Category Archives: weapons

Non, je ne regrette rien

70 years ago this month.

January 1954 – French Indochina. Legionnaires of the recently reformed 1st Foreign Parachute Battalion (1er Bataillon Etranger de Parachutistes) crouching, stationary, during a patrol west of a little hamlet in the heart-shaped Mường Thanh Valley called Diên Biên Phu, long before it was infamous.

Daniel Camus/ECPAD/Defense Ref. : NVN 54-9 R43

Note the floppy chapeau de brousse bush hats, TAP 47 “lizard” camo, and hallmark MAT-49 SMGs: the French Indochina experience at its peak.

Formed at Khamisis, Algeria on 1 July 1948, 1er BEP shipped out to Indochina just four months later and would remain in the embattled colony during its entire existence. It was reportedly full of hard cases with prior combat jumps, including several former SOE/OSS types, Sky Soldiers, Paras, Paracadutisti, and Fallschirmjäger who has served under a half dozen flags in the Big Show.

They would make a series of spectacular airborne raids and jumps that have been all but lost to history including dropping 580 men into Haiphong on 18 March 1949, landing two companies at Phu Doan and another at Tuyen Quang during Operation Pomone I in April 1949 to destroy Viet Minh depots, 412 men at Phu Lo Xoc at the end of that month, a full battalion-sized raid on Phu Doan on 7 May 1949, captured Tinh Luyen in an 18 August 1949 airdrop, dropped a company to reinforce Hoa Binh in November 1949, raided Quang Nguyen on 20 April 1950, was involved in the brigade-sized mass drop (along with 2d BEP and 3d BPC) on Phu Doan during Operation Marion on 11 September 1950, and dropped in the tragic rescue at That Khe in October where an entire company was annihilated and its others decimated, leading the battalion to be disbanded on December 31, 1950.

Reformed, they lept into Cho Ben in November 1951 in Operation Tulipe.

Bled out, they had to be reformed extensively over the next two years.

They were only at full strength and para-qualified in November 1953 when they were pinned to Operation Castor– seizing the Mường Thanh Valley and fortifying Diên Biên Phu near the border of present-day Laos, essentially Giap’s backyard.

On D-Day on Castor, 20 November 1953, 2,650 men of GAP; 2/1 RCP, 1 & 6 BPChoc parachuted into the valley, meeting up with 25 pathfinders of GCMA who had landed the night prior. On D+1, 1,400 men of our 1er BEP, along with 2 GAP, and 8 BPChoc parachuted in. D+2 saw 485 Vietnamese paras of 5 BPVN leap in followed by a mortar company and light artillery battalion.

Castor was carried out with five squadrons of WWII-era C-47 Dakotas and one of recently supplied (CIA manned) C-119 Flying Boxcars. In all, just over 5,000 men would be parachuted into the valley in four days– the largest combat airdrop for any country since the Varsity jumps over the Rhine in March 1945.

It would be 1er BEP’s final jump.

Dien Bien Phu, René Pleven, Minister National Defense, presents decoration to fanion 1st BEP Feb 1954. Three months later the unit would no longer exist and the pennant was destroyed rather than be captured

 

Captain Cabiro, commander of the 4th company of 1st BEP (Bataillon Etranger de Parachutistes) is smoking a Gauloises cigarette. Note the Luger P08 he picked up in 1944 and the American handie-talkie radio

Indochina 1954, Officers newly reformed 1er BEP. TAP 47 lizard camo, Mauser bayonet, US M1 helmets, and handie-talkie

Indochina War, Dien Bien Phu, January 1954. A lieutenant of French 1er BEP recon unit.

With every member of the battalion either killed, wounded, or captured at Diên Biên Phu during the later 54-day siege of the outpost in 1954, 1er BEP would be reconstituted in name only on 18 May 1954– two weeks after the battle.

Following a shift to Algeria during the French withdrawal from Indochina it would be redesignated the 1st Foreign Parachute Regiment (1er Régiment Etranger de Parachutistes, 1er REP) in September 1955, a unit that earned further glory in the Suez and fighting in North Africa only for that unit to be dissolved for good for its part in the 1961 Algiers putsch against De Gaulle.

The regiment’s parade song was “Non, je ne regrette rien” (“No, I regret nothing”), by Edith Piaf.

Tea, Rope, and Tommy Guns

80 years ago this morning:

Men from British Army’s No. 9 Commando “having a cuppa” on the morning following a raid on the night of 29/30 December near the Garigliano river in Italy as part of Operation Partridge, a diversionary attack behind Jerry’s lines to cover the withdrawal of the X Corps. They marched back 29 gagged and bagged German POWs for intel purposes but sadly lost nine of their own.

Image by SGT Mott – No 2 Army Film & Photographic Unit, via the Imperial War Museums, Catalog IWM NA 10449

Note the array of weapons carried by the cap comforter-clad and ash-faced Commandos including M1928 Thompsons, the standard No. 4 Enfield .303.

