longer barrel.

Officers posed in front of one of Trolle’s 9.4″/35 Canet guns.

Boxing practise on the deck of Herluf Trolle THM 4494

Her secondary battery was four 5.9-inch Bofors PK L/43 M/96s mounted on a gun deck protected by a central casemate. A tertiary battery was intended for defense against boats, including ten 57mm/40 M.1885s and eight 37mm/20 M.1885 Hotchkiss guns. To help spot those incoming TBs, she carried two 30-inch and two 35-inch electric searchlights.

Finally, a torpedo battery of one bow and two abeam below the waterline 18-inch tubes was installed in three different compartments.

This scheme of Trolle from circa 1917, when she had replaced most of her 57mm 6-pounders with heavier 3″/52 L/55 KM.07s, gives you a good understanding of her arrangement. Note the forward torpedo tube as well as the beam/keel-mounted tube.

Also like Prat, Trolle would use an armor belt and scheme of Creusot steel, just not as much (the Prat had a nearly 12-inch belt). The Dane’s scheme included a 2-inch deck, a belt that was 7 inches amidships tapering to four at the stern, 6 inches over the casemates, and 7 solid inches in the barbettes, bulkheads, and main gun houses. The conning tower ran 7.5 inches.

When it came to propulsion, Trolle was designed with two Burmeister & Wain vertical triple expansion engines and six Thornycroft boilers arranged in a central room turning twin shafts. At 4,200 shp, she was good for 15.5 knots and carried enough coal (245 tons) to cruise 2,400nm at 9 knots, not long enough legs for cross-ocean service, but she was designed to fight in and around the North and Baltic Seas, just over the horizon from home.

Jane’s 1904:

The three ships of the class were all incrementally different and upgraded from one another.

Danish Herluf Trolle-class coastal defence ship Olfert Fischer on trials

Among the changes were that Trolle’s immediate sister, Olfert Fischer, had Krupp cemented nickel steel armor of the same scheme rather than Creusot plate, had slightly better Bofors M/03 model 9.4″/42s and Bofors M/01 5.9″/42s. This was a big deal as the Bofors 9.4s had a better rate of fire (1.8 rounds per minute versus 1.3 on Trolle’s Canet guns) and a longer range (13,700m vs 11,500m). Fischer was also fitted out as an admiral’s flagship, with extra cabins.

Peder Skram entering the port of Aarhus at the South Pier circa 1919 by Arge Andersen

Meanwhile, the third member of the class, Peder Skram, carried better engines of 5,400 shp, which were needed as she went some 200 tons heavier on a slightly longer and wider hull. Like Olfert Fischer, she had Krupp armor of the same (general) scheme and, again, even a better mark of Bofors M/06 9.4″/43 and Bofors M/06 5.9″/50s, while carrying 10 3-inch guns from the start instead of the 57mm 6-pounders.

Jane’s 1921 entry for the class, showing the differences between the three half-sisters.

Which sets the stage for us to…

Meet Herluf

Our little battlewagon carried the name of one of the Danish Navy’s biggest heroes, the 16th-century Admiral Herluf Trolle. He bested a larger Swedish fleet under Jakob Bagge at Öland in 1564, wrecking the massive 173-gun Swedish flagship Mars and capturing Bagge. He took on a second Swedish fleet at Bukow in 1565 and, gravely wounded, returned home to his wife and school only to pass away there 17 days later at age 49.

Together with his wife Birgitte Gøye, he transformed the Skovkloster monastery into the Herlufsholm school, which is still in operation.

Our subject was laid down at Orlogsværftet, København, the yard which built the entire class, on 20 June 1897.

Sketch of Herluf Trolle under construction, c. 1898, by Paul Pedersen

HDMS Herluf Trolle on a slipway before her launch on 1 September 1899. Note her ram bow with her forward 18-inch torpedo tube under the “beak.”

HDMS Herluf Trolle on a slipway before her launch on 1 September 1899.

Launched 1 September 1899, Herluf Trolle entered the fleet on 7 June 1901, some 125 years ago this week, and was on her trials through 20 July.

Danish coast defense ship Herluf Trolle on trials in 1901

Herluf Trolle, 1902

Looking at the launching and completion dates of her sisters, it would seem they followed on the same graving dock, with Olfert Fischer joining Trolle in May 1905 and Peder Skram in September 1908. The fact that each subsequent ship was laid down after trials of her previous sister makes the numerous small changes from ship to ship logical.

A great postcard of Herluf Trolle showing her original profile with two tall masts and an assortment of Royal Danish Navy rate badges below, including gunners, torpedomen, medical, musicians, machinists, electricians, and boatswains. THM 7889.

The most powerful Danish warship when commissioned, Herluf Trolle was a showboat at the time and undertook two long, independent summer cruises (14 June 14- 4 October 1902 and 2 June- 30 September 1904), waving the flag in the Baltic and Western Europe.

Danish coast defense ship Herluf Trolle, early in career, with buff superstructure. THM 3587

The former included attending the fleet review at Spithead on the occasion of King Edward VII’s Coronation.

The June 1902 Spithead review included 160 warships from around the world, including Herluf Trolle.

A 1905 refit, after her sister Olfert Fischer arrived in the fleet, saw Herluf Trolle bolster her armament with six 47mm/40 M.1885 3-pounders.

As noted in the opening of the post, the summer of 1906 saw her in the Royal Division in Norway for the coronation of one of Denmark’s princes as the Scandinavian country’s new king.

Danish coast defense ship Herluf Trolle during the coronation of the Norwegian king Haakon VII, 22 June 1906, National Library of Norway

Danish coast defense ship Herluf Trolle during the coronation of the Norwegian king Haakon VII, 22 June 1906, National Library of Norway

Danish coast defense ship Herluf Trolle during the coronation of the Norwegian king Haakon VII, 22 June 1906, National Library of Norway

The next seven years saw Trolle alternate her summers with a series of exercises and maneuvers with the fleet’s main squadron (1.Eskadren), then settle into a winter nap period.

