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NOAAS John N. Cobb

NOAA Ship John N. Cobb (R 552) was a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research vessel in commission from 1970 to 2008. She was named for John Nathan Cobb and was the oldest commissioned ship in the NOAA fleet when she was decommissioned, having previously served in the United States Department of the Interior′s Fish and Wildlife Service from 1950 to 1956 and in the United States Fish and Wildlife Service′s Bureau of Commercial Fisheries from 1956 to 1970 as US FWS John N. Cobb (FWS 1601).

NOAAS John N. Cobb
NOAAS John N. Cobb (R 552) on 27 April 2004.
History
United States Fish and Wildlife Service
NameUS FWS John N. Cobb
NamesakeJohn N. Cobb (1868-1930), American fisheries researcher and first dean of the University of Washington College of Fisheries
BuilderWestern Boatbuilding Company, Tacoma, Washington
Launched16 January 1950
Commissioned18 February 1950
IdentificationFWS 1601
FateTransferred to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 3 October 1970
NotesOperated by Fish and Wildlife Service's Bureau of Commercial Fisheries 1956-1970
United States
NameNOAAS John N. Cobb
NamesakePrevious name retained
AcquiredTransferred from U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service 3 October 1970
Decommissioned13 August 2008
HomeportSeattle, Washington
Identification
Fate
  • Donated to Seattle Maritime Academy 2008
  • Preserved 2009
  • Sold to private owner 2015
  • Abandoned and seized 2016
  • Sold to private owner 2017
StatusExtant as commercial fishing vessel 2018
General characteristics
TypeFisheries research ship
Tonnage
Displacement250 tons (full load)
Length93 ft (28 m)
Beam26 ft (7.9 m)
Draft10 ft 10 in (3.30 m)
Installed power325 bhp (242 kW)
PropulsionFairbanks-Morse diesel engine, 1 shaft, 25 tons fuel
Speed9.3 knots (17.2 km/h; 10.7 mph) (sustained)
Range2,900 nmi (5,400 km; 3,300 mi) at 9.3 knots (17 km/h; 11 mph)
Endurance13 days
Boats & landing
craft carried
1 × fiberglass utility boat
Complement10 (2 NOAA Corps officers, 2 licensed engineers, and 4 other crew members) plus up to 4 scientists[note 1]
Notes60 kilowatts electrical power
John N. Cobb (fisheries research vessel)
NRHP reference No.09000047
Added to NRHPFebruary 11, 2009

Construction and commissioning Edit

W. C. Nickum and Sons designed John N. Cobb based on a West Coast purse-seiner design.[1] The Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) funded her construction using US$150,000 ifrom the sale of the FWS fisheries research vessel Washington, and the Western Boatbuilding Company constructed her in Tacoma, Washington. She was launched on 16 January 1950 and commissioned as US FWS John N. Cobb (FWS 1601) on 18 February 1950.[1]

Technical characteristics Edit

John N. Cobb had a wooden hull. As originally constructed, she was designed for exploratory fishing cruises and fishing gear research and development, with trawling, longlining, gillnetting, and oceanographic sampling capabilities.[1] When commissioned in 1950, she had then-modern navigational equipment, including radar, a LORAN navigation system, depth finders, and an electro-mechanical steering system.[1]

John N. Cobb had a total of 13 bunks, and her mess room could serve eight personnel at a time. During her NOAA service, she carried a complement of two NOAA Corps officers, two licensed engineers, and four other crew members, and could accommodate up to four scientists.

Her deck equipment featured three winches and one boom crane. This equipment gave John N. Cobb a lifting capacity of up to 4,800 pounds (2,200 kg) as well as 7,200 feet (2,200 m) of cable that could pull up to 14,000 pounds (6,400 kg).

During her NOAA years, in support of her primary mission of fishery and living marine resource research for the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) division of NOAA, John N. Cobb was equipped with a shallow-water echo sounder, fishfinder, forward-looking sonar, and net sonde. She had a single laboratory of 150 square feet (14 m2). She carried a 17-foot (5.2 m) fiberglass boat for utility and rescue purposes. She could conduct bottom trawls down to depths of over 300 fathoms (1,800 ft; 550 m).

