Category Archives: military history

Of Black Hulls, Buoys, and Grenades along the Mekong

While we’ve covered the Vietnam-era deployments of the U.S. Coast Guard’s 26 Point-class patrol boats (CGRON One) and the follow-on rotating mission of 31 blue water cutters with CGRON Three (the latter of which steamed 1.2 million miles, inspected 69,517 vessels and fired 77,036 5-inch shells ashore), there was a third series of unsung USCG deployments that still saw a good bit of action.

Between 1966 and 1972, at least four WWII-era 180-foot seagoing buoy tenders (USCGC Planetree, Ironwood, Basswood, and Blackhaw) were moved to Sangley Point, Philippines, from where they rotated to the waters around South Vietnam in 3-to-7-week stints, establishing a modern aids-to-navigation (ATON) system and training a motley collection of locals to keep tending them moving forward.

The Coast Guard Cutter Basswood works a buoy as busy Vietnamese fishermen travel to the open sea and their fishing grounds from Vung Tau harbor during her 1967 deployment. The cutter battled monsoon weather for a 30-day tour to establish and reservice sea aids-to-navigation dotting the 1,000-mile South Vietnamese coastline. USCG Historian’s Office photo

The 180-foot buoy tender USCGC Blackhaw (W390) in 1960, still with her circa 1943 3-inch mount behind her stack.

Blackhaw tending aids to navigation off Da Nang, Republic of Vietnam in September 1970, with RVN lighthouse service personnel aboard. Blackhaw spent 11 stints in Vietnamese waters while staged from the Philippines: 13 March- 6 May 1968; 24June-18JuIy 1968; 9 September-11 October 1968; 16 January- 4 March 1969; 16 April-3 May 1969; 16 June-3 July 1969; 24 October-7 December 1969; 23 April-18 May 1970; 24 October-10 November 1970; 13 January-7 March 1971; 25 April-17 May 1971.

While they carried a 3″/50 DP mount, Oerlikons, and depth charges when built, most of the 180s landed their topside armament during the 1950s, as it generally wasn’t needed to go that heavy while tending navigational aids stateside at the time.

This changed for the Southeast Asia-bound tenders, who added a pair of topside M2 .50 cal Brownings (later raised to eight!), as many as four M60 machine guns, and a serious small arms locker that included M1 Garands, M16s, M1911s, shotguns, spam cans of 10-gauge Very flares, depth charge markers, and grenades.

Lots of grenades.

Check out this 1970 ordnance draw from Sangley Point by Blackhaw:

The 7,000 rounds of .22LR are likely for recreational use, with the tender probably having a couple of rimfire pistols and rifles aboard for downtime target practice.

Working in the Vietnamese littoral, they came under enemy fire regularly and returned said fire. For example, in one incident in 1970, Blackhaw’s crew expended 132 grenades (!), 3,360 rounds of 5.56/.30 cal for rifles, 2,300 7.62 rounds for light machine guns, and 3,535 rounds .50 cal for heavy machine guns reacting to combat. Heady stuff for navigational aids guys!

Check out this deck log from a rocket encounter on Blackhaw while operating in conjunction with Navy Seawolf helicopters and PCFs.

Also, when anchored overnight within distance of shore, rifle-armed topside sentries typically dropped a grenade over the side every 20 minutes or so and/or fired off a Very signal to discourage enemy sappers from swimming out with limpet mines. Hence, the need for a pallet of hand grenades on a buoy tender.

More details on Blackhaw’s work, via a 1970 Proceedings article by LCDR Robert C. Powers, U. S. Navy, Former Logistics Plans and Requirements Officer, Staff, U. S. Naval Forces, Vietnam:

The basic plan was for the United States to provide material, technical advice, and funds to the Directorate of Navigation, who would provide buoy tender services. A staff study by Commander Coast Guard Activities Vietnam in April 1967 concluded that greater U. S. assistance was necessary in completing the desired improvements, and recommended full time use of a large buoy tender in Vietnam. USAID was to continue upgrading the Directorate of Navigation so that they could completely take over the aids to navigation mission by January 1969.

Coast Guard buoy tenders in the Pacific were reassigned, and the USCGC Blackhaw, (WLB-390) a 180-foot buoy tender, was employed full time for this task in January 1968. Her homeport was changed from Honolulu to Sangley Point in the Philippines. One officer and 14 enlisted men were added to the normal ship’s complement of six officers and 43 men. Six additional .50-caliber machine guns were installed, giving her a total of eight. Two 7.62-mm. machine guns were also added. The Blackhaw’s schedule was planned to provide about 40 days in-country per quarter, with no duties except for the job of Vietnam aids to navigation. In July 1968, the Joint Chiefs of Staff formalized this employment.

The Coast Guard has now installed and is operating 55 lighted buoys, 50 unlighted buoys, and 33 lighted structures in Vietnam. A small Coast Guard buoy depot has been established at Cam Ranh Bay, for in-country storage and maintenance of NavAid equipment. The Directorate of Navigation continues to operate those aids which were in place before Coast Guard involvement, but is not yet capable of relieving the Coast Guard in the maintenance of U. S. installed aids.

