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USCGC Marion

USCGC Marion (WSC-145), was a 125 ft (38 m) United States Coast Guard Active-class patrol boat in commission from 1927 to 1962. She was named for Francis Marion, an American Revolutionary War general who was known for his unconventional warfare tactics. Marion served during the Rum Patrol and World War II performing defense, law enforcement, ice patrol, and search and rescue missions. Most notably, Marion served as the platform for the first intensive oceanographic studies made by the Coast Guard.[1][5]

USCGC Marion in Baffin Bay (August 1928)
History
United States
NameUSCGC Marion
NamesakeFrancis Marion, American Revolutionary War general[1]
OperatorU.S. Coast Guard
BuilderAmerican Brown Boveri Electric Corporation, Camden, New Jersey
Cost$63,163 USD[1]
Launched15 March 1927
Commissioned6 April 1927
Decommissioned15 February 1962
FateSold 8 March 1963 to Robert F. Solomon of Norfolk, Virginia and renamed Top Cat[2]
General characteristics
Class and typeActive-class patrol boat
Displacement232 tons (trial)
Length125 ft (38 m)
Beam23 ft 6 in (7.16 m)
Draft7 ft 6 in (2.29 m)
Installed powerAfter 1938 re-engining: 1,200 brake horsepower (0.9 megawatt)
Propulsion
Speed
  • As built: 10 knots
  • In 1945: 12 knots (maximum); 7 knots (economical)[3]
RangeIn 1945: 2,900 nautical miles (5,370 kilometers) at 10 knots; 4,000 nautical miles (7,400 kilometers) at 7 knots[3]
Complement
  • 20 (3 officers, 17 enlisted men) (1930)[1]
  • 46 (5 officers, 41 men) (1945)[3]
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Sonar (1945) QCO-1[3]
  • Detection radar (1960) SPS-23[4]
Armament
  • In 1927: 1 x 3-inch (76.2-millimeter) 23-caliber gun
  • In 1941: 1 x 3-inch (76.2-mm) 23-caliber gun, 2 x depth charge tracks
  • In 1945: 1 x 3-inch (76.2-mm) 23-caliber gun , 2 x single 20-mm 80-caliber gun mounts, 2 x depth charge tracks, 2 x Mousetraps1 x 3-inch (76.2-mm) 23-caliber gun1 x 3-inch (76.2-mm) 23-caliber gun
  • In 1960: 1 x single 40-mm 60-caliber antiaircraft gun mount[4]
NotesSold 8 March 1963[4]

Construction and commissioning edit

Marion was built by American Brown Boveri Electric Corporation at Camden, New Jersey. She was commissioned as USCGC Marion (WSC-145) on 6 April 1927. She was the eleventh of the Active-class patrol boats to be commissioned, which were designed for trailing the "mother ships" that supported the smuggling boats of "rum-runners" during Prohibition. The Active-class ships were also referred to unofficially as the "Buck & a Quarter" class in reference to their 125-foot length.[6][7]

Marion expedition to Davis Strait edit

Marion was initially assigned Rum Patrol duties with a home-port of New London, Connecticut, however, Lieutenant Commander Edward H. Smith had been directed by Coast Guard Commandant Frederick C. Billard to outfit her as an oceanographic research vessel for an expedition to Arctic waters off the coast of Greenland. The purpose of the expedition was to attempt to find information about the formation of icebergs and their movements. Marion was loaded with supplies and provisions for 70 days of cruising and spare parts for every piece of machinery on board. The complement was increased to two officers, two warrant officers and 23 men; six more than her normal complement. Marion departed Boston, Massachusetts, on 11 July 1928,[8] stopped briefly at Halifax, Nova Scotia, and arrived at Sydney, Nova Scotia, where fuel and water supplies were topped off and 78 drums of fuel were stowed on deck. While at both Halifax and Sydney, Smith consulted local mariners familiar with the Labrador Sea and Davis Strait and updated the ship's charts with information from the mariner's charts.[9]