Operational history Edit

Fish and Wildlife Service Edit

Assigned Seattle, Washington, as her home port, John N. Cobb made her first cruise in March and April 1950, operating off Alaska in search of commercially useful populations of shellfish, especially shrimp.[1] From June to September 1950, she operated in the Pacific Ocean off Alaska, Oregon, and Washington looking for commercially exploitable albacore populations. In August 1950, her crew discovered a seamount rising 9,600 feet (2,926 m) from the sea bottom to 132 feet (40.2 m) below the sea's surface 270 nautical miles (500 km; 310 mi) off the coast of Washington;[1] the seamount later was named Cobb Seamount.[1]

In 1953, John N. Cobb cruised off the Aleutian Islands, conducting a preliminary search for salmon populations and developing fishing techniques that would allow the successful use of gill nets in the open ocean.[1] Later in 1953, she explored Prince William Sound off Alaska to assess the availability of herring there.[1] In 1955, she tagged petrale sole in the Esteban Deep – a submarine canyon – in the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.[1] That spring, working in conjunction with chartered halibut schooners, she began the first survey of salmon populations in the eastern North Pacific Ocean, and by the time she wrapped up this work in 1961, the general distribution of salmon in the North Pacific and Bering Sea was understood.[1] Meanwhile, the Fish and Wildlife Service was renamed the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and reorganized in 1956, creating a new Bureau of Commercial Fisheries (BCF), and John N. Cobb became a part of the BCF fleet.[1]

 
Starboard quarter view of US FWS John N. Cobb, from Commercial Fisheries Review, September 1957.

In 1959, John N. Cobb was supporting the USFWS's Exploratory Fishing and Gear Research (EF&GR) element in 1959 when it fielded its first scuba diving team,[1] which operated from her. In August 1959, she took part in the Chariot Project with the United States Atomic Energy Commission to assess the feasibility of using nuclear explosives to excavate harbors or canals off the northwest coast of Alaska, but the project never came to fruition.[1] Of her first 41 cruises in the 1950s, she focused on experimental fishing methods and equipment in 11, engaged in midwater trawling in seven, conducted bottom and shrimp trawling in two, and tested a fish pump device in two.

In 1960, John N. Cobb experimented with the use of a high-resolution echo sounder to locate dragging areas off Washington that contained commercial quantities of fish. In 1961, she worked with the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission to study deep-water marine resources off Washington and Oregon. In 1963, she joined the BCF ship George B. Kelez in experimental trawling for salmon off Alaska.[1]

NOAA Edit

On 3 October 1970, a reorganization occurred which created NOAA under the United States Department of Commerce. Under the reorganization, the BCF came under the control of the new National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS, an element of NOAA, and via a phased process during 1972 and 1973 the ships of the NMFS and of another element of NOAA, the National Ocean Survey – successor to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, which was abolished upon the 1970 creation of NOAA – were brought together to form a consolidated NOAA fleet. John N. Cobb became a part of the new NOAA fleet via this process and was redesignated NOAAS John N. Cobb (R 552).[1] With her home port at NOAA's Marine Operations Center-Pacific (MOC-P) in Seattle and operated by NOAA's Office of Marine and Aviation Operations, John N. Cobb conducted research off southeastern Alaska and the Pacific Northwest of the United States. She supported research of the NMFS Auke Bay Laboratory in Juneau, Alaska, collecting fish and crustacean specimens using trawls and benthic longlines; and fish larvae, fish eggs, and plankton using plankton nets and surface and mid-water larval nets. Scientists from the National Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle also conducted surveys of whales and porpoises – including cetacean ecology and humpback whale prey investigations – and of seals, and studied harbor seal ecology near tidewater glaciers while aboard John N. Cobb. She also took part in coral and sponge benthic habitat studies, the mapping of near-shore estuary habitats, sablefish tagging and telemetry studies, assessments of juvenile rockfish habitats, and oceanographic sampling and long-term coastal monitoring, and she provided support to remote field camps and the Little Port Walter Marine Station in Port Walter, Alaska.[1]

