USNSCS Grayfox (TWR-825)

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A sister ship of the Grayfox, TWR-841
A sister ship of the Grayfox, TWR-841
History
NameUSNSCS Grayfox
BuilderMarinette Marine, Marinette, Wisconsin
Acquired15 August 1997
Commissioned26 April 1998
HomeportPort Huron, Michigan
Statusin active service, as of 2009
General characteristics
TypeUSNSCC training ship
Displacement213 long tons (216 t) full load
Length120 ft (37 m) o/a
Beam25 ft (7.6 m)
Draft7 ft 6 in (2.29 m)
Propulsion2 × Caterpillar 3512 TAC 1,175 hp (876 kW) diesel engines, 2 shafts
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12–16 knots (22–30 km/h; 14–18 mph) cruising
18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph) maximum
Range1,700 nmi (3,100 km)
Endurance1 week at sea
Complement30 Sea Cadets, 6 Sea Cadet Officers

The USNSCS Grayfox (TWR-825) is a training ship, the largest owned by the United States Naval Sea Cadet Corps. She is homeported in Port Huron, Michigan and is used by the USNSCC for shipboard training. The USNSCS prefix stands for "United States Naval Sea Cadet Ship."

History

Vice Admiral Terrance Etnyre, commander of Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, salutes the Sea Cadets performing as sideboys of the U.S. Naval Sea Cadet training ship Grayfox (TWR 825), Detroit Navy Week, 2007

United States Navy, 1985–1995

The Grayfox started life in 1985 as a 120-foot Torpedo Weapons Retriever, one of ten. She was assigned to the United States Navy's Atlantic Undersea Testing and Evaluation Center (AUTEC), Andros Island, Bahamas, where her job was to launch and retrieve test torpedoes and targets. Eventually, as torpedoes became less of a threat, the Navy decided to mothball her in 1995. She was then sent to Green Cove Springs, Florida, where a group of sponsors found her and decided the Sea Cadets needed their own ship to train on. The Secretary of the Navy transferred the USNS Grayfox to the USNSCC on August 15, 1997.

U.S. Naval Sea Cadet Corps, 1997–present

Since she had been in mothballs for quite some time, the Grayfox needed a lot of attention. All of the torpedo rollers had to be removed from the after deck and returned to AUTEC. The ramp had to be welded over and, she needed to be chipped and painted. Most of her systems required attention in one form or another. After a long winter of hard work by the cadets and volunteers, she was finally starting to look like a Navy ship.[1]

She was commissioned in the U.S. Naval Sea Cadet Corps on April 26, 1998 as the USNSCS Grayfox by Mrs. Jack Kennedy, wife of the former National President of the Navy League of the United States.

The ship has berthing for 30 cadets and 6 officers. The large berthing capacity is due to the extension of the main cabin that was constructed by James M. Hannan Division and other volunteers.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Hannan Division - USNSCS Grayfox". Archived from the original on 2008-04-09. Retrieved 2008-06-20.