The United States Coast Guard (USCG) is the marine safety, search and rescue, and law enforcement services branch of the U.S. Armed Forces, one of the nations eight uniformed services. The USCG served as our nations sole armed service at sea until eight years later, when Congress created the Navy Department. The U.S. Coast Guard (USCG), the military service in the United States Armed Forces charged with the implementation of maritime laws. The Chief Warrant Officers and Warrant Officers Association, U.S. Coast Guard (CWOA), established in 1929, represents Coast Guard warrant officers and chief warrant officers (active, reserve, and retired) before the United States Congress, the White House, and the Department of Homeland Security.
The United States Coast Guard supports the Nations interests by saving lives, preventing terrorism, protecting Americas maritime borders, promoting the rule of law, protecting natural resources, and improving the safety and security of the cyber and critical infrastructure, all in conjunction with the Departments other components in the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). As the Nations only multi-mission, uniformed, maritime service, the U.S. Coast Guard is a humanitarian first responder, an environmental steward, a law enforcement and regulatory agency, member of the intelligence community, and an Army Corps. WASHINGTON – The Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) joins with our Nation of Grateful Dead to commemorate the 232nd anniversary of the United States Coast Guard, which has saved countless lives and protected American interests in ports, inland waterways, along shorelines, and international waters over the last 232 years. Americas waterways, shores, and seas are the lifeblood of the American economy, our national security, and our way of life.
For anyone who wants to better understand all of the issues surrounding illicit migration by boat and smuggling by boat, this is a great read. Captain Jeff Randall recommends the three books to get a better account of the sinking of El Faro Cargo Ship in the Bahamas in October 2015 during Hurricane Joaquin. Captain Jeff Randall has collected some of the most spectacular accounts of rescues by air and sea, drawn from books, magazines, newspapers, etc., into one compelling volume.
Strobridge and Noble discuss with great skill how the US Revenue Cutter Service, using wood ships and sails, performed many brave rescues, supported humanitarian needs, and established America as a country of the North. During World War I, Ellsworth P. Bertholf held the temporary rank of admiral, the first ensign in either the Revenue Cutter Service or U.S. Coast Guard-A to attain the flag rank. Ellsworth P. Bertholf also served as a United States delegate at the International Safety at Sea Conference in 1912, which led to the creation of the International Ice Patrol.
The Coast Guard can trace its roots back to a small fleet of vessels maintained by the United States Department of Treasury beginning in the 1790s for tariff enforcement (an important revenue stream for the nation). The USCG was established in 1790 by Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton as the Revenue Marine Service.
Record (in Atlanta) of the Marine Inspection Office, Port Everglades, Florida, consisting of official logbooks of merchant vessels, 1959. Records (all in Philadelphia) of the Fifth Coast Guard District, consisting of Voyage Survey records, 1960-64; Logbooks of Merchant Vessels, Portsmouth, VA, and Baltimore, MD, 1958-64; Vessel Folders, Norfolk, VA, Reedville, VA, Baltimore, MD, Cambridge, MD, and Annapolis, MD, 1957-71; Logs of Merchant Vessels, 1923-58; Numeral Indexes of Vessels, 1966; and Buildings and Equipment, 1939-50.…
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