In the early 1980s John N. Cobb collaborated with other research vessels in a research project using small mesh purse seines to sample juvenile salmon off the coasts of Alaska, British Columbia, Oregon, and Washington.[1] In the immediate aftermath of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on Bligh Reef in Alaska's Prince William Sound on 29 March 1989, John N. Cobb, which was in an inactive status at the time, quickly returned to active duty and played an important role in post-spill research on the effects of the spill on the environment. In subsequent years, she supported numerous studies of the lasting ecological effects of the spill on Prince William Sound.[1]

In the mid-1990s, John N. Cobb came to the assistance of the purse-seiner Karen Rae, which was in distress in Icy Strait[1] in the Alexander Archipelago in southeastern Alaska.[1]

As fisheries science renewed its focus on the marine ecology of juvenile salmon and other epipelagic fishes, John N. Cobb helped to pioneer the use of surface rope trawls from 1997 to 2007.[1] This led to the creation of the Southeast Coastal Monitoring Project and allowed the development of an understanding of the biophysical factors affecting fluctuations from year to year in salmon populations.[1]

John N. Cobb's 50th anniversary in the fleets of NOAA and its predecessors was celebrated in 2000. On 10 May 2004, she rendered assistance to the Alaska Marine Highway System ferry LeConte, which had run aground that morning in Peril Strait near Cozian Reef, about 30 nautical miles (56 km; 35 mi) north of Sitka, Alaska.[1][2] She joined other vessels in rescuing LeConte's 86 passengers from life rafts, picking up most of them herself.[2]

NOAA's plans called for John N. Cobb to remain active until August 2008, but the main crankshaft in her original 1931 Fairbanks-Morse locomotive engine broke in June 2008, rendering her inoperable. Repairs were estimated to cost $245,000 and take four to six months to complete, so NOAA decided to bring her long career to an end. She was decommissioned on 13 August 2008 at the Sand Point facility in Seattle, and was the oldest NOAA ship at the time of her decommissioning.

Later career Edit

After decommissioning John N. Cobb, NOAA donated her to the Seattle Maritime Academy, a branch of Seattle Central Community College,[3] and she was moved to Salmon Bay in Seattle. She was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on 11 February 2009,[4] but the Academy never repaired her broken crankshaft,[3] and she remained moored in Salmon Bay under the Ballard Bridge for about seven years.[5] In 2015, the Academy sold her to Daniel J. Webb,[3] who moved her to Port Townsend, Washington, in February 2016 to repair her crankshaft.[3] However, John N. Cobb by then was waterlogged and too heavy for the port's equipment to haul out of the water.[3] Unable to pay her mooring fees or for her repairs, Webb abandoned her at Port Townsend.[6][7] A legal dispute over payment of mooring fees and for repairs to the vessel broke out during 2016 between the Port of Port Townsend and the State of Washington, which represented the Seattle Maritime Academy; the port claimed that the Academy had violated the law by selling an unseaworthy vessel to an owner who could not afford to repair her, while the state countered that the law exempted unregistered vessels used primarily for government purposes, that the Academy had never registered John N. Cobb and therefore was not bound by the law, that the Academy was free to surplus the vessel in any way it saw fit consistent with the wishes of her donor, and that any matter of financial restitution to the port was matter between the port and Webb.[3][7]

Meanwhile, the Port of Port Townsend sought and gained custody of John N. Cobb because of her overdue mooring fees, pumped the water out of her, and hauled her out of the water in October 2016 for an inspection, estimating her to be worth US$300,000 once repaired but requiring US$250,000 in repairs, and estimating her scrap value as US$50,000.[3] Hoping to find a buyer who would preserve her but willing to sell her to a scrapyard if no other buyer came forward, the port then put her up for sale.[3] On 26 April 2017, Ron Sloan purchased John N. Cobb, and he contracted with the fishing vessel Sunnford to tow her from Seattle to Winchester Bay, Oregon, where she arrived on 18 August 2017.[5] As of 2017, John N. Cobb was undergoing repair[5] for commercial use in tuna fishing and for charter for fisheries research and other activities during the off-season.[8]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Combat Fleets of the World 1990/1991, p. 917, claims her complement was 8 (4 civilian officers and 4 other crew members) plus up to 4 scientists.