Around 1909, Trolle and her sisters switched to a more 20th-century battle gray (kampgra) scheme.

Danish coastal battleships Herluf Trolle and Olfert Fischer, 1909, Squadron service, dressed in flags and firing salutes. THM 36515

A subsequent 1910 refit saw her land her troublesome new 3-pounders in exchange for a couple more 57mm 6-pounders.

Herluf Trolle in the Kaiser Wilhelm Kanal, June 1911. THM 6625

Danish coastal defence ship calling in Scotland on the Tyne in June 1914, photo by Bob Short

War!

On 1 August 1914, with Germany, France, and Russia joining the Balkan sideshow that had been brewing against Austro-Hungary and Serbia/Montenegro, Denmark moved to a robust war footing, the concept of a strong neutrality appealing to the government.

The Navy participated in this Security Force (Sikringsstyrken) with the traditional single fleet squadron splitting into two, with the 1st Squadron guarding Øresund and the 2nd Squadron in the Great Belt. The squadrons were made up of the Trolles along with Denmark’s handful of light cruisers and assorted torpedo boat flotillas. 

Great War service: Torpedo boat Tumleren, coast defense ship Herluf Trolle, by Benjamin Olsen, painting in the Danish Naval Museum Gallery

Dismantling enemy mine during the Great War on Herluf Trolle THM 7352

Herluf Trolle in battle gray (kampgra) with her masts folded and decks clear for war in a Christmas 1914 postcard.

The Danish Navy in 1914 had two Donnet-Lévêque FBA Type A seaplanes in service, dubbed Maagen 1 & 2, as well as five aviators. Here is one seen off the stern of Herluf Trolle. Note the rifle-armed sentry under the barrel of her aft 9.4-inch gun. The Danes later built a domestic seaplane factory, Luftmarinestation København, and constructed a dozen seaTHM 7353

Trolle and her sisters were building blocks and flagships in the Sikringsstyrken for the next half decade, Denmark only demobilizing on 28 February 1919.

Back to peace

Following the war and the inevitable peacetime budget cuts by increasingly liberal Danish governments, Herluf Trolle was relegated to reserve status in 1922, while her sister Olfert Fischer was used as a training ship, even carrying an HM-1 seaplane (Danish-built Hansa-Brandenberg W.29) for a period.

Trolle was retained as a pier-side training ship for officer candidates until paid off in 1930, then later sold for scrap.

Her place in the fleet had been taken by the new artillery training cruiser Niels Juel, which had entered service in 1923.

Holmen, 1932, with the Niels Juel to the left, royal yacht Dannebrog top left, the famed Mastekranen crane center with Herluf Trolle, Olfert Fischer, and Peder Skram at the bottom center

Fischer ended her career as a target ship for naval aviation, clad in extra coats of wood planks over her decks, and able to steam at 9 knots with a skeleton crew. A purported 389 practice bombs would rain down on her decks. Eventually, she was decommissioned in 1936 and discarded.

The final member of the class, Peder Skram, was used in the 1930s as an accommodation ship for the Apprentice School and in various other training tasks until WWII brought her back to the good graces. Rather than be surrendered to the Germans, she was scuttled by her crew at Holmen in August 1943, salvaged by the Kriegsmarine and commissioned as the gunboat Addler, then was sunk a second time in Friedrichsort by Allied aircraft, raised, and then later scrapped by 1949.

Danish warships after the fleet’s sinking at Holmen in connection with the state of emergency on 29 August 1943. From the right is seen the artillery ship Peder Skram, torpedo boat Vb. 2, and the motor torpedo boat Hvalrossen (only the masts are visible). In the background is the frigate Fyn. FHM-166686

Lived on in Coastal Artillery

Continuing to serve, Herluf Trolle’s main guns were sent to form a battery protecting the naval station at Holmen, while her four 5.9-inch guns were sent to Kongelundsfortet, on the southern end of the Copenhagen Fortress.

Danish coastal artillery Kongelundsfortet THM 319541

Emplaced in 1939, the Germans came along in 1940 and moved the 150s to the Sjællands Odde (Gniben reef) to control the submarine barrier in the Kattegat in 1943. Utilized by the Germans during the War and returned to the Danes immediately after, the guns were scrapped in the 1950s, although Artilleriskolen Sjællands Odde endures as a training ground for roughly 200 naval gunners per year. Meanwhile, Kongelundsfortet is preserved as a park and nature trail. 

At least some of Trolle’s guns, likely drawn from her myriad of small 75mm, 57mm, 47mm, or 37mm counter-boat/AAA batteries, are in the extensive collection of the Royal Armory of the Danish War Museum (Krigsmuseet) in Copenhagen, albeit not on display.

Epilogue

Our subject these days is best remembered in period paintings and postcards.

Herluf Trolle at Copenhagen by Christian Benjamin Olsen, 1902

Copenhagen circa 1907 with the Danish Herluf Trolle, Russian imperial yacht Polar Star, and Frigate Jutland/Jylland, Christian Benjamin Olsen

Postcard for Danish coastal battleship Herluf Trolle THM-30778

Storm in Drogden Sound by Christian Mølsted, 1919, with Herluf Trolle in the distance

A beloved naval hero, Herluf Trolle’s name endures.

At least one large naval barracks in Denmark carries the name.

One of the companies of the detested German-raised Schalburg Corps (Schalburgkorpset) of Danish SS volunteers was named after Herluf Trolle and had the cuff band to show for it.

The Royal Danish Navy recycled the name for a circa 1967 Peder Skram-class frigate (F 353) that served 20 years on active duty and a few more in the reserve before she was scrapped in 1995.