The aids to navigation detail remains in Saigon, attached to the Coast Guard Southeast Asia section. They schedule work for the Blackhaw and also repair light outages when the Blackhaw is not in the area.

Operation of a system of maritime aids to navigation in Vietnam is not the same as operating systems in the United States. Charts, for example, are poor, and accurately charted landmarks that may be used for buoy positioning are scarce. The channels, whether natural or dredged, are notoriously unstable. An example of this is the Cua Viet Entrance Channel Buoy 6. Established in 30 feet of water in October 1968, six months later the buoy became a shore light—high and dry. Enemy sappers have also been discovered and shot in the areas of moored buoy tenders. Viet Cong have stolen batteries from range lights. In Tan My, for instance, 50 batteries were lost in two months.

Several buoys are run down each month, usually resulting in a loss of lighting equipment. Within a representative four-month period, 40% of all unlighted buoys received damage as a result of collision, gunfire, and weather, and 70% of all lighted aids required extensive repair, recharge, and re-positioning. Before working on any buoy, a diver thoroughly inspects each buoy mooring for explosive charges.

Since active Coast Guard involvement in this task began, the maritime aids to navigation system in Vietnam has continued to improve. Harbormasters and pilots in all ports are happy with these improvements. Vietnamese personnel are on board the Blackhaw, while she is in-country, to become familiar with the system and maintenance methods.

The USCG turned over the ATON duties in South Vietnam to the locals on 31 December 1972, capping a forgotten footnote in the service’s history. As far as I can tell, none of the four tenders suffered any official combat casualties during their Vietnam service (with Agent Orange exposure being another matter).

Blackhaw earned a U.S. Navy Meritorious Unit Commendation as well as more Combat Ribbons than any other cutter.

She served in California waters until decommissioning in February 1993. Ship breakers stripped the former cutter of her valuable equipment, and the hulk was sunk as a target vessel. Nonetheless, she endures on the silver screen as she appears in the 1990 movie The Hunt for Red October as a Soviet icebreaker trailing the titular Typhoon-class SSBN during the opening sequence.

 

Warship Wednesday, October 8, 2025: Everlasting

Here at LSOZI, we take a break every Wednesday to explore the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period, 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, October 8, 2025: Everlasting

Library of Congress Call Number HAER CONN,6-NEWLO.V,1–1

Above, we see the camouflaged 180-foot Balsam/Cactus class sea-going buoy tender USCGC Evergreen (WAGL-295) during World War II while fighting the “Weather War” against the Germans on the Greenland Patrol. Note her SLa radar set on her mast and covered 3″/50 DP mount behind her stack. Harder to make out are her 20mm Oerlikons, depth charge tracks, Mousetraps, Y-guns, and WEA-2 series sonar set.

To be sure, she was a war baby, built in Duluth for an economical $871,946, but would go on to put in nearly a half-century of dedicated service to the country. She really set the bar for the term “multi-role.”

The 180s

In 1916, the Revenue Cutter Service and Lifesaving Service were merged to form the Coast Guard, to which the Bureau of Lighthouses was added on 1 July 1939, and as such, all U.S. lighthouses, tenders, and lightships became USCG installations and ships. The thing is, the lighthouse and buoy tender fleet was a hodgepodge of antiquated single-use vessels to which the Bureau had been looking to replace with a new series of 177-foot lighthouse tenders modeled after the USLHT Juniper, the last vessel designed by the Bureau.

Taking these plans, the Coast Guard made some changes and produced a 180-foot/950-ton single-screw steel-hulled ship that incorporated some new features that the USLHS never needed (an ice-strengthened bow, search and rescue equipment and mission, allowance for armament, etc. al). The first of these, USCGC Cactus (WAGL-270), was appropriated for $782,381 on 20 Jan 1941 and laid down at Marine Iron & Shipbuilding Corporation, Duluth, Minnesota, on 31 March.

Almost all of these hardy ships were built either at Marine or at Duluth’s Zenith Dredge Company very rapidly in three subclasses: the “A” or “Cactus” class, “B” or “Mesquite” class, and “C” or “Iris” class (with all named for trees and bushes). All ships of the three subclasses have the same general characteristics, but with slight differences (e.g., the “A/Cactus” class tenders may be differentiated from the other two classes of 180-foot tenders by their unique “A” frame main boom support forward and their large 30,000 gal fuel tanks that allowed an economical 17,000nm cruising range on their gentle diesel suite.)

The last to come off the ways was USCGC Woodbrush (WAGL-407), which commissioned 22 Sept. 1944. The building process entailed an average of 192,018 hours of labor per vessel.

USCGC Basswood through the Straits of Mackinac- 12 May 1944, a good example of the “180s.” Note the 3″/50 behind her wheelhouse facing over the stern as well as her 20mm mounts. ASW weapons, firefighting gear, and buoy-tending equipment were also shoehorned into these ships. Further, as shown above, they could break light ice, a feature that was to serve the units headed to the Pacific well!