Several other images exist in the IWM of No. 9’s special ops crews from the same period.

Note the M1911A1

THE BRITISH ARMY IN ITALY 1944 (NA 12469) A member of No. 9 Commando at Anzio, equipped for a patrol with his Bren gun, 5 March 1944. Copyright: © IWM. Original Source: http://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item/object/205204525

Note the toggle rope arrangement, a classic bit of Commando kit from WWII

The Toggle rope was (supposedly) very useful

As noted by the Commando Veterans organization about Operation Partridge, both the rope and the unit’s bagpipes played a tactical role in the fighting:

On the 29th Dec. operation “Partridge” took place. It started very badly, as the Navy landed the Commando 95 mins too late and 1000x away from the correct beach. Thus daylight found the Commando still on the enemy side of the river. At the mouth of the river the main body of the unit returned by DUKWs, but 4 and 6 Tps had to cross the river 2,700 yards up from the mouth by swimming and use of ropes. This they successfully achieved, bringing back their casualties. The bagpipes were very effectively used on this operation. When HQ had established itself at the mouth of the river most of the personnel made no attempt to dig themselves in. After one Jerry stonk, the C.O. says they dug so fast, he literally saw them sink into the ground.

Formed originally as the 2nd Special Service Battalion by amalgamating No. 6 and No. 7 Independent Companies in the scary Autumn of 1940 when Britain stood alone against Mr. Hitler, they were soon redesignated No. 9 Commando.

After raids along the coasts of occupied France (Operations Sunstar and Chariot), raids in the Med against the Italian islands of Tremiti and Pianosa, and the invasions of Italy as shown above, they took a vacation in occupied Greece then returned to “The Boot” for Operation Roast in 1945.

Disbanded in 1946, the Army Commando unit carries the name of no less than 102 men lost during the war on its Rolls of Honor. 

Gripen News

Saab is celebrating the delivery of another advanced Gripen E, #4107, to the Brazilian Air Force. The Swedes have at least 60 E variants on order and Brazil has ordered 28 E-series and 8 F-series two-seaters for SEAD work for starters, with the Brazilian planes eventually to be assembled domestically at São Bernardo do Campo.

This is the seventh Swedish-made Gripen delivered to Brazil. 

Is the Gripen E set for combat against Venuzealan F-16s and Su-30s over the skies of Guyana?

Maybe.

Likely not, but the probability is never zero. 

What’s so good about the Gripen E?

First introduced in 1996, over 250 earlier Gripen A/B and C/D-series aircraft have been produced over the past 15 years for a half-dozen countries from Europe to Thailand and South Africa.

But the E is not your daddy’s Gripen.

The Gripen E, or Super Gripen, uses a new engine, the GE F414G (developed from the Super Hornet’s engine) which allows it to supercruise at Mach 1.1, as well as a Raven ES-05 active electronically scanned array (AESA) radar (based on the Leonardo Vixen), and has significantly increased internal fuel capacity that gives it something like 40 percent greater range. It also has two additional underwing hardpoints than the older planes.

Splinter Camo Saab Gripen E of flygflottilj F 7 armed with Meteor and IRIS-T missiles

In short, it is a budget answer to the F-18E and F-35A while falling technologically somewhere between the two.

Saab recently managed to get footage of operational Swedish Gripen E and legacy Gripen C spending some quality time together.

Enjoy.

Coasties Swatting Vals on the Cape

As a follow-up to our coverage of the 80th passing of the Cape Gloucester operations that saw the 1st Marine Division hit the beaches on the day after Chrismas 1943, we touched on the fact that a lot of the Gators used in the op were Coast Guard-manned.

In fact, as detailed by the Foundation for Coast Guard History:

Landings at Cape Gloucester were conducted by Coast Guard-manned LSTs 18, 22, 66, 67, 68, 168, 202, 204, and 206.

LST-22 shot down a Japanese “Val” dive bomber while LST-66 was officially credited with downing three enemy aircraft. Two of her crew were killed by near misses. LST-67 brought down one Japanese dive bomber while LST-204 shot down two and the gunners aboard LST-68 claimed another. LST-202 claimed three enemy planes shot down.

USS LST-66 gunners shot down three Japanese bombers in the battle off Cape Gloucester, New Britain on 25-27 December 1943 and they are justly proud of their marksmanship. They call their LST the “Little Joe,” in honor of a Coast Guard shipmate who was killed in that battle. Left to right; S1/c Cleo Kidd, Perkins, Oklahoma, RM2/c Kenneth Gundling, West New York, N.J. MMoM2/c Julio Pascuito, Hyde Park, Mass., and F1/c John Langston Newport, Arkansas. (US National Archives Identifier 205584225, Local Identifier 26-G-2108, US Coast Guard photo # 2108 by Coast Guard Photographer Halscher.)