Danish Peder Skram-class frigate Herluf Trolle (F 353) visiting Kiel, West Germany, 20 June 1970. Photo by Georg Gasch, Stadtarchiv Kiel.

Thanks for reading!

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive

***

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Rubber Duckies

Some 85 years ago, a bit of calm before the storm.

Official period caption: “British and Chinese troops on exercise in rubber boats, Hong Kong, 1941.” Note the M1928 Thompson SMG on the bow of the leading boat and SMLEs at the ready.

IWM (KF 141)

The British first garrisoned Hong Kong on 26 January 1841 when a landing force from the 10-gun Hecla-class bomb vessel HMS Sulphur rowed ashore and set up shop.

Fast forward a century, and, as a result of the build-up to the Pacific War in 1941, the Hong Kong garrison held two battalions sent from Europe (2nd Royal Scots, 1st Middlesex) along with two from India (5th 7th Rajput, 2nd 14th Punjab), and would soon receive two from Canada as reinforcement (Royal Rifles, Winnipeg Grenadiers). This was in addition to units from the Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers, et. al.

Plus, as witnessed above, there were some locally raised outfits drawn from the colony’s 1.6 million residents: the Hong Kong Chinese Regiment and the much larger and senior Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps.

Two members of the Hong Kong Volunteer Defense Force on Queen’s Road Central in Hong Kong, 1941, UWM Libraries collection

The HKCR, led by a major, was only established in November 1941 and authorized as a single machine-gun battalion. Still in training as the Japanese closed in the next month, only a platoon-sized unit of the HKCR was able to take the field.

Meanwhile, the HKVDF was nearly brigade-sized, containing 2,200 men in seven infantry companies, five artillery batteries, five machine gun companies equipped with Vickers guns, a service company, an engineer company, an armored car platoon (with four Bedford chassis armored locally by the Kowloon-Canton Railway), a field ambulance unit, and signals. Led by Col. Henry B. Rose, it was formed in 1854.

Newly trained officers and NCOs of the Chinese Battalion, Hong Kong Volunteer Defence Corps. The Corps was the largest military unit of the Hong Kong Garrison at the time of the Japanese invasion. Photographer Frederick E. Palmer. IWM (KF 114)

Decimated in the desperate fight for Hong Kong in December 1941, both “local” units had their men largely paroled by the Japanese rather than tossed into POW camps.

Many of these men duly made their way into mainland China and either joined KMT forces ashore or later joined the 126-man Hong Kong Volunteer Company in Burma, where they were attached to the 77 Chindits Force under General Orde Wingate.

They were later deployed to Japanese-occupied Malaya, conducting special reconnaissance behind enemy lines.

Reformed after WWII once the colony was liberated, the Royal Hong Kong Regiment (The Volunteers) remained in the colors until 1995, manning British Ferret armored cars under association with the Royal Armoured Corps.

Britannia Squeeks

The Royal Navy has spent the past 14 weeks gearing up a mine countermeasures response to send to the Persian Gulf region.

That mission will be the 16,000-ton civilian-manned Bay-class auxiliary RFA Lyme Bay (L3007), loaded up with lots of sorta ad-hoc bits and pieces, including the Video Ray Defender-Viper system, “four specialist mine-hunting vessels, three RHIBS, more than 20 containers packed full of tech,” and a skosh of good wishes.

20 May 2026 – HMS Stirling Castle is using their crane to load kit and equipment onto RFA Lyme Bay. RFA Lyme Bay receives a kit while in Gibraltar ahead of deployment to the Gulf. HMS Stirling Castle has transported and delivered kit, including drones and sea boats. The Bay-Class auxiliary ship is in Gibraltar, undergoing maintenance and loading vital kit for further operations.

A closer look at Video Ray

It really didn’t use to be this way.

Just 30 years ago, the circa 1996 RN, a victor of the Cold War, had five brand new 465-ton Sandown class Single Role Minehunters on hand with up to 20 planned as well as 13 aging (built in the late-1970s-mid-1980s) but still very useful 725-ton Hunt class minehunters.

There was also a backup.

At the time, four 700-ton River class sweepers, constructed in the mid-1980s, were being re-rated to patrol boats for the Northern Island Squadron. Eight additional Rivers were in reserve at Plymouth, with an eye towards disposal, even though they were not even a decade old. Speaking of reserve, 10 old Ton-class sweepers (including the experimental GRP-hulled HMS Wilton, M1116) were still “on the books” pending disposal and being used for training and Sea Cadet units, along with other roles.

No matter how you dice it, that’s more than a dozen very modern active boats, another dozen on the schedule, and a dozen more in reserve.

Ships of the British Royal Navy’s Third Mine Countermeasures Squadron briefly meet the aircraft carrier HMS Illustrious (left). The Faslane-based mine hunters HMS Invernes, Bridgeport, and Sandown (right), were accompanied by their support ship Royal Fleet Forward Repair Ship, Diligence (center front), and the survey ship HMS Herald (center rear). 13 March 1998, USN Photo by Jonathan Guzman, PH1.

Since then, of the 15 Sandowns eventually completed (down from the planned 20), all save for HMS Bangor have been passed on to overseas allies, and Bangor was only given a last-minute reprieve to keep her around for five years.

Similarly, while seven of the now very old 13 Hunts are still on the RN’s list, just four (Ledbury, Cattistock, Brocklesby, and Hurworth) of those are manned and in service; the others are either laid up or transferred aboard.

The Tons and Rivers are long gone, save for Wilton, which is a floating museum.

The British Hunt class minesweeper HMS Cattistock (M31) celebrated her 40th birthday in 2022 and is scheduled to remain in service until age 50.

Poor Jackie Fisher.

Tell It To the Marines!