Meet Evergreen

Our subject was laid down as hull number CG-102 at Duluth’s Marine Iron & Shipbuilding Company on 15 April 1942.

Laying the keel of USCGC Evergreen at the Marine Iron & Shipbuilding Yard, Duluth, MN, 15 April 1942 (USCG photo)

The future USCGC Evergreen under construction, 30 April 1942 (USCG photo)

She was launched just ten weeks later on the day before Independence Day.

USCGC Evergreen prior to her launching on 3 July 1942. This view shows the notched or cutaway forefoot that made the 180s suitable for icebreaking. (USCG photo)

USCGC Evergreen in Duluth – April 1943 (USCG photo)

Evergreen commissioned on 17 March 1943, LT John E. Klang, USCG, commanding. Her construction took but 336 days. The new tender spent her first month in service tending AtoN and breaking ice on the Great Lakes before heading to the Atlantic to get into the “Big Show.”

Weather War

Following a short shake down and availability at the Coast Guard Yard, Evergreen embarked four civilian U.S. Weather Bureau personnel, set off on 18 August 1943 from Boston bound for a spot between the Davis and Denmark Straits off Greenland dubbed Weather Station No. 2, a location she would rotate with the identical but geographically distant Weather Station No.1 off and on over the next ten months other than trips back to Boston or Argentia, Newfoundland when relived. She alternated this duty with sisters USCGC Sorrel and Conifer, each typically clocking in for three-week stints.

Official wartime caption: “The latest U.S. Coast Guard armed buoy tender is shown slogging into a head sea during an Atlantic storm in this oil painting by USCG Combat Artist Hunter Wood. This type carries heavy guns in case it runs upon a U-boat.” Released February 11, 1944. National Archives Identifier 205575897

Officially there to steam in a 100-square-mile area to provide weather and position reports to transatlantic flights as an aid to the Army planes flying over the Northern Route (from Newfoundland, Labrador, and Iceland to Britain), this was not “cake” duty as one cutter, Muskeget, was sunk on Weather Station by a U-boat in 1942, taking her entire crew and her Weather Bureau met detachment to the bottom.

Evergreen chased a few submerged sonar targets on her days in the box and bumped into wayward Allied shipping but came away unharmed.

Her weather patrol duty came to a close in July 1944, when she was transferred to the Greenland Patrol, leaving Argentia in the company of the 125-foot patrol boat USCGC Frederick Lee (WSC-139) to escort the merchant ships SS Biscaya and SS Aragon to the frozen Danish territory, firing 16 rounds from her Hedgehog on a suspicious sonar contact along the way.

She would remain part of the Greenland Patrol through 30 September 1945, heavily involved in cargo runs, icebreaking to keep harbors open, shuttling Navy and Army personnel around the region, coming to the assistance of the icebound cutter USCGC Northland, and handing over four German prisoners of war to the Provost Marshal at Narsarssuak on Halloween 1944.

Permafrost

Post-war, Evergreen was homeported in Boston and reverted to her original task: tending buoys. Her guns, depth charges, and Hedgehogs landed; she took on the more traditional black hull and buff superstructure livery of a USCG working boat.

In 1948, Evergreen began service as the International Ice Patrol’s unofficial oceanographic vessel, continuing the work of mapping the ocean currents near the Grand Banks and surveilling bergs during the season. Sheep-dipped Aerographers Mates (AG) and Sonarmen (SO) performed the task of carrying out oceanographic observations.

Evergreen served in this capacity off and on until 1982.

USCGC Evergreen in heavy seas on the International Ice Patrol in 1951. (USCG photo)

Evergreen circa 1950s with black hull and buff superstructure. Via the UW-Madison State of Wisconsin Collection call no. ANSIY6CLATV43H9A

The 180s, via the 1960 edition of Janes.

Evergreen was held up as a shining example of the IIP’s success on the occasion of the Patrol’s unofficial 50th anniversary in 1962, having been founded in the aftermath of the 1912 loss of the RMS Titanic.

An attached USCG PAO and camera crew dutifully captured her patrol that year and reported back on the USCG’s experimental efforts to read the tea leaves of ocean currents in the region, then mark and, if needed, destroy dangerous bergs headed for the sea lanes.