Aboard USS LST-66 Coast Guardsman Rudolph Broker, coxswain, examines the hole pierced in an armored gun shield by a Japanese bomb fragment during an air attack, 25-27 December 1943 off Cape Gloucester, New Britain. The fragment wounded Broeker slightly, but he stuck to his gun post and helped knock out one of the attacking Japanese bombers. Two others were bagged by the Coast Guard gunners. Twice attacked by enemy aircraft, four near misses caused minor damage, with two killed and seven wounded. The ship’s gunners shot down three enemy aircraft. (US National Archives LST-66 War Diary, Identifier 78270636, Local Identifier 26-G-2112, US Coast Guard photo 2112 by Coast Guard photographer Halscher.)

During WWII, the Coast Guard lost 1,918 men— 574 in combat– while under Navy service before they were returned to the Treasury Department on 1 January 1946.

A New Carry 10mm?

Earlier this year SIG Sauer followed up on its first striker-fired 10mm handgun with something a bit more compact – and I’ve have all the details and some insights after kicking one around for a couple of months.

In early 2022, SIG debuted the new caliber option for its hugely successful P320 platform of pistols: the 15+1 capacity 10mm XTen. I extensively evaluated one with box after box of punishing 10mm loads and was impressed with it, the biggest complaint being that its size limited carry options.

Well, the company has an answer to that with the new XTen Comp.

Still chambered in potent 10mm Auto and using the same 15-round flush-fit magazine as the full-sized XTen, the (gently) smaller XTen boasts a 3.8-inch bull barrel instead of the standard 5-incher as seen on its big brother. This also shortens the slide and takes some weight (a quarter pound) off the scales.

Compare in size the XTen Comp, left, with the full-sized XTen. Note they have the same height and width but a shorter frame and top half in terms of length.

Plus, it has an open-top “integrated expansion chamber” that runs past the muzzle of the 3.8-inch barrel, a design that turns it into a ported compensator that cannot come loose with firing. SIG uses this on lots of its Comp model pistols, including 9mm P320s and the P365, and the company says it drops felt recoil by as much as 20 percent.

In initial testing, I found the compensated slide on the XTen Comp to have a better recoil impulse than either the full-sized XTen or the FN 510 Tactical which I tested recently.

More in my column at Guns.com.

The Final Marauder Reports

The U.S. Army’s 5307th Composite Unit (Provisional), was not a big organization.

Grouped into three battalions each of 963 men and 139 horses/mules plus a K9 platoon, its all-up TOE was just 2,997 officers and men– basically that of an understrength light infantry brigade. Its largest artillery was 81mm mortars. 

Code-named “Galahad” and led by Brig. Gen. Frank D. Merrill, they became the larger-than-life “Merrill’s Marauders” as they cut a swath across occupied Burma in 1944, marching 1,000 miles in six months (four of those in combat) from India to seize the Japanese-held airfield in the city of Myitkyina.

Now, the last of the Marauders, Russell Hamler, who began the war as a horse soldier in the 27th Cavalry before he volunteered for what would become the 5307th, has passed at age 99, closing a chapter in military history.

The lineage of the Mauraders passed to the 75th Ranger Regiment, which keeps the memory alive.

Warship Wednesday, Dec. 27, 2023: Battlebarge Unimaktica

Here at LSOZI, we take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1833-1954 period and will profile 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

Warship Wednesday, Dec. 27, 2023: Battlebarge Unimaktica

Above we see the 5″/38 DP Mk 12 forward mount of the 311-foot Casco-class high endurance cutter Unimak (WHEC-379) going loud sometime between 1982 and 1985. A WWII Battle of the Atlantic veteran, at the time of the above snapshot she was the last of her class in U.S. maritime service, four decades after joining the fleet, and still had a couple more years to go. The mighty Unimak began her journey 80 years ago this month.

The Barnegats

Back in the days before helicopters, the fleets of the world used seaplanes and floatplanes for search and rescue, scouting, long-distance naval gunfire artillery spotting, and general duties such as running mail and high-value passengers from ship to shore. Large seaplanes such as PBYs and PBMs could be forward deployed to any shallow water calm bay or atoll where a tender would support them.

Originally seaplane tenders were converted destroyers or large transport-type ships, but in 1938 the Navy sought out a purpose-built “small seaplane tender” (AVP) class, the Barnegats, who could support a squadron of flying boats while forward deployed and provide fuel (storage for 80,000 gallons of Avgas), bombs, depth charges, repairs, and general depot tasks for both the planes and their crews while being capable of surviving in a mildly hostile environment.

The United States Navy Barnegat-class seaplane tender USS Timbalier (AVP-54) with two Martin PBM-3D Mariner flying boats from the Pelicans of Patrol Squadron 45 in the late 1948. Timbaler´s quadruple 40mm gun mount on the fantail was added in around 1948. National Archives #80-G-483681

The United States Navy Barnegat-class seaplane tender USS Timbalier (AVP-54) with two Martin PBM-3D Mariner flying boats from the Pelicans of Patrol Squadron 45 in late 1948. Timber’s quadruple 40mm gun mount on the fantail was added around 1948. National Archives #80-G-483681

The 41 planned Barnegats were 2,500-ton, 311-foot long-legged auxiliaries capable of floating in 12 feet of water. They had room for not only seaplane stores but also 150 aviators and aircrew. Their diesel suite wasn’t fast, but they could travel 8,000 miles at 15.6 knots.

