Posted on 08/03/2004 9:41:33 PM PDT by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
NOTE: CLICK ON EACH GRAPHIC ON THIS TABLE TO GO TO A COAST GUARD RELATED SITE
Brief Timeline of The U.S. Coast Guard
On any given day, the men and women of the Coast Guard:
Most important, the Coast Guard saves lives.
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 countrys 95,000 miles of coastline, including the Great Lakes and inland waterways. CLICK HERE for the Coast Guard marching song "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.
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Looks like this is a job for Sandy Berger!!
Is there an historic USCG flag?
Good morning to everyone at the Canteen and to all our military at home and abroad. Thanks for your continued service to our country.
Today's the day Norton updates their anti-virus definitions. Be sure to donwload them when they arrive.
congrats on the birthday! and keep fighting the good fight!
Happy Birthday USCG!
Semper Fi to the Semper Pa's
My late, best friend was a Coastie. God bless him and all that serve...
Thanks Tonk. Good Morning everyone!
Happy Birthday to the CG, doing an extraordinary job every day.
Psssst, it is also my birthday. I will give everyone my PayPay account.:)
free dixie,sw
The nations oldest (continuous!) seagoing service.
Thanks Tonk
Semper Paratus!
Happy Birthday U.S. Coast Guard from a proud daughter of a WWII Coastie. He spent most of his tour doing destroyer escort back and forth across the Atlantic (torpedo bait).
Thanks Tonk for your tribute to this oft forgotten branch of the military.
Happy Birthday to the Coast Guard!
YEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
free dixie,duckie/sw
As another proud daughter of a WWII Coast Guard veteran and a present "Coastie" mom whose son is serving overseas, I also salute the U.S. Coast Guard.
The dedication, pride and love for their country of these fine young men and women that I witnessed at my son's graduation ceremonies a few years ago brought tears to my eyes.
Semper Paratus!
SOME of those fishing boats/yachts got into SHOOT-OUTS with German submarines & WON! all of the "privately-crewed gunboats did VALUABLE service to the war effort!
The CITY OF GOLIAD (formerly the 64-foot motor yacht, EEL) captured a U-boat in 1942 & towed it to Galveston,TX as a PRIZE OF WAR! (the U-boat is now berthed in the Galveston County Park.)
The CITY OF GONZALES (formerly the 88-foot sailing yawl, GRAY-HOUND)fought a 2-hour surface battle with another U-boat & SUNK the submarine, with a direct hit from a WW1-surplus ANTI-TANK GUN!
see the book YACHTS AGAINST SUBS by RAM(retired) L.B.N.Gnaedinger for more details! facinating book!
free dixie,sw
Happy Birthday!!!! Puddle Pirates!
Happy Birthday USCG!
Thank you troops!
Have fun everyone!
I am very proud to have you serving to protect our Coastline - Happy Birthday Tonk!
Coast Guard Supports Terror War in Iraq, at Home
WASHINGTON, Aug. 3, 2004 -- The U.S. Coast Guard is an active player in the war on terror, both in Southwest Asia and on the home front, according to Adm. Thomas H. Collins, commandant of the Coast Guard.
Members of Coast Guard Port Security Unit 313, homeported in San Pedro, Calif., patrol the port of Umm Quasr, Iraq, during the major-combat phase of Operation Iraqi Freedom. Coast Guard port-security units helped maintain security in Iraqi ports and on oil terminals. Photo by Petty Officer 1st Class Tom Sperduto, USCG |
Collins said the "fifth armed service," and the only one to fall under the Department of Homeland Security, is making its largest commitment to port- security operations since World War II. At the same time, the Coast Guard has deployed its largest contingent of Coast Guard members and assets overseas since the Vietnam conflict, in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.
At the height of the conflict, Collins said the Coast Guard deployed 1,200 men and women, 11 ships and a port-security unit to the theater to conduct maritime-interception operations and coastal-security patrols. The port- security unit and five soon to be six patrol boats remain on duty in the northern Arabian Gulf, where they work closely with the Navy and Marine Corps under the command of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command.
Meanwhile, on the home front, Collins said, the Coast Guard's coastal and port- security mission "has been taken off the back burner and put on the front burner with the flames turned up."
In support of this mission, the Coast Guard has conducted more than 35,000 port-security patrols and 3,500 air patrols. Coast Guard teams have boarded more than 2,500 "high-interest vessels," interdicted more than 6,200 illegal migrants, and created and maintained more than 115 maritime-security zones.
In addition, the Coast Guard established new maritime safety and security teams to respond to terrorist threats or incidents in domestic ports and waterways, and sea marshals to prevent ship hijackings. "These are 100-person teams that can surge into ports or other high-risk areas when called and provide additional force structure (and) security presence for deterrence," Collins said.
To keep up with these missions, Collins said the Coast Guard is expanding its force to about 41,000 men and women in uniform, with most of its new capability to be dedicated to security missions. In addition, he said, the Coast Guard has called close to 50 percent of its 8,500 Selected Reserve members to active duty.
The commandant said these enhancements, "developed for the country in very, very short order," are helping to close security gaps that make the United States vulnerable to attack.
Related Articles: |
A Coast Guard port-security unit boat crew, from Fort Eustis, Va., patrols the Hudson River during the first weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center. The port-security units, made up mostly of Coast Guard reservists, deployed to New York to provide on-water security. Photo by Chief Petty Officer Brandon Brewer, USCG |
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