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USO Canteen FReeper Style ~ U.S. Coast Guard 213th Birthday Celebration ~ August 4 2003
68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub and FRiends of the Canteen

Posted on 08/03/2003 10:51:44 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub

 
 
For the freedom you enjoyed yesterday...
Thank the Veterans who served in
The United States Armed Forces.
 
 
Looking forward to tomorrow's freedom?
Support The United States Armed Forces Today!
 
 

NOTE: CLICK ON EACH GRAPHIC ON THIS TABLE TO GO TO A COAST GUARD RELATED SITE
History of U.S. Coast Guard Day - August 4
 
August 4 is celebrated as Coast Guard Day to honor the establishment on that day in 1790 of the Revenue Cutter Service, forebear of today's Coast Guard, by the Treasury Department. On that date, Congress, guided by Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, authorized the building of a fleet of ten cutters, whose responsibility would be enforcement of the first tariff laws enacted by Congress under the Constitution.
 
The Coast Guard has been continuously at sea since its inception, although the name Coast Guard didn't come about until 1915 when the Revenue Cutter Service was merged with the Lifesaving Service. The Lighthouse Service joined the Coast Guard in 1939, followed in 1946 by the Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection. In 1967, after 177 years in the Treasury Department, the Coast Guard was transferred to the newly formed Department of Transportation. In March of 2003 the Coast Guard became part of the new Department of Homeland Security.
 
Coast Guard Day is primarily an internal activity for active duty Coast Guard personnel, civilian members, reservists, retirees, auxiliarists, and dependents, but it does have a significant share of interest outside the Service. Grand Haven, Michigan, also known as Coast Guard City, USA, annually sponsors the Coast Guard Festival around August 4. Typically it is the largest community celebration of a branch of the Armed Forces in the nation.
 
In addition to celebrating their own day every year, Coast Guard members also participate as equal partners in Armed Forces Day activities.

Brief Timeline of The U.S. Coast Guard

1790: Congress authorized the building of ten boats (cutters) establishing the Revenue Cutter Service.
1861: The cutter "Harriet Lane" fires the first shot of the civil war.
1912: The Titanic sunk after a collision with an iceberg, beginning the ice patrol mission.
1915: The Coast Guard is created by combining the life saving service and revenue cutter service.
1917: The Coast Guard becomes part of the navy for the duration of world war I.
1919: The Coast Guard begins a war against rum runners during prohibition.
1932: The Coast Guard is assigned enforcement responsibility of the whaling convention, which was signed by 21 other nations. The Northern pacific halibut act is passed and is enforced by the Coast Guard, although the Coast Guards mission of marine and natural resources enforcement dates back to 1820's.
1936: The Coast Guard is assigned the duty of icebreaking by executive order.
1939: The Lighthouse Service is incorporated into Coast Guard, bringing along the aids to navigation mission.
1942: The Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection Bureau is transferred to the Coast Guard, beginning the boating safety missions.
1967: The Coast Guard is transferred from the Treasury Department to the Department of Transportation.
2003: The Coast Guard is transferred from the
Department of Transportation to the Department of Homeland Security.




On any given day, the men and women of the Coast Guard:

  • Conduct 109 search-and-rescue missions.
  • Assist 192 people in distress.
  • Seize 169 pounds of marijuana.
  • Nab 306 pounds of cocaine.

Most important, the Coast Guard saves lives.

"Ten or 12 people today will go home to dinner with their family only because the Coast Guard got them out of trouble," said Adm. James Loy, commandant of the Coast Guard.

Now that's a respectable day's work. All from a service of only 35,000 people, fewer than the New York Police Department. And by the way, the Coast Guard is the only service in which the role of women is unrestricted.

Regular Coast Guard Total 35,000 Coast Guard Reserves Activated since 9/11 2900

The Coast Guard increased its vigilance, readiness, and patrols to protect the country’s 95,000 miles of coastline, including the Great Lakes and inland waterways.