Barnegat class tender plans

Originally designed for two 5-inch/38-caliber guns, this could be doubled if needed (and often was) which complemented a decent AAA armament helped out by radar and even depth charges and sonar for busting subs.

All pretty sweet for an auxiliary.

We’ve covered them in the past including the horse-trading and gun-running USS Orca, the former “Queen of the Little White Fleet” USS Duxbury Bay (AVP-38), and the 60-year career of USS Chincoteague (AVP-24), but don’t worry, they have lots of great stories.

Meet Unimak

Laid down on 15 February 1942 at Harbor Island, near Seattle by Associated Shipbuilders (one of at least four of her class constructed at the yard), our tender would carry on the “Bay” naming convention of the rest of the Barnegats by being the first U.S. Navy ship named in honor of the bay on the southern side of windswept volcanic Unimak Island, in the Aleutians.

Unimak Island, Shishaldin Volcano. Part of the Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Vernon Barnes, USFWS.

The future USS Unimak was christened at Seattle, Washington, on 29 May 1942. The sponsor was Mrs. H. B. Berry. Photograph from the Bureau of Ships Collection in the U.S. National Archives. NHHC 19-N-58542

USS Unimak (AVP-31) was commissioned on 31 December 1943, CDR Hilfort Craft Owen, USN (USNA 1927), in command.

USS Unimak (AVP-31) At Seattle, Washington, on 31 January 1944 shortly after her delivery. Note her camouflage, two forward 5-inch mounts, and radar fit although it does seem as if some of her gun directors have been airbrushed out. Photograph from the Bureau of Ships Collection in the U.S. National Archives. Catalog #: 19-N-61152

War!

Although built in the Pacific Northwest, it was deemed Unimak was needed in the Atlantic and, following shakedown and running supplies to seaplane bases on the Pacific coast of Central America including Santa Elena Bay, Ecuador, and at Aeolian Bay, Battra Island, in Galapagos group, she crossed the Ditch into the Caribbean in April 1944.

Following a trip carrying men and supplies to Barranquilla, Colombia, she escorted the converted Lykes steamer SS Genevieve Lykes— then USS Valencia (AKA-81) — to Panama, from where she would continue west to take part in the invasion of Okinawa.

Unimak then spent the rest of 1944 at the disposal of Fleet Air Wing Three (FAW-3) out of NAS Coco Solo in the Canal Zone which at the time included PBM-3 Mariner flying boats of VPB-74, VPB-201, VPB-206, VPB-207, VPB-209, and VPB-215 and the PB2Y-3 Coronados of VPB-1 and VPB-15, PV-1 Ventura of VB-141, and the PBY-5A Catalinas of VPB-84.

Notable incidents during this period included three in July 1944– coming to the aid of the torpedoed T2-SE-A2 tanker SS Kittanning (which had been hit by U-539 under Kplt Hans-Jürgen Lauterbach-Emden), the search for lost Navy blimp K-53, and the recovery of a crewman from a lost FAW-3 aircraft. She helped nurse the still-afloat Kittanning into Panama, collected nine crew from K-53 and sank her floating wreckage with 40mm shells, and recovered the severely burned FAW-3 aviator, photographing his remains for further possible identification, and consigning him to the deep with full honors.

After being relieved on duty to FAW-3 by one of her sisters in December 1944, Unimak shipped up the East Coast and spent Christmas at Boston Navy Yard under refit. She would remain there until April 1945 when she crossed the Atlantic to bring back men and equipment from England.

On a second trip post-VE-Day, VPB-103 and VP-105, after flying their PB4Y-1s across the Atlantic from Europe, had their ground staff and cargo sent across aboard the Unimak, sailing from Bristol, England on 4 June 1945 and arriving at Norfolk on the 14th.

Then came Pacific service, Unimak chopped to the authority of FAW-4 out of Adak, Alaska– passing her namesake bay– on 13 September 1945 after a trip to pick up military personnel from the outposts at far-flung Palmyra (22 August) and Johnston Island (25 August) then dropping them at Pearl Harbor (27 August) where she observed VJ-Day. While serving with the frozen flying boats of FAW-4, she called at Massacre Bay on Attu (21 September), the Soviet Pacific Fleet base at Petropavlovsk in Siberia (25 September) and back to U.S. waters at Kodiak (30 September), shuttling aircrews and ground personnel back home.

Wrapping up her post-war clean-ups, Unimak was decommissioned on 26 July 1946. Records do not indicate she was eligible for any battlestars. A shame.