Metro Goldwyn Mayer’s “Tell It To the Marines,” an interbellum silent film featuring the great Lon Chaney, began filming in the summer of 1926, specifically running from 7 June to 3 August, for a Christmas weekend release.

The first film made with the full cooperation of the service, its shooting locations included Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego and aboard the top-of-the-line Tennessee-class dreadnought USS California (BB-44) while on a port call at San Francisco, with active duty servicemembers filling in as extras.

I give you, some 100 years ago, the Corps’ two best-known bulldogs of the day: then-Brigadier General Smedley “Ol’ Gimlet Eye” Darlington Butler, then the commander of MCRDSD, and depot mascot “Sergeant Major Jiggs,” the first bulldog to “serve” in the Marine Corps, snapped between scenes in the filming of “Tell It To the Marines” in the summer of 1926.

Note the two MoHs on Butler’s salad bar. From the Smedley Butler Collection (COLL/3124), Marine Corps Archives & Special Collections

And, of course, Butler and BB-44, taken during the same summer.

The U.S. Battle Fleet steamed into San Francisco Bay, California, on 18 June 1926, where all 68 warships dropped anchor. This was the greatest number of warships that had steamed through the Gold Gate since the entire U.S. Fleet of 144 ships was there in April 1925. The photograph shows, left to right, in the foreground, Captain William H. Standley of USS California exchanging salutes with Brigadier General Smedley D. Butler, USMC. Courtesy of the San Francisco Maritime Museum, San Francisco, California. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph NH 68840

Lon Chaney, the first actor to be made an honorary Marine, would often state that this was his favorite film, and it was the biggest box office success of Chaney’s career.

Morphy’s earlier this year sold one of Butler’s China-made uniforms at auction.

The unlined summer uniform auctioned by Morphy’s was made by a Chinese tailor and bore inked Chinese letters on the inside. It is believed to have been made during Butler’s 3rd Brigade’s China Expedition. Its cloisonne ribbon bars were unquestionably made in China, likely Shanghai, and corresponded to Butler’s awards. The uniform (including undershirt and tie) remained with Butler’s family through the early 2000s, before entering the collector community.

In VG condition, it sold very near its high estimate, for $24,000.

Frankie, reborn and ready for the sea again

Some 70 years ago this week, the 968-foot Midway-class super carrier USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA-42), is seen being pushed out by tugs at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, 6 June 1956, offering a good view of her new hurricane bow and a trio of 5″/54 Mark 16 guns on her starboard sponsons.

National Archives Identifier 7578593

Swanky Franky had just completed her 25-month SCB-110 conversion at the PSNS, which lasted from 5 March 1954 to 6 April 1956, and many excellent images of her are in the National Archives from that period. 

USS_Franklin D.Roosevelt (CVA-42) in June 1956 NARA 7578590

As noted by DANFS

Workers at Puget Sound fitted Franklin D. Roosevelt with an angled flight deck, two C-11-1 and one C-11-2 steam catapults, a mirror landing system, a hurricane bow, and AN/SPS-8 height finding and AN/SPS-12 air search radars on a new mast, as part of a SCB-110 reconstruction plan. Workers also removed some of her 5-inch guns [6 out of 18], and the added measures increased her standard displacement to 51,000 tons. Franklin D. Roosevelt was recommissioned at the shipyard on 6 April 1956, Capt. John T. Hayward in command. The carrier returned to sea and on 16 June arrived at San Francisco to load stores for her voyage around the Horn to Mayport, Fla., and arrived at her new home port on 8 August.

The ship emerged from the yard work with an entirely new silhouette, and her angled flight deck is clearly visible in this port-bow image taken sometime after her recommissioning on 6 April 1956. (Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph UA 543.03)

Commissioned after construction at Newport News as CVB-42 on 27 October 1945– some eight weeks after VJ Day– she conducted her shakedown in the Caribbean before completing one North Atlantic and six Mediterranean deployments before her decommissioning for the SCB-110 modernization. Her original WWII construction had only lasted 696 days while her Cold War reconstruction took 761.

Transitioning back to the East Coast, FDR would complete a further 17 deployments including an emergency cruise (November-December 1956) to the Suez, a South Atlantic goodwill cruise, 14 Med cruises under Sixth Fleet orders including during the 1967 and 1973 wars, an emergency sortie to the Caribbean in November 1961 during the crisis in the Dominican Republic, and a 21 June 1966 – 21 February 1967 Vietnam cruise.

USS Franklin D. Roosevelt (CVA-42) underway in the Gulf of Tonkin, during her Vietnam War combat deployment, 19 October 1966. A UH-2 Seasprite helicopter of HC-2 is in flight at left while F-4B Phantoms, A-4C/Es Skyhawks, KA-3Bs, and RF-8As are on deck. Photographed by PH1 Hendricks. USN 1120428

Frankie was the first post-WWII super carrier decommissioned, on 1 October 1977, having completed 30 years of service, not counting her yard conversion period. She earned one battle star for her Vietnam War service, where her air wing (CVW-1) conducted over 7,000 combat sorties in 95 days on Yankee Station.

Her sistersCoral Sea and Midway, remained in the fleet until 1990 and 1992, respectively, with the latter the largest preserved carrier museum ship in the world.

Militare Omnia Animalia Curant

Mexican Punitive Expedition. The 5th U.S. Cavalry passing near San Geronimo. Colonel Wilder of the 5th Cavalry in front on the left, Colonel Tate of the 11th Cavalry in front on the right, during the campaign against Villa, 15 May 1916. Signal Corps Photo 111-SC-102703

Some 110 years ago today, on 4 June 1916, the U.S. Army established the Veterinary Corps as part of the National Defense Act. While each field artillery and cavalry regiment had enlisted farriers and medical officers, they were part of the regiment itself or drawn from remount depots as needed.