CLICK HERE for the Coast Guard marching song
Semper Paratus (Always Ready)
Words and Music
by Captain Francis Saltus Van Boskerck, USCG


Click Below for the latest Coast Guard
and Coast Guard Auxiliary news.


"The civilian volunteer component of the United States Coast Guard"



In the summer of 1934 a yachtsman named Malcolm Stuart Boylan planted the seed that eventually sprouted as the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. Boylan had just been elected commodore of the newly-created Pacific Writers' Yacht Club, which was about to undertake a cruise from its home in Los Angeles to Catalina Island. Boylan asked a Coast Guard acquaintance, LTCDR C.W. Thomas of the cutter Hermes, to inspect the club's boats before their departure.

Another of the Hermes's officers, LT F.C. Pollard, made the trip to Catalina on board Boylan's yacht, and the two men had a long discussion about the relationship between the Coast Guard and the boating community. On August 23, 1934, Boylan sent Pollard a letter outlining a basic concept for a Coast Guard reserve: ...

A Coast Guard Reserve would be an excellent thing to perpetuate its traditions, preserve its entity and, more particularly, to place at the disposal of CG officers, auxiliary flotillas of small craft for the frequent emergencies incident to your...duties. A copy of Boylan's letter made its way to Washington, and to the desk of CDR Russell Waesche, an aide to the Commandant of the Coast Guard. Waesche saw merit in the idea, but it languished for some five years.

In 1936 Waesche was promoted to rear-admiral and appointed Commandant. He was a forceful, energetic man, and the creation of a Coast Guard reserve became one of his favorite projects. With the backing of the Secretary of Commerce, the Secretary of the Navy, and several influential Congressmen, RADM Waesche finally was able to gain Congressional approval for the concept.

On February 19, 1941 Congress passed a law restructuring the Coast Guard Reserve. Henceforth the Coast Guard was to operate two reserve forces. The existing civilian reserve organization was renamed the U.S. Coast Guard Auxiliary. A new U.S. Coast Guard Reserve was to function on a military basis as a source of wartime manpower, like the reserves of the other armed services.

The officers running the Coast Guard appreciated the staggering demands that war would put on it, and the value of the new reserve system in helping them meet those demands. By the summer of 1941 the District Commanders were sending Coast Guard headquarters lists of boats owned by Auxiliarists that would make good patrol craft - and requisitioning Lewis machine guns, Thompson submachine guns, rifles, and pistols for them.

On November 1, 1941, President Roosevelt signed an order transferring the Coast Guard from the Treasury Department to the Navy Department. A few weeks later the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, and the Coast Guard's reserve system was put to the ultimate test. On the night of December 7, amid rumors of Japanese invasion, twenty Coast Guard Auxiliarists from the 13th District took their boats out of Seattle on the service's first wartime patrol cruise. In May, 1942 the Secretary of the Navy authorized uniforms for the Coast Guard Auxiliary.

Perhaps the Auxiliary's most important contribution to the war effort came in the form of the Volunteer Port Security Force. An executive order of February, 1942 directed the Secretary of the Navy to take the necessary steps to prevent "sabotage and subversive activities" on the nation's waterfronts. The task of protecting the hundreds of warehouses, piers, and other facilities that kept the American shipping industry in business fell to the Coast Guard, which in turn delegated it to the Reserve and the Auxiliary.

As the war went on and the Coast Guard's resources were stretched thinner, Auxiliarists and TRs were called upon to fill gaps wherever active duty Coast Guardsmen left them. Auxiliarists' boats patrolled the waterfronts and inlets looking for saboteurs, enemy agents, and fires. At least one unit of temporary Reservists, recruited from the Auxiliary, patrolled east coast beaches on horseback. Other Auxiliarists manned lookout and lifesaving stations near their homes, freeing regular Coast Guardsmen for sea duty. When a flood struck St. Louis in the spring of 1943, Coast Guard Auxiliarists and Reservists evacuated seven thousand people and thousands of livestock.