Likewise, her sisters were lucky, and none of the 35 completed (30 as seaplane tenders, four as PT boat tenders, and one as a catapult training ship) were lost in WWII.

Jane’s 1946 listing for the Barnegat class, note Unimak.

White Hull Days

With the Coast Guard losing many of their large pre-war cutters during the conflict (the 10 Lake class 240-foot vessels given as part of the “Destroyers for Bases” deal, the new 327-foot Treasury-class cutter Alexander Hamilton sunk by U-132 while patrolling the Icelandic coast in 1942, and the USCGC Escanaba blown up on convoy duty in 1943), and a new series of Ocean Stations established immediately following the war, the service needed more big hulls. The Lakes were meant to be replaced by the downright roly-poly 255-foot Oswego class gunboat/cutters, but it was thought that the Navy’s excess 311-foot Barnegats could help on Ocean Station duty at least for a while.

Between April 1946 and November 1949, the Navy would transfer no less than 18 surplus Barnegats to its eternally cash-strapped sister service. In USCG parlance, they became known as the “311” class after their overall length, or the Casco-class, after USS Casco (AVP-12), which was loaned to the U.S. Coast Guard on 19 April 1949.

As noted by the USCG Historian’s Office:

The fact that the class was very seaworthy, had good habitability, and long-range made them well suited to ocean-station duty. In fact, an assessment made by the Coast Guard on the suitability of these vessels for Coast Guard service noted:

“The workmanship on the vessel is generally quite superior to that observed on other vessels constructed during the war. The vessel has ample space for stores, living accommodations, ships, offices, and recreational facilities. The main engine system is excellent. The performance of the vessel in moderate to heavy seas is definitely superior to that of any other cutter. This vessel can be operated at higher speed without storm damage than other Coast Guard vessels.” [Memo, CDR W. C. Hogan, Commanding Officer, CGC MC CULLOCH to Commandant “SUBJ; CGC MC CULLOCH, Suitability [sic] for use as CG Cutter.,” 12 February 1947; copy in 311-Class Cutter File, USCG Historian’s Office.]

Once they were accepted into Coast Guard service, a number of changes were made in these ships to prepare them for ocean-station duty. A balloon shelter was added aft; there were spaces devoted to oceanographic equipment and a hydrographic winch as well as an oceanographic winch were added.

They would (eventually) land most of their wartime armament and sensors, retaining just the forward 5″38 DP single, but pick up a Mk 11 Mousetrap ASW device, SQS-1 sonar, and SPS-23 (later SPS-29A/B/D) radar in case they were needed for convoy escorts in a war with the Russians. Some also later gained a pair of Mk 32 Mod 5 ASW torpedo tubes.

In Coast Guard service, they became WAVPs at first– although the service did not typically operate their seaplanes in an expeditionary fashion, starting with hull number 370 to not step on any existing USCG pennant numbers. Also, in most cases, the former Navy name was retained. However, three (USS Wachapreague, USS Biscayne, and USS Willoughby) would inherit the name of traditional past cutters (becoming USCGC McCollough, USCGC Dexter, and USCGC Gresham, respectively).

Thus, the decommissioned USS Unimak (AVP-31) became USCGC Unimak (WAVP-379) on 3 January 1949. Likewise, her 18 now-Casco-class sisters all carried hull numbers ranging between WAVP-370 and WAVP-387.

For the Coast Guard, at the time the name Unimak was very symbolic. The service had lost five men at the Scotch Cap Lighthouse on the island to a tsunami in 1946 when a freak 130-foot wave struck the lighthouse. Scotch Cap had been the location of the first manned U.S. lighthouse along the Bering Sea in 1903.

Scotch Cap Lighthouse on Unimak Island. It was wiped out by a Tsunami, on April 1, 1946, killing 5 USCG members

“From ocean stations to drug busts, the 311-foot ships were among the most popular large cutters in the Coast Guard,” wrote Dr. Robert L. Scheina, the former USCG Historian in 1990. “Their reputation as fine sea boats was probably exceeded only by the 327-foot cutters.”

USCGC Unimak (WHEC-379). Note her installed Mousetrap ASW device behind her forward mount, open and ready to go. Courtesy of the Naval Air Station Fort Lauderdale Museum

Speaking of ocean stations, Unimak was very busy on these, stationed out of Boston from January 1949 to September 1956, she served during this period twice each on OS Easy, OS Delta, and OS Coca in the North Atlantic.

Coast Guardsmen work on breaking the ice that coats the deck of USCG Unimak in February 1955, while on Ocean Station Coca in the North Atlantic

Then came a shift to New Jersey.

Unimak, Coast Guard Photo Number 5771, July 1957. [CDR William Wilson provided the following information regarding the cutter and the photo: “It was taken in July 1957 when she was homeported in Cape May. Where it was taken, I cannot remember, possibly off Wildwood, NJ as we did a lot of day ops just offshore. FYI, I am the sailor standing alone just forward of the three men on the starboard side of the 5″-38. I was in charge of the anchor detail when taken. I was a DC-2 at the time.”