Beginning with just 72 veterinary officers and no enlisted, the Corps was tasked with caring for a vast number of animals crucial to the Army’s operations at home, on campaign in Mexico and the Philippines, and, soon, on the battlefields of Europe.

By the end of the Great War, the Veterinary Corps numbered no less than 2,312 officers and 16,391 enlisted personnel, primarily supporting the American Expeditionary Force in Europe, which fielded over 165,000 mules and horses. Such personnel also took care of the myriad of unofficial mascot and casualty dogs adopted by units headed “Over There.”

Of note, the Fifth Avenue Uniform Company alone produced 377,000 American-made horse gas masks during the war.

Masked horse and rider, Western Front, 10 June 1918, Signal Corps Photo 165-WW-96H-1

The U.S. Army Veterinary Corps is still going strong and still specializes in horses, mules, and military working dogs. Their historical motto is “Militare Omnia Animalia Curant” (They Care for All Military Animals).

Warship Wednesday 3 June 2026: The Mighty Mud Duck

Here at LSOZI, we take a break every Wednesday to explore the old steam/diesel navies from 1833 to 1954, profiling a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places.- Christopher Eger 

If you enjoy my always ad-free Warship Wednesday content, you can support it by buying me a cup of joe at https://buymeacoffee.com/lsozi As Henk says: “Warship Coffee – no sugar, just a pinch of salt!”

Warship Wednesday 3 June 2026: The Mighty Mud Duck

USCG Historians Office

Above we see the 240-foot Tampa-class cruising cutter/gunboat USCGC Modoc (WPG-46) in her circa 1922-1940 peacetime white and buff livery, likely somewhere off North Carolina, her stomping grounds when not on ice patrol.

A hard-charger in an interesting class of cutters, Modoc had several brushes with history during her career and wartime service.

The Tampas

In late 1917, with 47 USCG cutters and 272 boat stations transferred to the Navy’s control under the mobilization plan for the American entry to the Great War, six of the smaller service’s largest cruising cutters on the East Coast– the 205-foot USCGC Algonquin and Manning, Seneca (204 feet), Ossipee (165 feet), Tampa (190 feet), and Yamacraw (191 feet)– had been quickly fitted with extra guns and depth charges and sent overseas to Gibraltar.

The 205-foot USCGC Seneca, among the largest and most capable cutters when the U.S. entered the Great War, spent 1917-19 overseas on convoy escort duty

The six-pack formed Patrol Squadron Two of the Atlantic Fleet Patrol Forces, Sixth Division, and were tasked with escort duties for convoys sailing between England and the Mediterranean. They gave yeoman service, with Tampa tragically lost during the conflict. Seneca alone escorted 30 convoys, accounting for an armada of more than 500 ships.

With that as a forward, on 12 November 1917, the Navy General Board met with USCG Constructor Frederick E. Hunnewell to discuss the smaller service’s future shipbuilding program. It had been decided that the service would begin construction on a new class of larger, more capable cutters. The guidelines favored a 240-foot vessel with decent warfighting characteristics (speed and armament) as well as endurance and seakeeping, with the Navy stressing a 16 knot speed (most of the cutters deployed to Europe pushed 12 knots, maximum) and Board member RADM Charles Badger (USNA 1873) urging “three 5-inch guns centerline, one 3-inch anti-aircraft gun, and two machine guns” as standard armament.

With magazine space for 200 rounds per 5-incher, a 6,000-gallon-per-day evaporator, a five-kilowatt radio, day and night signaling apparatus, a submarine signal receiver, two 30-inch searchlights, an ice machine, and six 30-foot small boats, the estimated cost of six desired new 240-foot cutters so armed would be $700,000 apiece, with the class pushing $4.2 million and change.

However, with the Navy prioritizing its own vessels for construction during the war, the planned half-dozen 240-footers never made it to the schedule before the Coast Guard reverted to the Treasury Department in 1919 upon the outbreak of peace.

Still a program of record, the service whittled the number of hulls down from six to four and pursued novel cost-savings measures and innovations to cover the basics of the circa 1917 mandate, but on a more shoestring T-department budget.

In 1921, Captain Quincy B. Newman, Engineer-in-Chief of the Coast Guard, introduced the first synchro-turbo electric drive on ships in any of the U.S. services on the class leader of the new 240-footers, the USCGC Tampa (WPG-48). The plant consisted of two Babcock & Wilcox, cross-drum type, 200 psi, 750° F superheated boilers transferring to a General Electric 2,040 kVa electric motor driven by a turbogenerator, pushing a single 13-foot four-bladed screw.

At the time, they were the largest and most capable cutters ever to enter service.

A more in-depth dive by Newman, from Marine Engineering and Shipping Age, January 1922:

On trials, Tampa made 16.2 knots against a planned 16. Effective range was 5,500nm at 9 knots, about what a plodding convoy was good for.

Here’s a better look at the plan of these 240s. Note the forward “officers’ country” for the eight members of her wardroom. The berthing for the 81 enlisted was over the engineering spaces.

Robert Scheina notes that:

“The 240-foot cutters followed the traditional cutter hull form, having a plumb bow and counter stern. These features proved particularly undesirable while on the International Ice Patrol. Heavy seas coming up under the counter caused severe shocks. The wardroom in this class was well forward; thus, the deck sloped upward. This feature was known as the ‘Honeywell Hill,’ in honor of the principal architect of the class.

Armament in peacetime would be two unshielded 5″/51 Mark 8 single mounts (new guns for the Coast Guard, only entering Navy service in 1911), a 3/50″ DP gun, a pair of 57mm 6-pounders (loved by the Coast Guard for “shots across the bow”), and a 1-pounder saluting gun. Weight and space were reserved on deck for multiple depth charge racks, while the 6-pounders could be swapped out with additional 3″/50s in time of war.