The Auxiliary and the Reserve attracted their share of celebrity members. Actor Humphrey Bogart took his yacht on several patrols out of Los Angeles, and Arthur Fiedler, conductor of the Boston Pops Orchestra, put in his twelve hours per week on patrol duty in Boston Harbor.

During the Vietnam conflict several Coast Guard cutters were taken off their normal stations and sent to Southeast Asia. Auxiliarists put their boats to work on patrol duty.

The years 1992 and 1993 saw the Auxiliary's ingenuity and dedication tested by disasters precipitated by weather and international politics. Auxiliarists evacuated hundreds of people from the path of Hurricane Andrew, and from the scenes of devastating floods in the Midwest. In 1994 a military coup in Haiti released another surge of immigrants heading for Florida. The Coast Guard and the Auxiliary mobilized in the largest search-and-rescue operation since the Second World War.



Hi. Thanks for coming to see me. Who am I?
I'm Coastie. I travel all over the country meeting boys and girls.
I help the children learn to be safe around the water.


Click on my picture to visit my home page.





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KEYWORDS: michaeldobbs
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To: Semper911
"Hey Tonk, you still standing watch out there in Coos Bay? ODs still breathing down your neck?"

Still qualified to stand radio watchs.
The CO and XO have me working in the Operations Office now-a-days.
Now I get to breath down the OD's neck for reports. LOL
In fact thanks to the CO I made Coast Guard and Coast Guard Auxiliary history.
Oct will be my 2 year anniversay.
I wouldn't change it for anything!

FReeper makes Coast Guard / Coast Guard Auxiliary History
21 posted on 08/04/2003 12:04:57 AM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Happy Birthday U.S. Coast Guard!)
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To: Semper911

Thanks, Semper911, for stopping by the Canteen with that terrific story of the rescue, you as a member of our Coast Guard, effect every day. Thank you for your service to our country.


22 posted on 08/04/2003 12:06:51 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: Kathy in Alaska; All
Time for this Coastie (yes, Auxiliary members are called Coasties also) to get some sleep.
May God Watch over and Protect the guardians of the sea, the U.S. Coast Guard.

23 posted on 08/04/2003 12:11:29 AM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (God Bless and Protect our military and our allies military.)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
M1911A1,
Thanks for the job you and all the military are doing, your are absolutely superb! Its always incredible what real Americans can do when they face up to trouble and pound it down! You are some of the best!

Trike
24 posted on 08/04/2003 12:12:08 AM PDT by Trikebuilder (We know the path they walk, and pray each step for them, till home they come to us.)
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To: All
CLICK HERE for Coast Guard Day Picnics
25 posted on 08/04/2003 12:16:45 AM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Happy Birthday U.S. Coast Guard!)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
Good night and sleep well, Tonkin. God bless you good for your service to our country, both those years ago, and now in the Coast Guard Auxiliary. *HUG* Lots to read about today. Happy Birthday, Coast Guard!


26 posted on 08/04/2003 12:17:43 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; Brad's Gramma
Thanks Gramma, I'm glad you got to read it. I don't get to tell my sea stories much any more.

Tonk, Glad you have that link up about your promotion to the Ops center. I read it when you first put it up, and posted a congrats to you. That was a great thread.

Goodnight, and Happy Coast Guard Day.

27 posted on 08/04/2003 12:18:12 AM PDT by Semper911 (Bread and circus are not enough. Hence, FreeRepublic.com)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
As a deep water sailor, and a member of the brown water navy, I can say in all truth, the Coast Guard sails the most dangerous water in the world, and makes it look fun! All the while, saving idots, madmen, and others, mostly from themselves. They ply the hard edge of the sea, where ships become wrecks, and too many died before they came along. We owe them a real debt, as they rescue, patrol, stop drugs, assist in every war, and handle whatever they are given with awesome class!

thanks to those who serve us in the most dangerous places on earth.