January 1962. Original caption: “The 180-ft. Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen passes a mammoth iceberg conducting an oceanographic survey for the International Ice Patrol.” NARA 26-G-5965

January 1962. Original caption: “Seen here being lowered into the water from the Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen is one of the three experimental oceanographic buoys which the 1962 Ice Patrol will use to delve into the secrets of the Labrador Current. This current carries icebergs farthermost south along the eastern slopes of the Grand Banks off Newfoundland, where they menace North Atlantic shipping. The buoy carries oceanographic instruments that automatically record the direction and volume of current and sea temperature, among other important data, and detect fluctuations and changes in the current. Information collected over long periods by the buoys will enable oceanographers to forecast more accurately the severity of the approaching ice season.” NARA 26-G-5967

January 1962. Original caption: “Personnel aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen, oceanographic vessel for the International Ice Patrol, are reading and recording temperatures of water samples collected in Nansen bottles during an oceanographic survey in the Grand Banks. Temperatures read to a thousandth of a degree. The Nansan bottles are numbered and represent various depths of the sea that have been tapped and measured. From 20 to 25 bottles spaced about 100 ft. apart on a cable are lowered into the sea from the current at one time with the aid of a winch. In some places, the sea floor is touched. An average survey depth is one mile, however. From information on temperature, salinity, surface and sub-surface currents collected from oceanographic research, the drift of icebergs may be predicted, and subsequently the most efficient use is made of the searching unit of the Ice Patrol.” NARA 26-G-5963

January 1962. Original caption: “A crew member takes a bearing on an iceberg in the Grand Banks off Newfoundland from the bridge of the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen during a recent International Ice Patrol. From the beginning of the U.S. Coast Guard’s formal undertaking of International Ice Patrol operations in 1914 until World War II, the tracking of icebergs and warning of ships passing through the dangerous ice zone in the North Atlantic was performed solely by Coast Guard cutters. Since 1946, the operation has relied mainly on aerial reconnaissance flights of Coast Guard planes operating out of Argentia, Nfld. Cutters still play a role in the Ice Patrol operations; however, in emergencies, when icebergs drift too near the shipping lanes, and require constant monitoring. Also, when the patrol places are grounded because of dense fog or foul weather. Another exception is the cutter Evergreen, which has performed much of the Ice Patrol’s oceanographic surveys during every patrol season.” NARA 26-G-6057

January 1962. Original caption: “Ignited thermite spews skyward a geyser of ice, steam, and smoke from a cave behind the 180 ft pinnacle of a mined iceberg 325 ft. long in Cape Bonavista Bay, Nfld. The charges were electronically detonated by Ice Patrol men from the Ice Patrol Cutter Evergreen after an unsuccessful try from a rubber raft. It was the second and final demolition test on this iceberg in which twenty 28-lb. charges of thermite were ignited. Thirteen 28-lb. thermite charges were tried the day before. Neither blast had any marked effect on the berg. The ice patrol followed as a basis for its iceberg thermite demolition tests, a theory of the late Professor H.T. Barnes of McGill University, Canada, who experimented with thermite in icebergs. His theory holds that the thermite’s high-temperature explosion would produce a thermal shock wave that could rupture an iceberg along its planes of natural stress, causing it to crumble and melt faster than normally.” NARA 26-G-5905

January 1962. Original caption: “Lieutenant (jg) Thomas F. Budinger, USCGR, last of the Ice Patrol iceberg lamp blacking party to abandon target, make a run for the lifeboat from the oceanographic vessel USCG Evergreen. One-half of this 75-ft. wide, 150-ft. long tabular iceberg in Cape Bonavista bay, Nfld., has been covered with 100 lbs. of carbon by three U.S. Coast Guard officers. The berg will be watched from the Cutter Evergreen for 12 hours, and the effects of the carbon will be evaluated. The theory of this test is based on the carbon’s potential capacity for holding the heat from sun rays, which can penetrate the iceberg and hasten its melting. Several days before this test, the Ice Patrol tried mining and igniting thermite incendiary charges on this same berg. There was no marked demolishing effect.” NARA 26-G-5907

In 1963, Evergreen was redesignated as the Coast Guard’s first dedicated oceanographic vessel, WAGO-295.

She soon received the first computer installed aboard a government-operated oceanographic research vessel. She also transformed her livery for the third time, earning an all-white scheme, replacing the black and buff that she had carried since the late 1940s. The hard-to-keep-clean livery and her frequent deployments earned her several nicknames during her far-flung service, including “Evergone,” “Cutter Neverseen,” “Never Clean,” and just “The Green.”

180-ft. U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen (WAGO-295), oceanographic vessel for the International Ice Patrol and other missions, shown here in new white paint coat. The cutter was formerly black.”; USCG Photo No. 1CGD1025631; 25 October 1963; photo by ENS John C. Goodman, USCGR.

USCGC Evergreen in Boston Harbor on 7 January 1964 (USCG photo).

Nonetheless, she had an impact.

As noted by a USCG Oceanography publication:

By 1965, Evergreen’s computer and lab had enabled much more rapid evaluations of berg data, in turn allowing for rapid warnings of the ice patrol. In 1966, Evergreen was sent on an oceanographic cruise of the tropical Atlantic off the coast of Brazil, where routine temperature, salinity, and oxygen measurements were made.

Evergreen’s work transformed how the Coast Guard addressed oceanography, and her sea-going lab was replicated on all 35 high-endurance cutters by 1968. An oceanographer’s mate rating was established for the service the same year, with an eight-week school set up on Governor’s Island.

After NOAA was created in 1970, Evergreen’s oceanographic role decreased but did not go away entirely, at least not for another decade.