Citations Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x noaa.gov AFSC Historical Corner: John N. Cobb, Establishing a Rich Legacy nRetrieved August 25, 2018
  2. ^ a b Anonymous, "M/V LeConte Runs Aground, All Passengers Safe," sitnews.us, May 10, 2004 Retrieved August 25, 2018
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Bermant, Charlie, "Port battles state over derelict boat," pteader.com, December 7, 2016 Retrieved August 25, 2018
  4. ^ "Weekly List". February 20, 2009. Retrieved 2009-02-20.
  5. ^ a b c Hitz, Charles R., "Cobb 2017 – A Good Year," carmelfinley.wordpress.com, December 28, 2017 Retrieved August 25, 2018
  6. ^ Twietmeyer, Nick, "Man has left abandoned boats and ruined finances in his wake," kitsapdailynews.com, February 26, 2018 9:25 a.m., Retrieved August 25, 2018
  7. ^ a b Twietmeyer, Nick, "Poulsbo bids farewell to derelict tugboat," kitsapdailynews.com, April 6, 2018 3:51 p.m., Retrieved August 25, 2018
  8. ^ Finley, Carmel, "The John N. Cobb to go for tuna!," carmelfinley.wordpress.com, August 24, 2017 Retrieved August 26, 2018

References Edit

  • "National Register of Historic Places Registration Form / RV John N. Cobb" (pdf). 12 November 2008. Retrieved 2012-09-03.
  • "Accompanying Photos" (pdf). 12 November 2008. Retrieved 2012-09-03.

External links Edit

  • . Old Tacoma Marine Inc. Archived from the original on 2012-02-11. Retrieved 2012-09-03.
  • Prézelin, Bernard, and A. D. Baker III. The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World 1990/1991: Their Ships, Aircraft, and Armament. Annapolis, Maryland: United States Naval Institute, 1990. ISBN 0-87021-250-8.

