USCGC Eagle (WIX-327)

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USCGC Eagle under sail
USCGC Eagle under sail.
Career (Germany) Kriegsmarine Jack
Name: Segelschulschiff Horst Wessel
Namesake: Horst Wessel
Laid down: 15 February 1936
Launched: 13 June 1936
Commissioned: 17 September 1936
Fate: Transferred to United States
Career (United States)
Commissioned: 15 May 1946
Homeport: United States Coast Guard Academy (New London, Connecticut)
Status: Active in service as of 2009
General characteristics
Displacement: 1,784 long tons (1,813 t) full load
Length: 295 ft (90 m) overall
234 ft (71 m) waterline
Beam: 39 ft 1 in (11.9 m)
Draft: 17 ft 6 in (5.3 m) full load
Propulsion: 1 × Caterpillar (C399) diesel engine (1980)
Sail plan: Foremast: 147.3 ft (44.9 m)
Mainmast: 147.3 ft (44.9 m)
Mizzenmast: 132.0 ft (40.2 m)
Sail Area: 22,300 sq ft (2,070 m2)
Speed: 17 kn (31 km/h; 20 mph) under sail
10 kn (19 km/h; 12 mph) under diesel
Range: 5,450 nmi (10,090 km; 6,270 mi) at 7.5 kn (13.9 km/h; 8.6 mph) under diesel
(range under sail unlimited)
Complement: 19 officers, 56 crew,
175 cadets and instructors

The USCGC Eagle (WIX-327) (ex-Horst Wessel) is a 295-foot (90 m) barque used as a training cutter for future officers of the United States Coast Guard. She and the USS Constitution are the only active commissioned sailing vessels in American government service.

She is the seventh U.S. Navy or Coast Guard ship to bear the name in a line dating back to 1792. Each summer, Eagle conducts cruises with cadets from the United States Coast Guard Academy and candidates from the Officer Candidate School for periods ranging from a week to two months. These cruises fulfill multiple roles; the primary mission is training the cadets and officer candidates, but the ship also performs a public relations role. Often, Eagle makes calls at foreign ports as a goodwill ambassador.

Contents

[edit] Segelschulschiff Horst Wessel

The ship was built in 1936 as the second of three similar vessels (Gorch Fock class) at the Blohm & Voss shipyard in Hamburg, Germany and used to train recruits for service in the Kriegsmarine. (At a later date, two further copies of this design were completed.) She was launched on 13 June 1936 and named for the well-known member of the Nazi Party, Horst Wessel. Commissioned by Adolf Hitler himself as a school ship for the German Navy (Reichsmarine) on 17 September 1936, she was homeported in Kiel on the Baltic Sea.

Segelschulschiff Horst Wessel

Under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany could not be militarized. Hitler ordered the creation of this sailing ship and her sister ships to train Navy cadets, but the ships were constructed with identical engine room setup and frame as U-boats.[citation needed] By the time World War II began, the Navy had already trained many of its U-boat machinists and officers.

In the three years before World War II, she undertook numerous training cruises in European waters, but also visited the Caribbean. In 1941 she was converted to a cargo ship, transporting men and supplies throughout the Baltic Sea, but continued to perform training missions as well. Equipped with two antiaircraft guns on the bridge wings, Horst Wessel is said to have downed three Soviet aircraft and one "friendly" German aircraft in combat. The crew had realized the German aircraft they had shot down was "friendly" while it was spiraling into the sea, and set about rescuing the pilot. When he set foot on the ship, he was furious and demanded an explanation. Upon review of the logs and radio personnel, it was determined that the pilot had been using the wrong codes for the battle group, showing the now embarrassed pilot that it was actually his fault.

At the end of World War II, the four vessels then extant were distributed to various nations as war reparations (Gorch Fock I went to the USSR as the Tovarishch, Albert Leo Schlageter went to Portugal as Sagres III, and the Mircea was completed and sold to Romania). Later, West Germany constructed a fifth vessel of the class, Gorch Fock II for its own use.

Horst Wessel was taken as a war prize by the United States. She was first sent to Wilhelmshaven, Germany, for repairs and modification, and was commissioned into the United States Coast Guard as the Coast Guard Cutter Eagle on 15 May 1946. In June 1946 a U.S. Coast Guard crew, assisted by the German captain and crew still aboard, sailed her from Bremerhaven, through a hurricane, to her new home port of New London, Connecticut.

[edit] "America's Tall Ship"

USCGC Eagle leading a parade of ships, New York, July 4, 2000.

The Eagle has a standing crew of six officers and 56 enlisted; on training missions, she carries on the average a complement of 12 officers, 68 crew, and up to 150 cadets. Each year, she takes one long training cruise to the Caribbean, the Pacific Coast, or Europe, and two shorter cruises along the U.S. East Coast.