Shifting to Cape May, New Jersey– home of the USCG’s basic training center– from September 1956 until August 1972, during this period Unimak often embarked young enlistees and strikers on training cruises ranging from Brazil and Nova Scotia. While at sea on these, the school ship was still very much a working cutter.

As noted by the USCG Historian, her rescues while working out of Cape May included:

  • 7 March 1967: rescued six Cuban refugees in the Yucatan Channel.
  • 10 March 1967: rescued survivors from F/V Bunkie III in Florida waters.
  • 15 March 1967: rescued 12 Cuban refugees who were stranded on an island.
  • 29 May 1969: towed the disabled F/V Sirocco 35 miles east of Fort Pierce, FL, to safety.
  • 3 April 1970: stood by the grounded M/V Vassiliki near Mayaguana Island until a commercial tug arrived.

Unimak and her kind were largely redesignated as high endurance cutters (with Unimak becoming WHEC-379) on 1 May 1966. Unimak was then re-rated to a training cutter (WTR-379 in 1969).

While most of her sisters in Coast Guard service were soon sent to Vietnam waters (with seven transferred to the South Vietnam Navy in 1972) she was reassigned from Cape May on 7 August 1972 to Reserve Training Center Yorktown, Virginia, to serve as a school ship for Coast Guard reservists.

Unimak at sea, Sept 1970

Guantanamo 1971. 311-foot Casco class cutter likely USCGC Unimak (although I’m not sure about the aft mast radar fit), passing Bibb

In this, she was the first cutter to take female officer candidates to sea.

Original caption: “9 May 1973 Boston — COMING INTO PORT aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Unimak are five women officer candidates training for the first time alongside their male counterparts. The stopover in Boston is part of a two-week training cruise designed to give students at the Coast Guard Officer Candidate School in Yorktown, Virginia, a taste of life at sea. Shown are Officer Candidates (from left to right) Lynn W. Smith, Sue E. Jennings, Bonnijill McGhee, Sheila E. Denison, and Margaret R. Riley.” USCG photo 210429-G-G0000

By early 1973, all 18 of the Cascos save for two– including Unimak— had been either returned to the Navy or given to the doomed Saigon regime.

Unimak and sistership Gresham (ex-USS Willoughby) in the 1973 Jane’s. At this point, Gresham was an unarmed weather ship (WAGW) while Unimak was still a WTR assigned to Yorktown.

After Gresham was formally decommissioned on 25 April 1973 and sold for scrap to a Dutch breaker that fall, Unimak was the last of her type in U.S. service.

Finally, her number came up and Unimak was decommissioned on 29 May 1975 and laid up at the USCG Yard at Curtis Bay, Maryland.

However, after just 28 months in mothballs, the operational needs to stem the time of Cuban refugees and drugs heading across the Caribbean left the Coast Guard pressing everything from old icebreakers to tugboats in service on the southern line.

This left Unimak ready for her second recommissioning, on 22 August 1977, returning once again as a high endurance cutter (WHEC-379).

Unimak 311 Casco/Barnegat WHEC 379, wearing her glad rags

While her Mousetrap had long been removed, her 5-incher still worked. Added to this were six mounts for M2 .50 cal Brownings, and two M29 81mm mortars on the 01 deck forward of the bridge for use in firing illumination rounds.

USCGC UNIMAK somewhere in the York River 1979

USCG Base Boston UNIMAK and the larger 378-foot USCGC CHASE Circa 1979

USCGC 379 UNIMAK Cutter

UNIMAK at RTC Yorktown Circa 1980

Unimak, WHEC-379 8 June 1987, USCG Historians Office

Stationed out of New Bedford, Massachusetts, it was intended that she be used for fisheries patrol, freeing up more modern cutters for the trip down to Florida.

However, she did make her LE patrols down to the Straits, scoring some notable counter-drug busts:

  • 6 October 1980: seized M/V Janeth 340 miles southeast of Miami carrying 500 bales of marijuana.
  • 14 October 1980: seized P/C Rescue carrying 500 bales of marijuana and P/C Snail with two tons of marijuana in the Gulf of Mexico.
  • 17 October 1980: seized M/V Amalaka southwest of Key West with 1,000 bales of marijuana.
  • 19 October 1980: seized F/V Wright’s Pride southwest of Key West, carrying 30 tons of marijuana.
  • March 1981: intercepted M/V Mayo with 40 tons of marijuana.
  • 30 November 1984: seized the sailboat Lola 100 miles north of Barranquilla carrying 1.5 tons of marijuana.
  • 2 November 1985: seized tugboat Zeus 3 and a barge 200 miles south of the Dominican Republic carrying 40 tons of marijuana.