noaas, john, cobb, noaa, ship, john, cobb, national, oceanic, atmospheric, administration, research, vessel, commission, from, 1970, 2008, named, john, nathan, cobb, oldest, commissioned, ship, noaa, fleet, when, decommissioned, having, previously, served, uni. NOAA Ship John N Cobb R 552 was a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration research vessel in commission from 1970 to 2008 She was named for John Nathan Cobb and was the oldest commissioned ship in the NOAA fleet when she was decommissioned having previously served in the United States Department of the Interior s Fish and Wildlife Service from 1950 to 1956 and in the United States Fish and Wildlife Service s Bureau of Commercial Fisheries from 1956 to 1970 as US FWS John N Cobb FWS 1601 NOAAS John N Cobb NOAAS John N Cobb R 552 on 27 April 2004 HistoryUnited States Fish and Wildlife ServiceNameUS FWS John N CobbNamesakeJohn N Cobb 1868 1930 American fisheries researcher and first dean of the University of Washington College of FisheriesBuilderWestern Boatbuilding Company Tacoma WashingtonLaunched16 January 1950Commissioned18 February 1950IdentificationFWS 1601FateTransferred to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration 3 October 1970NotesOperated by Fish and Wildlife Service s Bureau of Commercial Fisheries 1956 1970United StatesNameNOAAS John N CobbNamesakePrevious name retainedAcquiredTransferred from U S Fish and Wildlife Service 3 October 1970Decommissioned13 August 2008HomeportSeattle WashingtonIdentificationIMO number 7738436 R 552FateDonated to Seattle Maritime Academy 2008 Preserved 2009 Sold to private owner 2015 Abandoned and seized 2016 Sold to private owner 2017StatusExtant as commercial fishing vessel 2018General characteristicsTypeFisheries research shipTonnage185 gross register tons GRT 78 net register tons NRT Displacement250 tons full load Length93 ft 28 m Beam26 ft 7 9 m Draft10 ft 10 in 3 30 m Installed power325 bhp 242 kW PropulsionFairbanks Morse diesel engine 1 shaft 25 tons fuelSpeed9 3 knots 17 2 km h 10 7 mph sustained Range2 900 nmi 5 400 km 3 300 mi at 9 3 knots 17 km h 11 mph Endurance13 daysBoats amp landing craft carried1 fiberglass utility boatComplement10 2 NOAA Corps officers 2 licensed engineers and 4 other crew members plus up to 4 scientists note 1 Notes60 kilowatts electrical powerJohn N Cobb fisheries research vessel U S National Register of Historic PlacesNRHP reference No 09000047Added to NRHPFebruary 11 2009 Contents 1 Construction and commissioning 2 Technical characteristics 3 Operational history 3 1 Fish and Wildlife Service 3 2 NOAA 3 3 Later career 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Citations 7 References 8 External linksConstruction and commissioning EditW C Nickum and Sons designed John N Cobb based on a West Coast purse seiner design 1 The Fish and Wildlife Service FWS funded her construction using US 150 000 ifrom the sale of the FWS fisheries research vessel Washington and the Western Boatbuilding Company constructed her in Tacoma Washington She was launched on 16 January 1950 and commissioned as US FWS John N Cobb FWS 1601 on 18 February 1950 1 Technical characteristics EditJohn N Cobb had a wooden hull As originally constructed she was designed for exploratory fishing cruises and fishing gear research and development with trawling longlining gillnetting and oceanographic sampling capabilities 1 When commissioned in 1950 she had then modern navigational equipment including radar a LORAN navigation system depth finders and an electro mechanical steering system 1 John N Cobb had a total of 13 bunks and her mess room could serve eight personnel at a time During her NOAA service she carried a complement of two NOAA Corps officers two licensed engineers and four other crew members and could accommodate up to four scientists Her deck equipment featured three winches and one boom crane This equipment gave John N Cobb a lifting capacity of up to 4 800 pounds 2 200 kg as well as 7 200 feet 2 200 m of cable that could pull up to 14 000 pounds 6 400 kg During her NOAA years in support of her primary mission of fishery and living marine resource research for the National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS division of NOAA John N Cobb was equipped with a shallow water echo sounder fishfinder forward looking sonar and net sonde She had a single laboratory of 150 square feet 14 m2 She carried a 17 foot 5 2 m fiberglass boat for utility and rescue purposes She could conduct bottom trawls down to depths of over 300 fathoms 1 800 ft 550 m Operational history EditFish and Wildlife Service Edit Assigned Seattle Washington as her home port John N Cobb made her first cruise in March and April 1950 operating off Alaska in search of commercially useful populations of shellfish especially shrimp 1 From June to September 1950 she operated in the Pacific Ocean off Alaska Oregon and Washington looking for commercially exploitable albacore populations In August 1950 her crew discovered a seamount rising 9 600 feet 2 926 m from the sea bottom to 132 feet 40 2 m below the sea s surface 270 nautical miles 500 km 310 mi off the