Evergreen, late 1960s, now with the familiar racing stripe, which was adopted after 1967

USCGC Evergreen, between 1967 and 1968. 

In 1979, the IIP began using satellite-tracked oceanographic drifters to determine the currents and no longer had a need for an oceanographic vessel to conduct surveys in support of operations.

By this time, Evergreen had moved on to other duties anyway.

Walking the beat

Evergreen had survived an engine room fire and flooding in 1968 that sent her to the Coast Guard Yard for an extended period.

She took on the appearance quite different from the rest of her class, with a new superstructure, no buoy tending gear, a bow thruster (exotic for the 1970s), and improved electronics.

CGC Evergreen (WAGO-295) Oceanographic Conversion. 1971 plans NARA 301094596

Evergreen, 28 Feb 1973, with her much different “wide” superstructure without bridge wings and very little open deck space forward. 

Following her repair, she shifted homeport from Boston to the Yard, from where she still made ice surveys during the season but also engaged in other oceanographic and SAR research.

In 1974, the cutter’s homeport was changed to New London, Connecticut. She roamed from Labrador to the South Atlantic Bight in 1976, conducting current surveys.

Evergreen with an iceberg in February 1976 off the Grand Banks

Three of the 180s, Evergreen and sisters USCGC Citrus (WLB-300) and Clover (WLB-292) were eventually redesignated as Medium Endurance cutters (WMEC) to combat the rising drug trade and replace smaller 143-foot Sotoyomo-class fleet tugs that had been transferred from the Navy in the 1950s. Citrus was redesignated WMEC-300 in June 1979 to replace USCGC Modoc (WMEC-194, ex-Bagaduce), while Clover became WMEC-292 in February 1980 to replace the old tug Comanche (WMEC-202, ex-Wampanoag).

Citrus and Clover looked very much like Evergreen’s 1967-68 scheme.

USCGC Citrus in 1984 as WMEC

USCGC Clover at anchor, no date, in the 1980s WMEC arrangement.

Evergreen had her designation changed in May 1983 after the service’s oceanography program was all but shuttered.

These “white hulled” conversions entailed the removal of their remaining buoy handling gear and reassignment to predominantly LE and SAR patrol duties.

Armament was the provision to mount two M2 heavy and two M60 GPMGs (not always carried) as well as the cutters’ own small arms lockers. This was later augmented by two 40mm Mk 19 grenade launchers in the mid-1980s. They also picked up SPS-64(v)1 navigational radars.

Some of Evergreen’s more noteworthy drug seizures included that of FV Glenda Lynn off Long Island with 27 tons of marijuana on board in May 1983 and the 25 September 1984 seizure of the yacht Margie 150 mi SE of Nantucket Island carrying 4 tons of marijuana.

Bridge of USCGC Evergreen- 22 February 1983 (USCG photo)

End game

Starting in 1972 with the USCGC Redbud, which was decommissioned and transferred to the Philippines, the Coast Guard began whittling down the 180s. Before the end of the decade, four further 180s, all from the earliest Cactus variants (Balsam, Cowslip, Woodbine, and Tupelo), were taken out of service and disposed of.

Three of the 180s were lost in accidents.

  • Cactus ran hard aground in 1971, and the damage was so extensive that the government decided to decommission the vessel rather than repair her– nearly 30 years into her service career.
  • In January 1980, USCGC Blackthorn collided with a commercial tanker in Tampa Bay, Florida, and capsized the buoy tender, taking 23 members of her crew to the bottom.
  • In December 1989, USCGC Mesquite grounded on a rock pinnacle jutting from the bottom of Lake Superior, which damaged her so severely that the USCG decided to decommission the old gal, and she was scuttled by a commercial salvage company in 1990.

With the service moving to commission the new and much more capable 225-foot Juniper class of ocean-going buoy tenders, the writing was on the wall for the remaining 180s. Evergreen decommissioned on 26 June 1990 and was turned over to the Navy at Patuxent River two months later.

She wound up in deeper waters than the Titanic off the coast of North Carolina after giving up the ghost to Navy shelling and target practice during a fleet exercise on 25 November 1992.

She only narrowly avoided a coup de grâce from the brand-new USS Arleigh Burke (DDG 51), which found her, and then soon after lost her, before the destroyer’s 5-inch gun could be brought to bear.

As detailed by a former Burke crewman in CIC, the conversation went something like this:

“Bridge, Combat: Surface target lost by radar. Last bearing zero-zero-zero relative, range 6,000 yards.”

Followed shortly by:

“Bridge, Sonar: Underwater target acquired, bearing zero-zero-zero relative, range 6,000 yards, depth increasing.”

Evergreen earned the Unit Commendation twice, the Meritorious Unit Commendation three times, and almost too many Arctic Service Medals to count.

Epilogue

Little remains of Evergreen that I can find.

She has a few of her logs and war diaries, along with her 1971 plans, which have been digitized in the National Archives.

The Coast Guard Art Program has memorialized her in at least two paintings.