Trike
28 posted on 08/04/2003 12:19:29 AM PDT by Trikebuilder (We know the path they walk, and pray each step for them, till home they come to us.)
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To: M0sby; M1911A1; Trikebuilder
M0sby
See post 24 from Trikebuilder to M1911A1

Trikebuilder : Great post Brother!
29 posted on 08/04/2003 12:20:36 AM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub (Have you said Thank You to a service man or woman today?)
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To: Trikebuilder
Hi, Trike. It's great to see you. And thank you for your service to our country.


30 posted on 08/04/2003 12:42:00 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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Comment #31 Removed by Moderator

To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; Kathy in Alaska; tomkow6; LaDivaLoca; JohnHuang2
Mornin', everybody ! Happy Monday !

81 degrees right now, headin' for around 100.


Click for Dallas, Texas Forecast


Have a cup while you FReep !






For those who prefer hot chocolate.....




32 posted on 08/04/2003 1:20:10 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP (Bu-bye Dixie Chimps! / Coming Soon !: Freeper site on Comcast. Found the URL. Gotta fix it now.)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
Jim Davenport's Coast Guard art is terrific! Those paintings give a good idea of some of the rough "seas" our Coasties have to contend with. WOW!
33 posted on 08/04/2003 1:35:29 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: Yehuda
Thanks, Yehuda, for stopping by to share the Coast Guard's birthday.
34 posted on 08/04/2003 1:38:40 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: MeeknMing
Thanks, Meekie, I'll be back in a few hours for my hot chocolate with marshmallows. Thanks to Carl too.
35 posted on 08/04/2003 1:41:51 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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Duty ~ Honor ~ Country

Click above to visit "A Day in the Life of President Bush"

36 posted on 08/04/2003 1:47:18 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; All
HAPPY BIRTHDAY U.S. COAST GUARD!!!
 
From a Coast Guard "brat". My late stepfather was a 14 year vet stationed
in Spain, Galveston TX , Charleston and Sullivan's Island SC. We lived on Sullivan's for almost 10 years,
was a cool place to grow up.
I spent a lot of time here and got to go up in the lighthouse on Sullivan's Island a bunch of times,
Plus a lot of boating, sailing, exploring,fishing and scuba diving.
 
 
I have relatives in town and only a few minutes to surf and check mail all weekend. No fun! (they are leaving Wed. :-) )

37 posted on 08/04/2003 1:50:19 AM PDT by wolficatZ (___><))))*>_____\0/________)
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To: HiJinx; 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub; MoJo2001; LindaSOG; LaDivaLoca; TEXOKIE; tomkow6; rwgal; ...


A PRAYER OF PROTECTION

The light of God surround you
The love of God enfold you
The power of God protect you
The presence of God watch over you
Wherever you are,God is,
And all is well.
Amen.

Bless This House



Bless this house O Lord we pray;
Make it safe by night and day;
Bless these walls so firm and stout,
Keeping want and trouble out:
Bless the roof and chimneys tall,
Let thy peace lie over all;
Bless this door, that it may prove
ever open to joy and love.


Bless these windows shining bright,
Letting in God's heav'nly light;
Bless the hearth a'blazing there,
with smoke ascending like a prayer;
Bless the folk who dwell within,
keep them pure and free from sin;
Bless us all that we may be
Fit O Lord to dwell with thee;
Bless us all that one day we
May dwell O Lord with thee.



(Click on praying hands above, or on banner at the top to hear the music)


38 posted on 08/04/2003 1:50:20 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: Kathy in Alaska
Good morning, E.G.C. A little rain in the last hour or so, not sustained. *sigh* No thunderstorms for you, I hope.
39 posted on 08/04/2003 1:55:10 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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To: MoJo2001
Good morning, Kiddo! It's Monday! Have a great first day. *HUGS*


40 posted on 08/04/2003 2:04:31 AM PDT by Kathy in Alaska (God Bless America and Our Troops Who Protect Her)
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