Modoc’s stern 5″/51 in gunnery practice during the ice season, 27 November 1928. Note the extra deck space for depth charge racks and projectors. NARA 26-G-11-27-28(20)

Another shot of Modoc’s 5″/51

Another shot of Modoc’s 5″/51 in peacetime practice

Note her 3″/50 was on a platform before the bridge:

One of Modoc’s two 6-pounders. Navy Secretary Edwin Denby (far right) and Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon (third from right) aboard the new U.S. Coast Guard cutter Modoc, prior to her first sailing, at the Washington Navy Yard, April 1922, LOC npcc.06082

When it came to peacetime, the typical magazine allowance was 100 5-inch Service rounds, 100 3-inch Service, 110 6-pounder Service, 60 1-pounder Target, and 110 6-pounder Blank charges. Also stored were 20 Torpedo “D” wrecking mines with another 20 TNT booster charges. This went out the window in wartime.

Likewise, with the Coast Guard long keeping the ability to send up to half of a cutter’s 89-man complement ashore to suppress assorted rowdies, bandits, and pirates, as needed, the class had an allowance of 53 “Landing Force Kits” each consisting of a M1903 Springfield rifle with bayonet, scabbard, and belt; a canteen with cup and cover, a haversack, and canvas leggings. For good measure, 25 M1911 pistols with belts and magazines were also included. Other goodies in the small arms locker included two Lewis guns, a single Thompson sub gun, two 22LR rifles and two .22LR pistols for marksmanship training; two .45-70 black powder line throwers, and four 1-inch Very pistols.

Landings, boardings, recoveries, and rescues were accomplished by eight boats: a 27-foot whaleboat, two 26-foot Monomoy surf boats, a 26-foot sailing launch, a 26-foot self-bailing surfboat, a 22-foot motor dinghy, and an 18-foot punt.

All four of the class (Tampa, Haida, Mojave, and Modoc, all named for Native tribes) were built by the short-lived Union Construction Company of Oakland, with Tampa laid down on 27 September 1920 and the last, Modoc, delivered on 14 January 1922.

Tampa class, 1929 Jane’s

240-foot Coast Guard cutters, likely Modoc, Mojave, and Tampa, September 1937 26-G-09-01-37(8)

Which sets the stage for us to…

Meet Modoc

Ordered in 1920 with the rest of her four-member class, the future Modoc was Yard No. 19. Launched  1 October 1921 with a bottle of sparkling cider smashed by a Miss Jean Lemard, Modoc commissioned 14 January 1922.

After completion, she headed via the Panama Canal to join sisters Tampa and Mojave on the East Coast while Haida remained on the West. Modoc’s first homeport was Wilmington, North Carolina, where she augmented and then replaced the old (circa 1899) 188-foot USCGC Seminole, with the latter eventually shuffled off to semi-retirement in the Great Lakes.

She is well remembered in Wilmington, which she called home for much of the next 18 years. She was captured by local photographer Louis T. Moore in her typical dock in front of the Customs House.

US Coast Guard Cutter Modoc in Wilmington, photo courtesy of the Historical Society of the Lower Cape Fear

US Coast Guard Cutter Modoc in Wilmington, photo courtesy of Historical Society of the Lower Cape Fear

Coast Guard Cutters Modoc and McAdoo dock at Wilmington, while the plodding ferryboat, Menantic, plies the waters by Moore

Modoc “defended” the town from faux buccaneers during the Feast of Pirates, which was held during the summers of 1927-29.

McKean Maffitt, secretary of the Feast of Pirates and Wilmington’s city engineer.

She also had some very real LE operations against bootleggers during Prohibition. Of note, the Tar Heel State maintained its own liquor ban from 1909 to 1935.

Modoc’s crew outside of the Customs House in Wilmington with smashed cases of smuggled hooch. Photo by Louis T. Moore

In the Ice

During the April-to-June ice season, when bergs from Greenland calve and drift south into the North Atlantic shipping lanes, Modoc, Tampa, and Mojave alternated 15-day stints on the International Ice Patrol, a service founded just after the loss of the Titanic.

Forward based out of either Boston or Halifax (it changed throughout the decade), these cutters tracked, day by day, the icebergs and field ice, determining their set and drift, then duly reporting their presence and location to the hydrographic office of the Navy while broadcasting the data by radio for protection of shipping. Each season in the 1920s typically tracked 400 large bergs.

It was customary for the cutter on station during the anniversary of the great liner’s loss to hold a ceremony. The skipper read prayers, three volleys were fired, and taps were sounded by the ship’s bugler. One such service aboard Modoc in 1925 was filmed and remains in public archives.

Memorial Service on board April 14 (in the late 1920s?), the Anniversary of the sinking of the S.S. TITANIC after colliding with an iceberg. Modoc was serving with the International Ice Patrol at the time. NH 45947

April 1928 saw Modoc as one of the spotting beacon ships off the Newfoundland for the German transatlantic plane Bremen, attempting a crossing from Dublin to St. John’s.

A modified Junkers W 33 monoplane, Bremen achieved the first successful non-stop airplane flight across the Atlantic Ocean from east (Baldonnel Aerodrome, Ireland) to west (Greenly Island, Quebec) in 36.5 hours, seen at Greenly above. Library and Archives Canada / PA-126212

Lifesaver

While not on Ice Patrol, Modoc performed the standard counter-smuggling, derelict destruction, law enforcement, and SAR that you would expect from a Coast Guard cutter.

She participated in several peacetime “saves.”

In February 1923, Modoc was sent from Wilmington to the lumber schooner Friendship, reported sinking in Oregon Inlet, about 90 miles south of Virginia Beach, and effected a rescue.

In January 1924, she rushed to the site of the Danish freighter Normania, reported foundered off Norfolk, but the steamer’s crew had already been rescued by the closer SS Henry R. Mallory just before their vessel plunged to Davy Jones.

