Sorrel, 1943
WAGL-296: WLB-296
Call Sign: NRZI
Nickname: "Workhorse of the 1st District"
Sorrel is a slender plant about 60 cm high, with roots that run deep into the ground, as well as juicy stems and edible, oblong leaves. The lower leaves are 7 to 15 cm in length, slightly arrow-shaped at the base.
Builder: Zenith Dredge Company, Duluth, MN
Builder's Number: bn CG-103
Cost: $952,103
Length: 180' oa
Beam: 37' mb
Draft: 12' max (1945); 14' 7" (1966)
Displacement: 935 fl (1945); 1,026 fl (1966); 700 light (1966)
Keel Laid: 26 May 1942
Launched: 28 September 1942
Commissioned: 15 April 1943
Decommissioned: 20 June 1996
Status: Sold private
Propulsion: 1 electric motor connected to 2 Westinghouse generators driven by 2 Cooper-Bessemer-type GND-8, 4-cycle diesels; single screw
Top speed: 13.0 kts sustained (1945); 11.9 kts sustained (1966)
Economic speed: 8.3 kts (1945); 8.5 kts (1966)
Complement: 6 Officers, 74 men (1945); 4 officers, 2 warrants, 47 men (1966)
Electronics:
Radar: Bk (1943); SL (1945)
Sonar: WEA-2 (1945)
Armament: 1-3"/50 (single), 2-20mm/80 (single), 2 depth charge tracks, 2 Mousetraps, 4 Y-guns (1945); None (1966)
Class History:
When the US Coast Guard
absorbed the Bureau of Lighthouses on 1 July 1939, Juniper,
a 177-foot all welded steel buoy tender, was under construction and plans
for a successor were on the drawing board. Plans initiated by the Bureau of
Lighthouses called for the construction of several identical buoy tenders to
replace existing coastal buoy tenders. The preliminary designs generated by
the Bureau were for a vessel similar to Juniper.
When the Aids to Navigation (ATON) system transferred to Coast Guard
control, USCG planners reviewed the preliminary plans for the new class of
buoy tenders and modified them to meet the service’s multi-mission role. To
be an effective part of the Coast Guard, the new buoy tenders needed to be
multi-purpose platforms. They had to be capable of conducting Search and
Rescue (SAR) and Law Enforcement (LE) missions, as well as their primary
mission tending ATON. On 20 January 1941 the US Coast Guard contracted Marine
Iron and Shipbuilding Company of
DIFFERENCES WITHIN THE 180' CLASS
Six “B” or
THE 180s GO TO WAR
Though the design was
completed before
The work done by the men
and women of Duluth
produced finished buoy tenders, but not warships. It would be up to military
technicians to make the 180s combat-ready. Many of the buoy tenders were
destined to operate far from home in a variety of war zones as part of a navy
locked in a two-ocean war. To defend themselves against air attack, the
tenders were fitted with 20mm guns, usually four of them, mounted high on the
superstructure and on the aft portions of the main deck. Armorers outfitted
the 180s with a single 3" cannon mounted aft of the stack to defend
against aircraft and engage small surface or shore targets. They installed
depth charge racks as well as K- and V-type launchers on the stern to deploy
depth charges in case the vessels ever encountered enemy submarines. Some 180s
were also fitted with a device known as a 'mousetrap'. This weapon system
launched rocket-propelled explosive charges that would explode on contact
with a submarine’s hull. The mousetrap system was generally mounted on the
bow so the launchers could fire ahead of the vessel. Besides the heavier
weapons systems, the tenders carried assorted small arms. Technicians
installed radar and sonar systems to help the 180s find targets or avoid enemy
units. The US Coast Guard shipyard at Curtis Bay, Maryland carried out the
bulk of the work that prepared the buoy tenders for duty overseas.
Buoy tenders from the 180
classes operating in the Atlantic Theater saw service from the frigid waters
around Greenland to the tropical coast of
As
the battleships and assault troop and cargo ships do the heavy work, the Coast
Guard tenders scurry alongside, paving the broken way for the miracle of
supply which follows. They'll lay cables in the ocean bed, fight fires and
perform rescue and salvage chores. A tender may moor an anchor for battleships
or tow a Navy seaplane caught on a reef-it's all in a day's work.