Midwatch Sighting by Terence Maley. Illumination flares show the looming 300-feet-high, quarter-mile-long iceberg directly in front of the Evergreen, a former Coast Guard cutter converted into an oceanographic research vessel, patrolling off the Grand Banks.

Evergreen at New London by Peter Eagleton. The Coast Guard Cutter Evergreen, launched in 1942, rests amid ice floes at New London, CT. This is her post-1971 configuration. 

Today, the Marine Science Technician (MST) rating, established in 1970 during the time of Evergreen’s service, carries on the legacy of the Oceanography Mate.

For more information about the 180s in general, the MARAD has a great 73-page PDF report on them here, while the LOC has a great series of images from the Planetree, a Mesquite subclass sister.

Meminisse est ad Vivificandum – To Remember is to Keep Alive

***

If you like 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/membership.htm

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.

With more than 50 years of scholarship, Warship International, the written tome of the INRO, has published hundreds of articles, most of which are unique in their sweep and subject.

PRINT still has its place. If you LOVE warships, you should belong.

I’m a member, so should you be!

Rock photoex

How about two great shots of NATO Standing Naval Force Atlantic (STANAVFORLANT) ships steaming in formation off the Rock of Gibraltar, February 1979.

The flagship destroyer HMCS Iroquois (280) is in the center, carrying a Canadian commodore, Capt.(later RADM) Gordon Lewis “Gordie” Edwards.

Just to the right (her port side) is the British Type 42 class destroyer HMS Sheffield (D 80), which would be lost just three years later in the Falklands War.

On the outside starboard is a Knox-class frigate USS Paul (FF-1080), while outside right is the West German Bundesmarine’s Köln-class frigate Lübeck (F224) with the Leander class frigate HMS Ariadne (F72), and the Dutch Van Speijk-class class (“Dutch Leander“) frigate Zr.Ms. Evertsen (F815) on either side of the Iroquois and Sheffield

Iroquois, a regular in STANAVFORLANT and later SNMG1 service, was kept steaming with a Maple Leaf from her stem until paid off in 2015, capping a 43-year career.

While Lubeck would be retired after 25 years of service, as the Germans tend to like newer ships, she would ironically be joined by Paul as a parts hulk in the Turkish fleet, while Ariadne would go on to a second career in Chile, with the latter sunk as a target in 2004.

Of interest, Evertsen, transferred to Indonesia as KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusuma (355) in 1989, is still in operation at some 60 years young.

KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusuma (355) ex Dutch Leander Zr.Ms. Evertsen (F815), photographed in 2024

As for SNMG1, it still sails after STANAVFORLANT’s founding some 58 years ago, and was recently in the high north operating within the USS Gerald R. Ford Carrier Strike Group as part of exercise Neptune Strike 25-3.

Among the participating forces are the Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Mahan (DDG 72) and Bainbridge (DDG 96), the Royal Danish Navy Iver Huitfeldt-class frigate Niels Jeul (F363), and the Swedish Navy Visby-class corvette HSwMS Helsingborg (K32).

That’s some expensive Grease

Milestone’s Premier Firearms Auction in suburban Cleveland recently chalked up $1.4 million smackers across its 1,206 lots. That’s not really unusual.

What caught my eye was the highest-selling piece.

A transferable and intact U.S. M3 “Grease Gun” submachine gun made sometime between 1943 and 1945 by General Motors’ Guide Lamp Division in Anderson, Indiana, the exclusive WWII manufacturer of the M3 and M3A1.

While Guide Lamp cranked out a whopping 606,694 of the plain Jane M3 variant, they only produced 15,469 of the improved M3A1s during the war.

The gun retained 95 percent of its metal finish, had a bright bore, and, as noted, was fully operational.

It came with an impressive selection of like-new support items in their original packaging: 12 mil-spec magazines, a complete parts kit, 29 rubber magazine covers, an oiler and sling kit, a 3-cell mag pouch, a canvas weapon cover, and two technical manuals.

It surpassed its estimate of $30K in selling for $40,950.

To keep that in perspective, during the war, the M3A1 was produced for a final adjusted cost of approximately $20.94 per unit.

Talk about inflation!

Japanese Light Machine Gun Surfaces in California Traffic Stop

A traffic stop in part of California known more for golf, wine, and scenic drives than full-auto World War II relics turned up something a bit unusual.

A sheriff’s deputy in Monterey County– home to the picturesque and affluent Carmel, Big Sur, and the Salinas Valley region– performed a stop last month on a female driver and a male passenger. An MCSO deputy, accompanied by his K9 Partner “Rocket,” arrived, and the dog alerted on “controlled substances and drug paraphernalia.” Going beyond that, deputies recovered a loaded M1911 pistol, a “loaded AR pistol carbine,” and a Japanese Type 11 light machine gun.

A press release from the agency stated that two of the three firearms did not have serial numbers, but did not elaborate on which two.