coast of Washington 1 the seamount later was named Cobb Seamount 1 In 1953 John N Cobb cruised off the Aleutian Islands conducting a preliminary search for salmon populations and developing fishing techniques that would allow the successful use of gill nets in the open ocean 1 Later in 1953 she explored Prince William Sound off Alaska to assess the availability of herring there 1 In 1955 she tagged petrale sole in the Esteban Deep a submarine canyon in the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Vancouver Island British Columbia Canada 1 That spring working in conjunction with chartered halibut schooners she began the first survey of salmon populations in the eastern North Pacific Ocean and by the time she wrapped up this work in 1961 the general distribution of salmon in the North Pacific and Bering Sea was understood 1 Meanwhile the Fish and Wildlife Service was renamed the United States Fish and Wildlife Service USFWS and reorganized in 1956 creating a new Bureau of Commercial Fisheries BCF and John N Cobb became a part of the BCF fleet 1 nbsp Starboard quarter view of US FWS John N Cobb from Commercial Fisheries Review September 1957 In 1959 John N Cobb was supporting the USFWS s Exploratory Fishing and Gear Research EF amp GR element in 1959 when it fielded its first scuba diving team 1 which operated from her In August 1959 she took part in the Chariot Project with the United States Atomic Energy Commission to assess the feasibility of using nuclear explosives to excavate harbors or canals off the northwest coast of Alaska but the project never came to fruition 1 Of her first 41 cruises in the 1950s she focused on experimental fishing methods and equipment in 11 engaged in midwater trawling in seven conducted bottom and shrimp trawling in two and tested a fish pump device in two In 1960 John N Cobb experimented with the use of a high resolution echo sounder to locate dragging areas off Washington that contained commercial quantities of fish In 1961 she worked with the U S Atomic Energy Commission to study deep water marine resources off Washington and Oregon In 1963 she joined the BCF ship George B Kelez in experimental trawling for salmon off Alaska 1 NOAA Edit On 3 October 1970 a reorganization occurred which created NOAA under the United States Department of Commerce Under the reorganization the BCF came under the control of the new National Marine Fisheries Service NMFS an element of NOAA and via a phased process during 1972 and 1973 the ships of the NMFS and of another element of NOAA the National Ocean Survey successor to the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey which was abolished upon the 1970 creation of NOAA were brought together to form a consolidated NOAA fleet John N Cobb became a part of the new NOAA fleet via this process and was redesignated NOAAS John N Cobb R 552 1 With her home port at NOAA s Marine Operations Center Pacific MOC P in Seattle and operated by NOAA s Office of Marine and Aviation Operations John N Cobb conducted research off southeastern Alaska and the Pacific Northwest of the United States She supported research of the NMFS Auke Bay Laboratory in Juneau Alaska collecting fish and crustacean specimens using trawls and benthic longlines and fish larvae fish eggs and plankton using plankton nets and surface and mid water larval nets Scientists from the National Marine Mammal Laboratory in Seattle also conducted surveys of whales and porpoises including cetacean ecology and humpback whale prey investigations and of seals and studied harbor seal ecology near tidewater glaciers while aboard John N Cobb She also took part in coral and sponge benthic habitat studies the mapping of near shore estuary habitats sablefish tagging and telemetry studies assessments of juvenile rockfish habitats and oceanographic sampling and long term coastal monitoring and she provided support to remote field camps and the Little Port Walter Marine Station in Port Walter Alaska 1 In the early 1980s John N Cobb collaborated with other research vessels in a research project using small mesh purse seines to sample juvenile salmon off the coasts of Alaska British Columbia Oregon and Washington 1 In the immediate aftermath of the Exxon Valdez oil spill on Bligh Reef in Alaska s Prince William Sound on 29 March 1989 John N Cobb which was in an inactive status at the time quickly returned to active duty and played an important role in post spill research on the effects of the spill on the environment In subsequent years she supported numerous studies of the lasting ecological effects of the spill on Prince William Sound 1 In the mid 1990s John N Cobb came to the assistance of the purse seiner Karen Rae which was in distress in Icy Strait 1 in the Alexander Archipelago in southeastern Alaska 1 As fisheries science renewed its focus on the marine ecology of juvenile salmon and other epipelagic fishes John N Cobb helped to pioneer the use of surface rope trawls from 1997 to 2007 1 This led to the creation of the Southeast Coastal Monitoring Project and allowed the development of an understanding of the biophysical factors affecting fluctuations from