Departing Sydney on 16 July using only one engine to conserve fuel, Marion headed through the Strait of Belle Isle and began her oceanographic survey mission. Initially, only Smith and his executive officer, Lieutenant Noble Ricketts, had the knowledge of how to sample the Arctic waters for temperature and salinity but they trained additional men to handle the instruments used for the survey. At each stop the ship's position was noted and a sounding was made while the temperature and salinity samples were collected. With 2,400 m (7,900 ft) of sample wire in the water, both winches that handled the sampling equipment failed on 27 July. The crew managed to retrieve the wire in the dark in three hours by using the anchor windlass to heave the line in. In the meantime, one failed winch was repaired using parts scavenged from a spare and the line was spooled back onto the winch. The repair evolution was completed by morning with one winch operational. By July 31, Danish officials in Greenland had radioed permission for Marion to put into Godthaab for repairs to the other winch and the crew worked through the day to remove the two ton winch to shore for repair and replace it on the deckhouse. Marion departed Godthaab that evening with repairs completed.[10]

After four days sailing a gale forced Marion to seek shelter at Godhavn where the crew was granted liberty. To Smith's surprise diesel fuel was available and he took the opportunity to fill the ship's fuel tanks. With the unexpected acquisition of fuel, when Marion departed Godhavn, she was able to do so on both engines. After completing a line of sample stations to the north, she returned to top off fuel and water tanks before heading across to Baffin Bay, all the while taking soundings and samples. Samples were taken along the coast of Baffin Island and a 450 mi (720 km) line across Davis Strait during the month of August ending at Ivigtut, the site of a cryolite mine that was Greenland's main source of income during that period. After re-provisioning and fueling, she headed back to sea only to be forced to shelter under Mount Kungmat for three days before departing Cape Farewell on a 620 mi (1,000 km) station line to Belle Isle. A storm prevented entering the Strait of Belle Isle so Smith decided to put in at St. John's, Newfoundland, for a liberty and supplies. While en route, Smith managed to run two unscheduled station lines along the Newfoundland coastal shelf.[11] Marion arrived at St. John's on 11 September and departed for New London the next day, her scientific mission accomplished. She arrived at New London on 19 September 1928[8] after having traveled 8,100 mi (13,000 km) and taken observations at 191 oceanographic stations with some 2,000 observations of temperature and salinity.[1] Numerous bottom samples had been taken and soundings were added to the charts of the area.[12] The Marion expedition observations demonstrated that pack ice had a direct influence on the drift of icebergs. Heavy pack ice along the Newfoundland and Labrador shelf waters prevented icebergs from being carried to shore and forced them to enter shipping lanes to the south. Little ice on the shelves allowed the icebergs to ground on the Newfoundland coast, where they were harmless. The expedition was the beginning of a long involvement by the Coast Guard in Greenland and its surrounding waters.[12]

Patrol duties during the Depression edit

Since Marion had originally been designed specifically for prohibition enforcement service, after the specialized oceanographic equipment was removed she resumed Rum Patrol duty with a home-port of New London. Her routine consisted of picketing liquor laden "mother ships" and preventing them from offloading prohibited cargo to smaller contact boats that were used to deliver liquor to shore.[13] In 1933, Marion was assigned the home-port of Norfolk, Virginia. With the end of prohibition, she assumed a more traditional role of a Coast Guard cutter, that of search and rescue, law enforcement, merchant vessel inspection, and defense training.[Note 1][14] Marion was transferred later to patrol duties out of St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. On 1 November 1940 she was transferred to U.S. Navy control out of Charlotte Amalie, Virgin Islands, where she performed wartime patrols and convoy escort duty.[1]

World War II service edit

Marion served on anti-submarine patrols with the Navy's Caribbean Sea Frontier Squadron based at Charlotte Amalie during World War II. On 14 October 1943, off Mayaguez, Puerto Rico, she assisted with the evacuation of the crew of EM Dow which had been badly damaged by squalls on a passage from Baltimore, Maryland. Marion made a lee for the stricken ship and rescued all 37 crewmembers of Dow without loss of life.[1][Note 2]

Post-war service edit

Marion was released from Navy service on 1 January 1946 and was reassigned duties out of Norfolk consisting of law enforcement and search and rescue work. In June 1955, she towed Siboney to safety from 300 mi (480 km) east of Norfolk.[1][17]

 
Top Cat

Marion was decommissioned on 15 February 1962 and sold 8 March 1963 to Robert F. Solomon of Norfolk who renamed her Top Cat.[2]