(Photo: MCSD)
(Photo: MCSD)
(Photo: MCSD)

Designed by “Japan’s John Browning,” Kijiro Nambu, the 22-pound Type 11 was the first light machine gun to be manufactured in the country when it went into production in 1922. A modification of the French Hotchkiss of WWI fame, Nambu’s design deleted that gun’s awkward 30-round feed strip for a hopper that could be stoked with 6.5mm Arisaka via five-round stripper clips designed for the inventor’s previous Type 38 rifle.

A Japanese Type 11 light machine gun in use with a canvas bag to catch brass, December 1924. (Photo: Library of Congress)

While some Type 11s were brought back to the U.S. by returning veterans and often made their way to display in VFW halls and museums– in deactivated conditions– functional and transferable Type 11s are scarce on the NFRTR and command a price typically over $10,000. I can only find three coming to the auction block in the past few years, and two of the three specify that the gun is in DEWAT condition.

Going beyond that, 6.5x50mm ammo is niche and runs around $2.50 a round for factory-new soft-point hunting loads, about all that is in production these days, for folks with sporterized Type 38s. However, and here is a significant caveat, the Type 11 had to use underpowered ammunition to function properly, rather than full-strength loads. So, if you had one that worked, good luck finding the right ammo for it to actually get cyclic.

Monterey County is strongly Democratic, and the Sheriff, progressive Tina Nieto, is a noted “champion for restorative justice. While long facing criticism for flouting local traffic laws herself, Nieto was outspoken on the traffic stop that netted the Type 11.

“This is a WWII era type of machine gun capable of firing over 500 rounds per minute,” said Nieto in a statement, although it is not clear if the Type 11 is serviceable, or if the gun was stolen from a collector or museum. “It’s a weapon of war. It’s a weapon of mass destruction.”

Knabb was booked into the Monterey County Jail and charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, possession of a machine gun, possession of a controlled substance while armed, possession of an unserialized firearm, and other charges. His bail was set at $50,000.

Despite being found with a “weapon of mass destruction,” Knabb was not listed as “in custody” on Oct. 5.

Korean Privateers

How about this great circa 1952 Kodachrome of an airstrip “somewhere in Korea” (likely Taegu Air Base, K-9) showing a USAF RF-51D photo Mustang (s/n 44-84775; c/n 44631, formerly F-6D) of the 45th Tactical Reconnaissance Squadron with a second RF-51D to its left while in the distance to the right you see two huge dark blue Navy Convair PB4Y-2 Privateers of VP-871 and a USAF Douglas R-4D1 Skytrain.

342-FH-4A39909-K90259, National Archives Identifier 176889420

The legendary Privateers weren’t a fluke, as no less than 22 Navy VP squadrons made 38 deployments to support the Korean War between 16 July 1950 and December 1953.

While most of these were with the new P2V-3/3W/5/6 Neptune (7 squadrons, 14 deployments) or PBM-5/5S/5S2 Mariner flying boats (8 squadrons, 14 deployments), at least seven squadrons of WWII-era PB4Y-2S Privateers (VP-9, VP-17, VP-22, VP-28, VP-42, VP-772, and VP-871) made 10 deployments. The last two Privateer squadrons mentioned (VP-772 and VP-871) were USNR units that were activated and rushed to the theatre, with planes often taken out of long-term storage.

PB4Y Privateer patrol planes of VP-23, in formation over Miami, Florida, July 1949. PB4Y-2 in foreground is Bu. no. 60006. Note that by this time, their dorsal gun mounts had been removed. 80-G-440193

The Privateers served in sea patrol, SAR, and night interdiction missions as well as supporting combat ashore. Of note, the reservists of VP-871, which is now VUP-19, earned its “Big Red” nickname during Korea for its role in night missions, dropping hundreds of red illumination flares to support allied air and ground units.

These “Lamp Lighter” or “Firefly” missions typically saw a P4Y rendezvous with four attack aircraft, search for truck convoys, and illuminate the targets for the attack aircraft, with each long-legged patrol bomber carrying as many as 250 flares.

During Korea, 5 PBMs and 6 P2Vs were lost in the conflict (including 16 KIA and 2 POW in combat-related crewmember losses), while only two Privateers were seriously attacked. Both of these were PB4Y-2Ss of VP-28, jumped off the coast of Red China by PRC MiG-15s on 20 September and 23 November 1952, respectively. Neither were lost, although one had to make an emergency landing in Okinawa.

All Navy PB4Y-2s were retired by 1954, though unarmed PB4Y-2G Privateers served until 1958 with the Coast Guard before being auctioned off for salvage, with many of those going on to work in the Western States as firebombers well into the 2000s.

USCG Coast Guard PB4Y-2G Privateers over San Francisco, 026-g-024-031-001

By the numbers, Port-au-Prince edition

For eight weeks this summer, 15 women and 128 men– the first element of 700 of the new Haitian Armed Forces (FAD’H) — were subjected to basic military training at Mexico’s Regional Center for Individual Combat Training (CRCTI) in San Miguel de Los Jagüeyes, north of Mexico City, where they practiced personal defense and shooting and “learned about human rights.”

They arrived back home in late September.