In December 1926, Modoc responded to the sinking of the Coast Guard schooner Lincoln, which was destroyed by fire with a loss of six lives, several miles southwest of Cape Lookout Lightship. Lincoln, a seized rumrunner, was being used to carry oil and gasoline to lightships and stations.

In October 1926, Modoc responded to the de-masted schooner Purnell T. White, which had been caught in the northeaster off Cape Lookout and towed her to port.

January 1928 saw her tow the disabled motor yacht Cutty Sark, owned by Alexander Smith of Chicago and New York, into Charleston.

In January 1929, three barges loaded with lumber from Fernandina, Florida, to Georgetown, South Carolina, broke away from their tug in a storm, and one, the barge Belfast, foundered off Frying Pan Shoals, with Modoc saving her four-man crew.

March 1930 saw Modoc involved in the sweeping search for the missing yawl Nahma, owned by Mr. A. Felix Du Pont, with 12 souls, including his 19-year-old son Richard, aboard. They eventually turned up, but Nahma, Richard, again at the wheel, was lost off Cape Hatteras just two years later, the six aboard rescued by the Army transport Republic. Richard Chichester du Pont would meet his end in 1943, piloting an experimental glider at March Field in California, aged just 32, with a commercial carrier he had founded beforehand, now today’s American Airlines.

In February 1936, Modoc was sent to the aid of the 7,200-barrel Atlantic Refining Company tanker Albert Hill, bound from Philadelphia to Atreco, Texas, for a cargo, 200 miles off the coast of South Carolina. Soon after taking her under tow, the 435-foot Hill suffered an explosion, with the cutter rescuing all but four of her crew. Nonetheless, Hill was pulled into port and eventually returned to service after extensive repair at Robins Dry Dock in New York and was only scrapped in 1947.

In July 1936, Modoc was sent to search for the schooner Dewless, which started that summer’s biennial 635-mile Newport-to-Bermuda race and then promptly vanished. Dewless, owned and skippered by F. William Schnirring of New York, was located safe and sound two days later.

While on the Ice Patrol, in May 1930, the cutter documented an encounter with a white whale.

Boston Navy Yard, 24 June 1934. Top to bottom is USS Farragut (DD-348) to the left, a 250-foot Lake class USCG cutter to the right, a 240-footer, likely either Modoc or Mojave, USS Eagle PE-19, the battlewagons USS Texas (BB-35) and New York (BB-34), the French Sloop D’Entrecasteux, and the venerable frigate USS Constitution. (49629216003)

Not War, but You Can See It from Here…

When the Germans invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, Modoc was steaming off the Virginia Capes, conducting small arms gunnery drills. Ordered to put into Norfolk with leaves canceled and those detached recalled, she soon transferred 24 enlisted, nearly a third of her complement, to bring the large 327-foot USCGC Bibb up to a more warlike footing. The bigger cutter was soon bound for duty with the newly formed U.S. Neutrality Patrol in the North Atlantic.

Even with a reduced crew, Modoc soon was on patrol herself, trailing and identifying passing vessels offshore, exemplified by this entry from 15 November 1939, in the Atlantic.

This continued through 1940, with a break at the Coast Guard Yard in Curtis Bay for a quick refit, and patrols as far south as the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico.

Modoc began New Year’s 1941 on patrol in the Florida Straits and in early February, she responded to the distressed 2,512-ton Brazilian freighter SS Mahukona, which disappeared without a trace while sailing from Newport News to Rio.

By April, Modoc was in drydock at Algiers across from New Orleans, prepping for continued North Atlantic service, calling at her traditional home port of Wilmington by the end of the month. Sent from there to the Boston Navy Yard for weapon upgrades, including adding two water-cooled .50 cal machine guns, two depth charge racks and two Y-gun projectors to her stern, she steamed out of Beantown for the Gulf of Maine on 12 May 1941, beginning a North Atlantic patrol off Newfoundland two days later, in doing so relieving cutter Northland (WPG-49), whose mission was to patrol the convoy lanes and pick up survivors of merchantmen sunk by German U-boats.

On the afternoon of Saturday, 24 May 1941, the neutral USCGC Modoc was shadowing British Convoy HX-126 on the lookout for survivors of nine freighters and tankers sunk by Wolfpack West over 20-22 March. Her radiomen overheard British traffic concerning the sinking of the vaunted battlecruiser HMS Hood, sent to the bottom of the Denmark Strait with 1,400 of her crew by the battleship Bismarck that morning.

Soon enough, Modoc’s lookouts reported a mysterious man-of-war on the horizon, followed by a biplane, and three other warships in the distance. It turned out the first ship was Bismarck, the aircraft was a Swordfish torpedo plane from the carrier HMS Victorious, and the three trailing ships were the battleship HMS Prince of Wales and the cruisers Suffolk and Norfolk.

Managing to avoid fire from either side, Modoc was able to observe the Sword’s attack on the German battleship and the resulting flak, then slipped back into the mists as the faster ships sped on for their rendezvous with destiny.

Her deck log from that evening:

Still in her peacetime white and buff scheme, the British reportedly thought she was a yacht at first, then almost opened fire on her.

Coast Guard Cutter Modoc (WPC-46) and the German battleship Bismarck by James Flood https://www.jamesaflood.com/uss-modoc-cg-wpg-46/

Following this exciting patrol, Modoc reported for duty with the Navy on 1 June 1941 and was designated flagship of the South Greenland Patrol, serving in the waters of that frozen subcontinent through the rest of the year.