Awards edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The repeal of Prohibition was accomplished with the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment on 5 December 1933.
  2. ^ EM Dow (WYP-353) was originally the former fishing vessel Annie Dow acquired by the Coast Guard under charter on 24 June 1943. She was assigned to Caribbean Sea Frontier Squadron. The prefix "EM" stood for "Emergency Manning".[15][16]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Marion, 1927", Cutters, Craft & U.S. Coast Guard-Manned Army & Navy Vessels, U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office
  2. ^ a b "Marion", Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, Naval History & Heritage Command, Naval Historical Center
  3. ^ a b c d e Scheina (1982), pp 44–49
  4. ^ a b c d Canney, pp 98–102
  5. ^ Johnson, pp 117–118
  6. ^ Scheina (1990), pp 57–60
  7. ^ Johnson, p 88
  8. ^ a b Record of Movements, Vessels of the United States Coast Guard, 1790–December 31, 1933", U.S. Coast Guard, Department of Transportation, p 426
  9. ^ Johnson, p 118
  10. ^ Johnson, p 120
  11. ^ Johnson, pp 120–121
  12. ^ a b Johnson, p 122
  13. ^ Johnson, p 80
  14. ^ Canney, p xiii
  15. ^ Scheina (1982), p 164
  16. ^ Scheina (1982), pp 166–167
  17. ^ Scheina (1990), p 60

References edit

  • Canney, Donald L. (1995). U.S. Coast Guard and Revenue Cutters, 1790–1935. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN 978-1-55750-101-1.
  • Flynn, Jim; Lortz, Ed; Lukas, Holger (March 2018). "Answer 39/48". Warship International. LV (January 2018): 23–25. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Johnson, Robert Irwin (1987). Guardians of the Sea, History of the United States Coast Guard, 1915 to the Present. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN 978-0-87021-720-3.
  • Scheina, Robert L. (1982). U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft of World War II. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN 978-0-87021-717-3.
  • Scheina, Robert L. (1990). U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft, 1946–1990. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN 978-0-87021-719-7.

Websites edit

  • "Marion". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Naval History & Heritage Command, Naval Historical Center. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  • "Marion, 1927" (pdf). Cutters, Craft & U.S. Coast Guard-Manned Army & Navy Vessels. U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office. Retrieved 27 November 2013.
  • "Record of Movements, Vessels of the United States Coast Guard, 1790–December 31, 1933" (pdf). U.S. Coast Guard, Department of Transportation. Retrieved 26 January 2014.

External links edit

  • The Journal of Ensign W. E. Prindle, Jr., USCGR, aboard the USCGC Marion, July–September 1942