Dressed in woodland BDUs with Haitian flag shoulder patches, they seem to have been “trained by the numbers” with donated Mexican HK G3s.

The training is part of an expanding defense collaboration under a 2018 agreement between Mexico and Haiti, with Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, and France also conducting similar but in smaller 20-50 member courses.

The program is part of Haiti’s effort to rebuild its army, disbanded in 1995 by Aristide in an effort to consolidate control after deposing (with massive U.S. help) the military council of School of the Americas-trained Gen. Raoul Cedras that previously ran the country.

Revived in 2017 by now-slain President Moise, the FAd’H only numbers about 1,300 soldiers alongside 9,000~ thoroughly demoralized national police officers tasked with protecting nearly 12 million people. They are facing open street violence against an estimated 200 organized criminal gangs, with the country running 1,500 violent deaths per quarter.

In 1994, the lightly armed FAd’H numbered 41 companies (6,200 men) while the paramilitary Haitian Gendarme had 11 companies (1,000 men).

A 900-strong (of 2,500 pledged) Kenya-led Multinational Security Support Mission (MSSM) was deployed last year to help fight the gangs, but it has stalled and is to be replaced, with the U.S. shopping around its allies for a follow-on, theorized 5,500-strong force to pick up the pieces.

Volunteer countries have been scarce.

Breaking out the Blues

Although some perma-hot stateside posts such as in Southern Florida as well as overseas warm water bases at in Bahrain, Cuba, Diego Garcia, Hawaii, Guam, et. al never shift uniforms (while UK-based Bluejackets are always authorized to wear winter uniforms), for much of the Navy, the first week of October sees the summer whites replaced by winter blues, which continue to be authorized until the following April/May.

Some regions, such as Georgia, Mississippi, and Texas, delay the change to blues until as late as November or December, but in general, the tradition, established in 1841, endures.

USS Augusta (CA-31), ship’s officers, circa 1937. Courtesy of Capt. Pat Henry., USN (RET), 1973. Catalog #: NH 78378

USS Augusta (CA-31), ship’s company, circa 1936. Courtesy of CRM W.R. Lucas, USN (RET), 1973. Catalog #: NH 78372

New Uniforms for the Pontifical Swiss Guard

So the Swiss Guards introduced a new uniform this week.

Now calm down, the classic “Michelangelo” enlisted Gala uniform (which was introduced by commandant Jules Repond in 1914, to a design inspired by 16th-century frescoes of Raphael of the Swiss Guard) isn’t going away.

You know, this one, seen in full ceremonial (with white collar and armor) and standard, with Basque hat, formats:

This uniform is worn by the Swiss Guard’s 85 Hellebardiers and 41 NCOs when on normal ceremonial duties during the day.

Which is covered by a waterproofed Mantle in inclement weather.

Except for special occasions, the unit’s nine officers and chaplain wear business suits, and when more formality is needed, such as for Easter services and swearing-in ceremonies, they wear this rarely seen red velvet number.

Then there is the more common so-called “Night and Exercise uniform,” which is used, as its name would imply, by after-hours guards as well as those in less public-facing areas, such as along the roads and at the entrance to St. Anne’s.

The dark blue and more fatigue Swiss Guard Exercise uniform.

They even wear them in the 100-mile march in 4 days at Nijmegen every year, where they march with the regular Swiss Army’s contingent.

And of course, as all members are well vetted Swiss Catholics who have completed their Swiss military service, there is a training uniform as well.

Plus, for deployed service outside of the Vatican, every Swiss Guard, officer, and man has a well-cut issued dark suit.

All those will remain in service.

What is changing is the “Repräsentationsuniform,” which is only used by the Guard’s nine officers for things such as receptions and official dinners that need to be more dressy than the standard “duty” business suit, but where the red, velvet, and very delicate Gala-uniform is not appropriate. After all, food and velvet do not mix.

The old Repräsentationsuniform. It is based on the circa 1870s Swiss Army Ordnance uniform.

The new Repräsentationsuniform is a bit more, well, it’s a bit more.

If you ask me, it looks like the House Atreides undress uniforms of Dune, 1984.

David Lynch would be proud.

Going home

How about this great period Kodachrome of the New Mexico class battleship USS Idaho (BB-42) steaming through the Panama Canal with her glad rags flying, en route to the U.S. east coast for epic Navy Day celebrations in October 1945.

National Archives 80-G-K-6572

Commissioned in March 1919, she came too late for the Great War. Idaho only managed to escape being at her traditional home on Pearl’s Battleship Row on December 7, 1941, by being transferred to the Neutrality Patrol in the Atlantic just six months before the Japanese attack.

Headed back to the Pacific, Idaho earned seven battle stars for her World War II service and was present in Tokyo Bay when Japan formally surrendered on 2 September and was ordered to the East Coast on 7 September, carrying 600 veterans stateside in addition to her crew.

Tough as a two-dollar steak, off Okinawa alone, Idaho fired 2,338 14-inch shells, 6,487 of 5-inch, and another 4,647 of 40mm in NGFS.

« Older Entries Recent Entries »