As noted by DANFS:

Transferred to the Navy by Executive Order No. 8929 of 1 November 1941, Modoc joined the Greenland Patrol, whose orders were to do “a little of everything.” This duty involved keeping convoy routes open, breaking and finding leads in ice for the Greenland convoys, escorting the convoys and rescuing survivors from torpedoed ships, constructing and maintaining aids to navigation, and reporting weather conditions. Ships of the patrol were also expected to discover and destroy enemy weather and radio stations in Greenland, continue hydrographic surveys, maintain communications, deliver supplies, and conduct search and rescue operations. All these duties, the Coast Guard performed with exemplary fortitude and faithfulness throughout the war.

War!

With the U.S. officially in the war after Germany declared war on it on 11 December 1941, following Pearl Harbor, Modoc was in Greenland’s waters. Sent back to Norfolk for six weeks of repairs and alterations in early 1942, she returned to Greenland on 26 April, escorting the oiler USS Laramie (AO-16), the latter filled with a vital cargo of gasoline and oil for Army bases on the island.

In May, she escorted the empty Laramie, SS Omaha, and SS Azra back to Boston. Then came subsequent convoy runs from Newfoundland to Greenland and back for the rest of the year, often working with sisters Tampa and Mohawk.

Modoc in WWII Greenland Patrol livery

USCG Modoc or Tampa seen in Greenland, LT JG George R. Boyce in foreground, October 1942, NARA

The Ice Patrol suspended during the war; on 19 March 1943, the massive 14,795-ton whale factory ship Svend Foyn collided with an iceberg 70 miles south of Cape Farewell while sailing with Convoy HX-229A from New York to Liverpool with a cargo of fuel oil. The vessel foundered two days later with the loss of 43 out of the 195 crew and passengers aboard, with the USCGCs Aivik, Algonquin, and Frederick Lee on scene, later joined by Modoc to transfer those plucked from the sea to the latter cutter for transport to St. Johns.

It was an epic rescue.

As related by DANFS

Due to the deep roll of the Modoc, operating without lights in the middle of the night, the taking on of the half-frozen survivors was a difficult feat. Several of her crew distinguished themselves by going down the net and working waist-deep in the icy water to haul half-numb survivors aboard. One man, Leonard W. Campbell (101-707) CBM, almost lost his life in this rescue work. He and two others–John T. Hendrix (200-373) CEM, and William F. Coultas (251-300) Sea1c, were commended, and each of them later received the Navy and Marine Corps Medal. The Svend Foyne finally sank with 24 persons reported trapped aft. When the vessel sank, the Modoc and Algonquin searched the position and heard cries for help, but could not sight any survivors. Nearly four hours later, she took aboard one man who died of heart failure an hour later due to the extreme cold of the water in which he had been immersed for hours.

Modoc steamed into St. Johns with 128 living men from Svend Foyne on 28 March 1943.

Returning to convoy work for the rest of 1943, Modoc joined the CGCs Storis and Comanche in a futile search for survivors of the lost USAT Nevada, which had gone missing in a storm off Greenland on 16 December.

During a stateside refit in 1944, Modoc landed her 5-inchers, Y-gun depth charge throwers, and .50 cals, kept her 3″/50s, added four 20mm Oerlikons, as well as 4 K-gun throwers and two forward Mousetrap ASW devices. She also picked up SF-1 and SC-3 radars and a QCJ-3 sonar. Not bad, given the circumstances.

Modoc, along with the cutters Tampa and Algonquin, spent part of March and April 1945 as ASW cats in the waters off Portland, Maine, chasing the “tame mouse” Italian submarine Goffredo Mameli (T.V. Cesare Buldrini) in exercises.

Remaining a fixture on the Greenland convoy routes the rest of the war, Modoc went to the assistance of the distressed HMT Strathella in February 1944, the steamer Chippewa in November 1945, and RMS Begun in December 1945.

Modoc returned to the Treasury Department in accordance with Executive Order No. 9666 of 28 December 1945.

Modoc 1944-45

She earned one battle star for her WWII service.

But she still had at least one more good sub-arctic rescue in her.

Damaged by heavy seas, the EC2-S-C1 type Liberty ship SS Henry Baldwin, carrying 589 troops, radioed for help (“Developed plate crack in starboard of after-deck. Extremely heavy westerly seas”) on 16 January 1946 from a position about 300 miles southeast of Cape Race, Newfoundland. Modoc, sailing back to the U.S., was ordered at once to her aid, and Baldwin limped into Argentia. After repairs, the freighter continued service for another 24 years.

Afterward, Modoc reported to Boston Navy Yard on 26 January for installation of weather equipment and repairs.

On 26 March 1946, Modoc inaugurated the first post-war International Ice Patrol, using radar and LORAN for the first time in the IIP’s history. Also, for the first time, patrol aircraft were used to assist the cutter– USCG PBY-5As and PB4Y-1s of VP-6CG out of Argentia.

Decommissioned 1 February 1947, just shy of 25 years of service, ex-Modoc was sold to Manuel Velliantis in Honduras.

She was converted for merchant use as a barco bananero (banana boat) and renamed Amalia V. Later registered in Ecuador in 1950 by Tropical Navigation Co., she was renamed Machala, and served as a merchantman until scrapped in 1964

Epilogue

Little exists of the Modoc outside of her logbooks and plans in the National Archives and the occasional relic on the collector market.

The Coast Guard recycled the name Modoc for use on the transferred WWII-era USS Bagaduce (ATA-194), which served as USCGC Modoc (WATA-194/WMEC-194) from 1959 to 1979. That 143-foot vessel saw an active post-military career, serving as a bed and breakfast and as a sea base with the Earthrace Conservation group.

Since the International Ice Patrol has been maintained by the Coast Guard, there has been no berg-related loss of life in the area during the annual season, which now typically counts. The last cutter patrol was by USCGC Spar in 1990, the mission transitioning to aircraft and, by 2016, a combination of aerial and satellite surveillance.

Thanks for reading!

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive

***

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