And of course, she came to more rescues in her second stint with the Coast Guard:

  • 9 December 1982: towed the disabled F/V Sacred Heart away from Daid Banks, 45 miles east of Cape Cod, in 30-foot seas. As noted by QMCM Ronald D. Meyer, USGC, ret: “It was horrific, seas over 30 feet, constantly, wind extremely strong. Ever seen a 300-foot ship tossed like a play toy until the steel hull cracks the ladders outside bend. I thought we were ALL going to die, no exaggeration. I was the one guy on board who knew for real because I knew where we were, and it was what I thought. Truth is the Captain struggled with the same thought as well. Only a handful of men were even capable of doing their jobs, which were critically needed. A handful of over 100 men were even able to function.”
  • 27/28 February 1983: she towed the dismasted Wandering Star to Mathew Town, Great Iguana.
  • 3 March 1983: towed the disabled M/V Yadrina to Mathew Town.

During her long USCG service, Unimak was nicknamed at one time or another:

“The Lone Ranger”; “Battlebarge Unimaktica”; “Unibarge”; “Unisub”; “RONC The Long Ranger”; “Uni-rust”; “Fast Attack Missile Sponge” (coined from the numerous missile hit drills from REFTRE in Gtmo); “New Bedford’s Virgin Girl” (based on her call sign NBVG); “Runamuck”; and the “Big Mac Attack.”

This was largely due to the practice of Coast Guard cutters that were assigned to or visited Nantucket playing the “Ring Game” with the famed Nantucket Angler’s Club for “ownership” of the cutter. Should the skipper lose, the NAC becomes the cutter’s “owner,” and a RONC (“Republic of Nantucket Cutter”) moniker is assigned. Key West has a similar and much better-publicized relationship with the Coast Guard and the whole Conch Republic thing.

Finally, with the new 270-foot Bear class cutters entering service, the Coast Guard no longer needed the 45-year-old Unimak, and she was decommissioned for the third and final time on 29 April 1988. Returned to the U.S. Navy for disposal, she was eventually stripped and sunk for use as a reef off the Virginia coast.

She had been commanded by three Navy officers in WWII and 23 Coast Guard officers between 1949-75 and 1977-88.

Epilogue

I cannot find any details about the location of the Unimak reef.

A veteran’s group was online between 2005 and 2018 but has since gone dormant. Some reunion videos and pictures are still on YT.

Unimak’s Coast Guard and Navy deck logs are in the National Archives as are her plans. 

Neither service has commissioned a second Unimak.

There are some period postcards that remain in circulation of her service, showing her shifting Coast Guard livery over the years. 

When it comes to the Barnegat class, they have all gone on to the breakers or been reefed with the final class member afloat, ex-Chincoteague (AVP-24/WHEC-375)/Ly Thuong Kiet (HQ-16)/Andres Bonifacio (PF-7) scrapped in the Philippines in 2003. None remain above water.


Ships are more than steel
and wood
And heart of burning coal,
For those who sail upon
them know
That some ships have a
soul.


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

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

Acquit yourselves like men

Some 80 years ago this month, No. 489 Squadron RNZAF, part of RAF Coastal Command at Langham, finished the transition from their lumbering Handley Page Hampden medium bombers to an aggressive new type, the Bristol Type 156 Beaufighter TF Mk.X.

This image hails from the Air Force Museum of New Zealand Photograph Collection, as are all from this post.

Torpedo armed Beaufighter and crew of No. 489 Squadron. Note the firing ports for her nose-mounted 20mm cannons. PR9035

Capable of carrying a 1,500-pound 18-inch torpedo Mark XII aerial torpedo (or a similar weight of bombs and rockets) as well as four nose-mounted Hispano Mark II 20mm cannons, a rear gunner in a bubble turret upstairs, and a six-pack of .303 Brownings in the wings, the big twin-engined attack plane could hit speeds of 320 mph and had an armed range of 1,700 miles.

The Beau was meant to take the fight to the enemy.

No. 489 would finish their conversion this month– which was made easy as they cut their teeth on the similar but slower Bristol Beaufort when formed in 1941– the Kiwis would soon be off to attack German shipping in occupied Norway (as well as off Holland and over the Channel as needed, for instance during Overlord).

30 June 1944: A great air-to-air view of a torpedo-armed No. 489 Squadron RNZAF Beaufighter No. P6-S, being flown by Pilot Officer Burrowes, making its first trip to Norway, escorted by a No. 315 Squadron RAF (Polish) Mustang No. PK-Whisky was piloted by Flying Officer T Haczkiewics, on a five-and-a-half-hour sortie. Note the “invasion stripes” on both aircraft. Photo PR10329

Image from the No. 489 Squadron unofficial diary. No. 489 Squadron aircraft attacking a ship that had eight Beaufighters painted on the bridge as claims. The ship was destroyed. PR10353

Aerial oblique, taken during an attack by No. 489 Squadron, on German Merchant shipping in Norwegian Fjord, Vindsfjord (Vindspol).

Image from the DH Mann personal album collection. No. 489 Squadron attack on “M” Class Minesweepers Burning After Straffing.”