uscgc, marion, united, states, coast, guard, active, class, patrol, boat, commission, from, 1927, 1962, named, francis, marion, american, revolutionary, general, known, unconventional, warfare, tactics, marion, served, during, patrol, world, performing, defens. USCGC Marion WSC 145 was a 125 ft 38 m United States Coast Guard Active class patrol boat in commission from 1927 to 1962 She was named for Francis Marion an American Revolutionary War general who was known for his unconventional warfare tactics Marion served during the Rum Patrol and World War II performing defense law enforcement ice patrol and search and rescue missions Most notably Marion served as the platform for the first intensive oceanographic studies made by the Coast Guard 1 5 USCGC Marion in Baffin Bay August 1928 HistoryUnited StatesNameUSCGC MarionNamesakeFrancis Marion American Revolutionary War general 1 OperatorU S Coast GuardBuilderAmerican Brown Boveri Electric Corporation Camden New JerseyCost 63 163 USD 1 Launched15 March 1927Commissioned6 April 1927Decommissioned15 February 1962FateSold 8 March 1963 to Robert F Solomon of Norfolk Virginia and renamed Top Cat 2 General characteristicsClass and typeActive class patrol boatDisplacement232 tons trial Length125 ft 38 m Beam23 ft 6 in 7 16 m Draft7 ft 6 in 2 29 m Installed powerAfter 1938 re engining 1 200 brake horsepower 0 9 megawatt PropulsionAs built Two 6 cylinder 300 brake horsepower diesel engines 1 After 1938 re engining Two Cooper Bessemer EN 8 600 brake horsepower diesel engines 3 4 SpeedAs built 10 knots In 1945 12 knots maximum 7 knots economical 3 RangeIn 1945 2 900 nautical miles 5 370 kilometers at 10 knots 4 000 nautical miles 7 400 kilometers at 7 knots 3 Complement20 3 officers 17 enlisted men 1930 1 46 5 officers 41 men 1945 3 Sensors and processing systemsSonar 1945 QCO 1 3 Detection radar 1960 SPS 23 4 ArmamentIn 1927 1 x 3 inch 76 2 millimeter 23 caliber gun In 1941 1 x 3 inch 76 2 mm 23 caliber gun 2 x depth charge tracks In 1945 1 x 3 inch 76 2 mm 23 caliber gun 2 x single 20 mm 80 caliber gun mounts 2 x depth charge tracks 2 x Mousetraps1 x 3 inch 76 2 mm 23 caliber gun1 x 3 inch 76 2 mm 23 caliber gun In 1960 1 x single 40 mm 60 caliber antiaircraft gun mount 4 NotesSold 8 March 1963 4 Contents 1 Construction and commissioning 2 Marion expedition to Davis Strait 3 Patrol duties during the Depression 4 World War II service 5 Post war service 6 Awards 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Citations 10 References 10 1 Websites 11 External linksConstruction and commissioning editMarion was built by American Brown Boveri Electric Corporation at Camden New Jersey She was commissioned as USCGC Marion WSC 145 on 6 April 1927 She was the eleventh of the Active class patrol boats to be commissioned which were designed for trailing the mother ships that supported the smuggling boats of rum runners during Prohibition The Active class ships were also referred to unofficially as the Buck amp a Quarter class in reference to their 125 foot length 6 7 Marion expedition to Davis Strait editMarion was initially assigned Rum Patrol duties with a home port of New London Connecticut however Lieutenant Commander Edward H Smith had been directed by Coast Guard Commandant Frederick C Billard to outfit her as an oceanographic research vessel for an expedition to Arctic waters off the coast of Greenland The purpose of the expedition was to attempt to find information about the formation of icebergs and their movements Marion was loaded with supplies and provisions for 70 days of cruising and spare parts for every piece of machinery on board The complement was increased to two officers two warrant officers and 23 men six more than her normal complement Marion departed Boston Massachusetts on 11 July 1928 8 stopped briefly at Halifax Nova Scotia and arrived at Sydney Nova Scotia where fuel and water supplies were topped off and 78 drums of fuel were stowed on deck While at both Halifax and Sydney Smith consulted local mariners familiar with the Labrador Sea and Davis Strait and updated the ship s charts with information from the mariner s charts 9 Departing Sydney on 16 July using only one engine to conserve fuel Marion headed through the Strait of Belle Isle and began her oceanographic survey mission Initially only Smith and his executive officer Lieutenant Noble Ricketts had the knowledge of how to sample the Arctic waters for temperature and salinity but they trained additional men to handle the instruments used for the survey At each stop the ship s position was noted and a sounding was made while the temperature and salinity samples were collected With 2 400 m 7 900 ft of sample wire in the water both winches that handled the sampling equipment failed on 27 July The crew managed to retrieve the wire in the dark in three hours by using the anchor windlass to heave the line in In the meantime one failed winch was repaired using parts scavenged from a spare and the line was spooled back onto the winch The repair evolution was completed by morning with one winch operational By July 31 Danish officials in Greenland had radioed permission for Marion to put into Godthaab for repairs to the other winch and the crew worked through the day to remove the two ton winch to shore for repair and replace it on the deckhouse Marion departed Godthaab that evening with repairs completed 10 After four days sailing a gale forced Marion to seek shelter at Godhavn where the crew was granted liberty To Smith s surprise diesel fuel was available and he took the opportunity to fill the ship s fuel tanks With the unexpected acquisition of fuel when Marion departed Godhavn she was able to do so on both engines After completing a line of sample stations to the north she returned to top off fuel and water tanks before heading across to Baffin Bay all the while taking soundings and samples Samples were taken along the coast of Baffin Island and a 450 mi 720 