During her many years of service, Eagle has traveled to ports throughout the United States and overseas. Among her various cruises, Eagle has participated in various Tall Ship races and events including the various incarnations of Operation Sail, most notably the American Bicentennial OpSail '76.

In September 1987, she undertook a yearlong cruise to Australia from her home at the U.S. Coast Guard Academy. During this cruise Academy instructors were embarked to conduct the cadets' courses while underway. In 2005, as part of the Trafalgar 200 International Fleet Review in the Solent off Southern England, Eagle was one of a number of tall ships from several nations to be reviewed by Queen Elizabeth II, along with the U.S. Navy warship USS Saipan (LHA-2). Later that Summer, Eagle returned to Bremerhaven for the first time since World War II, to an enthusiastic welcome.

In March 1998 Eagle trained her first and only enlisted members of the Coast Guard otherwise known as November-152 boot camp company. The members flew from Cape May, NJ to Roosevelt Rhodes, Air Force base in Puerto Rico. After just 3 days of training Eagle headed out to Fort de France, Martinique, La Guaira, Venezuela, Cartegena, Colombia then finally returned home to New London for boot camp graduation.

[edit] Specifications & Miscellany

Eagle's current auxiliary diesel

The design and construction of Eagle embodies centuries of development in the shipbuilder's art. The Eagle is slightly larger than her sister ship Gorch Fock. Overall Eagle displaces 1,824 tons. The hull is steel four-tenths of an inch (10 mm) thick. There are two full-length steel decks with a platform deck below. The raised forecastle and quarterdeck are made of steel overlaid with three inches (76 mm) of teak, as are the weather decks. Her auxiliary diesel engine, at 1,000 horsepower (750 kW), is also somewhat more powerful than that of the Gorch Fock. There are two 320 kW (430 hp) Caterpillar generators that can be run single or paralleled. Eagle has a range of 5,450 nautical miles (10,000 km) at her cruise speed of 7.5 knots (14 km/h) under diesel power. In the summer of 1974, during the kick-off race for OpSail '76 (from Newport, RI to Boston, MA), the participating ships encountered heavy weather and a number of participants other than Eagle dropped out. Off Cape Cod, the ship maintained a speed of 19 knots (35 km/h) on a broad reach under sail alone for a number of hours.

Helm station on the USCGC Eagle

Eagle has over 6 miles (9.7 km) of running rigging and approximately 22,300 square feet (2,072 m2) of sail area. To protect sails from chafing, the ship uses baggywrinkle extensively. People who see the baggywrinkle for the first time are usually very intrigued.

Eagle's propeller shaft can be disconnected from the engine and its reduction gears so the propeller can freewheel, thus lessening drag while the under sail.

In 1976, the Coast Guard added the "racing stripe" to her otherwise unadorned white hull.

The ship has undergone numerous refits since she was acquired in 1946. On July 1, 1972, the ship was returning to her berth at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, CT at the mid-point of her annual summer cadet training cruises when she was involved in a serious accident. Despite extensive precautions, as the ship passed below the Gold Star Memorial Bridge and a twin bridge being built parallel to it, her foremast and mainmast caught the safety netting slung below the new bridge. Both masts were snapped off above the topgallant crosstrees (about seven-eighths of the way up each mast), the upper parts left hanging dangerously from the remaining upright parts of the masts. As a result, the ship had to undergo emergency repairs.[1] The height of the mainmast was eventually reduced by 3 feet (0.91 m) so as to be the same height as the foremast.

In 1982, the ship underwent an extensive refit in the Coast Guard Yard at Curtis Bay (near Baltimore, MD). During this yard availability her original 1936 M.A.N. diesel engine (along with its generators and evaporators) were replaced by modern equipment. This made the engine room more spacious and less noisy and hot. The new engine could be controlled directly from the quarterdeck and responded instantly, rather than after a 30-or-more-second delay common with the original engine. Additional watertight compartmentalization was also added (previously, there had been only three (supposedly) watertight bulkheads). This compartmentalization included closing in cadet berthing areas, eliminating separate upper-class (fixed three-tier bunks) and lower-class (hammock) berthing and making the ship better able to accommodate male and female cadets. An enclosed pilothouse was built around the exhaust funnel on the quarterdeck. Electronic equipment (e.g., radar, navigation, and radio equipment) was updated as well.

[edit] In popular culture

Eagle has a significant presence in the Nantucket series of books by S. M. Stirling, in which she is visiting the island of Nantucket when a mysterious "Event" transports the entire island, including Eagle and her crew, back to the year 1250 BC. Sent across the Atlantic Ocean to barter for the grain and stock the time-lost Nantucketers need to survive through their first winter, her arrival off the south coast of Bronze Age England leads the natives to name her crew (and, by extension, the rest of the Island's population) as 'The Eagle People'. Although the Eagle described in the books is based on the real-world ship, all of her crew is fictional.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ New London Day, July 1, 1972.

[edit] External links

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