year to year in salmon populations 1 John N Cobb s 50th anniversary in the fleets of NOAA and its predecessors was celebrated in 2000 On 10 May 2004 she rendered assistance to the Alaska Marine Highway System ferry LeConte which had run aground that morning in Peril Strait near Cozian Reef about 30 nautical miles 56 km 35 mi north of Sitka Alaska 1 2 She joined other vessels in rescuing LeConte s 86 passengers from life rafts picking up most of them herself 2 NOAA s plans called for John N Cobb to remain active until August 2008 but the main crankshaft in her original 1931 Fairbanks Morse locomotive engine broke in June 2008 rendering her inoperable Repairs were estimated to cost 245 000 and take four to six months to complete so NOAA decided to bring her long career to an end She was decommissioned on 13 August 2008 at the Sand Point facility in Seattle and was the oldest NOAA ship at the time of her decommissioning Later career Edit After decommissioning John N Cobb NOAA donated her to the Seattle Maritime Academy a branch of Seattle Central Community College 3 and she was moved to Salmon Bay in Seattle She was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on 11 February 2009 4 but the Academy never repaired her broken crankshaft 3 and she remained moored in Salmon Bay under the Ballard Bridge for about seven years 5 In 2015 the Academy sold her to Daniel J Webb 3 who moved her to Port Townsend Washington in February 2016 to repair her crankshaft 3 However John N Cobb by then was waterlogged and too heavy for the port s equipment to haul out of the water 3 Unable to pay her mooring fees or for her repairs Webb abandoned her at Port Townsend 6 7 A legal dispute over payment of mooring fees and for repairs to the vessel broke out during 2016 between the Port of Port Townsend and the State of Washington which represented the Seattle Maritime Academy the port claimed that the Academy had violated the law by selling an unseaworthy vessel to an owner who could not afford to repair her while the state countered that the law exempted unregistered vessels used primarily for government purposes that the Academy had never registered John N Cobb and therefore was not bound by the law that the Academy was free to surplus the vessel in any way it saw fit consistent with the wishes of her donor and that any matter of financial restitution to the port was matter between the port and Webb 3 7 Meanwhile the Port of Port Townsend sought and gained custody of John N Cobb because of her overdue mooring fees pumped the water out of her and hauled her out of the water in October 2016 for an inspection estimating her to be worth US 300 000 once repaired but requiring US 250 000 in repairs and estimating her scrap value as US 50 000 3 Hoping to find a buyer who would preserve her but willing to sell her to a scrapyard if no other buyer came forward the port then put her up for sale 3 On 26 April 2017 Ron Sloan purchased John N Cobb and he contracted with the fishing vessel Sunnford to tow her from Seattle to Winchester Bay Oregon where she arrived on 18 August 2017 5 As of 2017 John N Cobb was undergoing repair 5 for commercial use in tuna fishing and for charter for fisheries research and other activities during the off season 8 See also EditNOAA ships and aircraftNotes Edit Combat Fleets of the World 1990 1991 p 917 claims her complement was 8 4 civilian officers and 4 other crew members plus up to 4 scientists Citations Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x noaa gov AFSC Historical Corner John N Cobb Establishing a Rich Legacy nRetrieved August 25 2018 a b Anonymous M V LeConte Runs Aground All Passengers Safe sitnews us May 10 2004 Retrieved August 25 2018 a b c d e f g h Bermant Charlie Port battles state over derelict boat pteader com December 7 2016 Retrieved August 25 2018 Weekly List February 20 2009 Retrieved 2009 02 20 a b c Hitz Charles R Cobb 2017 A Good Year carmelfinley wordpress com December 28 2017 Retrieved August 25 2018 Twietmeyer Nick Man has left abandoned boats and ruined finances in his wake kitsapdailynews com February 26 2018 9 25 a m Retrieved August 25 2018 a b Twietmeyer Nick Poulsbo bids farewell to derelict tugboat kitsapdailynews com April 6 2018 3 51 p m Retrieved August 25 2018 Finley Carmel The John N Cobb to go for tuna carmelfinley wordpress com August 24 2017 Retrieved August 26 2018References Edit National Register of Historic Places Registration Form RV John N Cobb pdf 12 November 2008 Retrieved 2012 09 03 Accompanying Photos pdf 12 November 2008 Retrieved 2012 09 03 External links Edit Information about the John N Cobb s Fairbanks Morse Diesel Engine Old Tacoma Marine Inc Archived from the original on 2012 02 11 Retrieved 2012 09 03 Prezelin Bernard and A D Baker III The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World 1990 1991 Their Ships Aircraft and Armament Annapolis Maryland United States Naval Institute 1990 ISBN 0 87021 250 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title NOAAS John N Cobb amp oldid 1179674063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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