km line across Davis Strait during the month of August ending at Ivigtut the site of a cryolite mine that was Greenland s main source of income during that period After re provisioning and fueling she headed back to sea only to be forced to shelter under Mount Kungmat for three days before departing Cape Farewell on a 620 mi 1 000 km station line to Belle Isle A storm prevented entering the Strait of Belle Isle so Smith decided to put in at St John s Newfoundland for a liberty and supplies While en route Smith managed to run two unscheduled station lines along the Newfoundland coastal shelf 11 Marion arrived at St John s on 11 September and departed for New London the next day her scientific mission accomplished She arrived at New London on 19 September 1928 8 after having traveled 8 100 mi 13 000 km and taken observations at 191 oceanographic stations with some 2 000 observations of temperature and salinity 1 Numerous bottom samples had been taken and soundings were added to the charts of the area 12 The Marion expedition observations demonstrated that pack ice had a direct influence on the drift of icebergs Heavy pack ice along the Newfoundland and Labrador shelf waters prevented icebergs from being carried to shore and forced them to enter shipping lanes to the south Little ice on the shelves allowed the icebergs to ground on the Newfoundland coast where they were harmless The expedition was the beginning of a long involvement by the Coast Guard in Greenland and its surrounding waters 12 Patrol duties during the Depression editSince Marion had originally been designed specifically for prohibition enforcement service after the specialized oceanographic equipment was removed she resumed Rum Patrol duty with a home port of New London Her routine consisted of picketing liquor laden mother ships and preventing them from offloading prohibited cargo to smaller contact boats that were used to deliver liquor to shore 13 In 1933 Marion was assigned the home port of Norfolk Virginia With the end of prohibition she assumed a more traditional role of a Coast Guard cutter that of search and rescue law enforcement merchant vessel inspection and defense training Note 1 14 Marion was transferred later to patrol duties out of St Thomas Virgin Islands On 1 November 1940 she was transferred to U S Navy control out of Charlotte Amalie Virgin Islands where she performed wartime patrols and convoy escort duty 1 World War II service editMarion served on anti submarine patrols with the Navy s Caribbean Sea Frontier Squadron based at Charlotte Amalie during World War II On 14 October 1943 off Mayaguez Puerto Rico she assisted with the evacuation of the crew of EM Dow which had been badly damaged by squalls on a passage from Baltimore Maryland Marion made a lee for the stricken ship and rescued all 37 crewmembers of Dow without loss of life 1 Note 2 Post war service editMarion was released from Navy service on 1 January 1946 and was reassigned duties out of Norfolk consisting of law enforcement and search and rescue work In June 1955 she towed Siboney to safety from 300 mi 480 km east of Norfolk 1 17 nbsp Top CatMarion was decommissioned on 15 February 1962 and sold 8 March 1963 to Robert F Solomon of Norfolk who renamed her Top Cat 2 Awards editAmerican Defense Service Medal American Campaign Medal World War II Victory Medal National Defense Service Medal with starSee also editRum Patrol List of Arctic expeditionsNotes edit The repeal of Prohibition was accomplished with the ratification of the Twenty first Amendment on 5 December 1933 EM Dow WYP 353 was originally the former fishing vessel Annie Dow acquired by the Coast Guard under charter on 24 June 1943 She was assigned to Caribbean Sea Frontier Squadron The prefix EM stood for Emergency Manning 15 16 Citations edit a b c d e f g h i Marion 1927 Cutters Craft amp U S Coast Guard Manned Army amp Navy Vessels U S Coast Guard Historian s Office a b Marion Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Naval History amp Heritage Command Naval Historical Center a b c d e Scheina 1982 pp 44 49 a b c d Canney pp 98 102 Johnson pp 117 118 Scheina 1990 pp 57 60 Johnson p 88 a b Record of Movements Vessels of the United States Coast Guard 1790 December 31 1933 U S Coast Guard Department of Transportation p 426 Johnson p 118 Johnson p 120 Johnson pp 120 121 a b Johnson p 122 Johnson p 80 Canney p xiii Scheina 1982 p 164 Scheina 1982 pp 166 167 Scheina 1990 p 60References editCanney Donald L 1995 U S Coast Guard and Revenue Cutters 1790 1935 Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland ISBN 978 1 55750 101 1 Flynn Jim Lortz Ed Lukas Holger March 2018 Answer 39 48 Warship International LV January 2018 23 25 ISSN 0043 0374 Johnson Robert Irwin 1987 Guardians of the Sea History of the United States Coast Guard 1915 to the Present Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland ISBN 978 0 87021 720 3 Scheina Robert L 1982 U S Coast Guard Cutters amp Craft of World War II Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland ISBN 978 0 87021 717 3 Scheina Robert L 1990 U S Coast Guard Cutters amp Craft 1946 1990 Naval Institute Press Annapolis Maryland ISBN 978 0 87021 719 7 Websites edit Marion Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Naval History amp Heritage Command Naval Historical Center Retrieved 27 November 2013 Marion 1927 pdf Cutters Craft amp U S Coast Guard Manned Army amp Navy Vessels U S Coast Guard Historian s Office Retrieved 27 November 2013 Record of Movements Vessels of the United States Coast Guard 1790 December 31 1933 pdf U S Coast Guard Department of Transportation Retrieved 26 January 2014 External links editThe Journal of Ensign W E Prindle Jr USCGR aboard the USCGC Marion July September 1942 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title USCGC Marion amp oldid 1185990133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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