Image from the DH Mann personal album collection. No. 489 Squadron “Attack On Convoy. Aug 29th 1944. Position 54° 10′ North. 08° 04′ East.”

No. 489 Squadron Beaufighters attacking ships off The Naze. There are 12 crews listed in the No. 489 Squadron unofficial diary.

No. 489 Squadron Beaufighter fires a salvo of rockets at an enemy ship. Unknown location.

Aerial oblique taken during an attack by No. 489 Squadron on German Merchant shipping in Norwegian Fjord, Orstenfiord (Orsta Fiord)

Joint Wing attack on shipping, off Den Helder. Copied from the No. 489 Squadron unofficial Unit History.

Their last operational sortie was 21 May 1945, and, while they would transition to Mosqutos post-VE-Day in preparation to head to the Pacific, it turned out the Emperor would throw in the towel before they arrived and they were disbanded.

During WWII, No. 489 flew 2,380 sorties across 9,773 hours on operations and lost 33 brave lads.

Their motto, in Moari, is Whakatanagata kia kaha (“Acquit yourselves like men, be strong”).

An oil painting saluting the squadron and its “Beautiful Beaus” is in the RNZAF Museum. 

Copy of an acrylic painting by RM Conly “489 Squadron Beaufighter”. Shows a No. 489 Squadron Beaufighter with a No. 315 Squadron Mustang escort over burning ships. See PR10329 for the original photograph this was painted from.

Scorpion vs Trawler

In news out of Chile, the country’s very professional (if somewhat outdated) navy has been keeping tabs on a foreign fishing fleet of 8 large trawlers crossing through the Juan Fernández Archipelago National Park and then into the Strait of Magellan to make sure they don’t illegally drop nets or lines in Chile’s EEZ.

While aerial observation occurred– conducted by AS365 Dauphin 2s, at least one submarine kept an eye on the Chinese fishing fleet as well, a great example of how modern sea power is meshing with roaming international IUU concerns.

These images were released by the Chilean Navy on 16 December, as part of Operación de Fiscalización Pesquera Oceánica (OFPO) (and you know how much of a sucker I am for periscope shots!):

The submarine looks to be a French-made Scorpène-class SSK, two of which — Carrera (SS-22) and O’Higgins (SS-23)— were delivered in 2005-06. The country’s fleet also runs an older pair of German HDW-made Type 209-1400s– Thomson (SS-20) and Simpson (SS-21)— which were delivered in the early 1980s during tensions with Argentina and today serve more of a training role.

While the Chileans aren’t saying, odds are the above images show Carrera, who just returned on 22 December to her homeport at Talcahuano following four months in San Diego as an OPFOR in the 2023 Diesel-Electric Submarine Initiative (DESI) and would have been transiting the area just in time to give a good flex. DESI 2023 saw the Colombian Navy submarine ARC Pijao’s deployment (the country’s 13th DESI) at Naval Station Mayport, Florida for training with Atlantic forces while Carrera did the same on the West Coast under the control of Submarine Squadron 11. This was Chile’s 10th DESI deployment since the program was established in 2001.

Submarine “Carrera” returned to Chile after participating in the DESI 2023 exercise (PHOTO: Chilean Navy)

Chile has been in the submarine biz since 1917.

For reference, before their current boats, the Chileans ran a pair of British-built Oberon-class submarines (O’Brien and Hyatt) for three decades.

Going even further back, Santiago picked up two non-GUPPY Snorkel conversion Balao-class boats– USS Spot (SS-413)/Simpson and USS Springer (SS-414)/Thomson in 1962.

They began their submarine arm with a six-pack of American-built British Holland 602/H-class-class boats put into service starting in 1917 as the Guacolda-class followed by three Odin class boats (Almirante Simpson, Capitan O’Brien, Capitan Thompson) in 1928.

Chile Guacolda class H-class submarines Holland 602, via Jane’s 1946

A 6-inch Christmas Eve off Buka

80 Years Ago Today: Cleveland-class light cruiser USS Columbia (CL-56) 6″/47 Mark 16 expended powder casings from Turrets 3 & 4 lying on the main deck aft of the ship during bombardment of Buka Island in the Solomons by CruDiv 12. December 24, 1943.

Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-299039

Columbia fired 863 6-inch shells that night-– over a third of the Cleveland-class magazine capacity of 200 rounds for each of their 12 main guns. She also fired 1141 5″/38 shells.

It was a role she played often, in addition to taking on Japanese surface assets and swatting away kamikazes. 

After 6/47 gun turrets of USS Columbia (CL-56) firing, during the night bombardment of Japanese facilities in the Shortlands that covered landings on Bougainville, 1 November 1943. Official U.S. Navy photo 80-G-44058

Columbia, dubbed “the Gem of the Ocean” by her crew, earned 10 battlestars and two Naval Unit Commendations during her short career. Decommissioned in 1947 after just over four years of service, with a good portion of that in reserve, she was sold for scrap in 1959.

« Older Entries Recent Entries »