None of the 180s were lost
to enemy action during the war. Those in the Atlantic Theater operated under
the threat of German U-boats, but the few encounters saw the cutters dropping
depth charges on the suspected positions of submerged U-boats and receiving no
return fire. A German U-boat sank one U.S. Coast Guard buoy tender from
another class, Acacia (WAGL-200), while she operated in the
PEACETIME MISSIONS
While a few vessels were
left overseas to repair and improve ATON systems in the various Pacific island
groups, most of the 180s returned to the
TENDING BUOYS
The process of tending or
servicing buoys has been the basic mission of the 180s throughout their
careers. It is a process that has evolved through several important
technological changes but one that remains fundamentally the same. Tending an
ATON begins with traveling to its location and making contact. Once on scene,
the conning officer maneuvers the vessel alongside the buoy so the deck force
can snag it with reaching poles. Approaching a buoy is often a tricky and
hazardous proposition since the marker's very purpose is often to mark shallow
water or other hazards to navigation. The difficult nature of the task is
reflected in the records of frequent groundings by the buoy tender fleet. The
180s original design, specifically single screw propulsion, meant they were
not the most maneuverable platforms and required a skilled ship handler to
bring them alongside an ATON. The addition of bow thrusters during
later renovations made them more nimble during close quarters maneuvering. Once
alongside a buoy, the deck crew snags it and then attaches the hook from the
cargo boom to a lifting eye on the marker. Then the boom operator lifts the
buoy out of the water and deposits it on the open well deck in front of the
superstructure where it is secured. The process of recovering the buoy has not
changed in any appreciable way over the years. Bringing the buoy on board is
less than half the recovery process. A concrete block or 'sinker' weighing
many thousands of pounds anchors each buoy. Heavy steel chain links the anchor
block to the floating buoy. In order to conduct a thorough inspection of the
whole system, the chain and sinker must be brought up. The mooring chain is
led through a chain stopper on the edge of the well deck. The chain stopper is
a mechanical device that prevents chain from slipping back overboard,
essentially a one-way valve for chain. After the chain is secure in the chain
stopper the boom operator reaches as far down the chain as possible and snags
a length of chain, which is pulled up, laid in the chain stopper, and secured
on deck with quick-releasing pelican clamps as a safety mechanism. Once the
chain is secure, the boom snags another length and hauls it up. In this
hand-over-hand fashion the boom operator hauls up the entire mooring. Often
the sinker is left hanging overboard on the outside of the chain stopper. This
part of the recovery process has changed since the 180s entered service.
Initially, the vessels did not have a chain stopper mechanism, and chain was
secured only by tie downs when the boom released one length to grab another.
The crew of
NEW ROLE FOR THE 180S
By the late 1940s all the
temporarily decommissioned buoy tenders had returned to service as manpower
levels stabilized. All thirty-nine members of the type were engaged in ATON,
SAR, and, depending on their location, icebreaking duties. Their combined
operations covered the entire shoreline of the continental
CONTINUING MILITARY SERVICE
The 180s saw limited duty
in the Korean War and significant action in
THE FLEET SHRINKS
By the early 1970s the 180s
had reached their thirtieth anniversaries as Coast Guard cutters. It was
during this decade that the buoy tender inventory began to shrink.
Appropriately enough, the first to go was Cactus, the first built. Cactus
ran hard aground in 1971 and the damage was so extensive that the
government decided to decommission the vessel rather than repair her. The USCG
decommissioned the first of the 180s two days shy of the thirtieth anniversary
of her launch. Two more 180s left active duty, albeit less traumatically
and according to longstanding plans, the following year. A fourth vessel left
service in 1973 and two more followed in 1975. These vessels, even Cactus, went
on to second careers in the hands of foreign governments or private owners.
Only one buoy tender was
decommissioned by design in the 1980s; Sagebrush left active duty in
April 1988, more than forty-four years after her commissioning. It was,
however, a hard decade on the 180 fleet. On 28 January 1980, Blackthorn collided
with a commercial tanker in
The
US Coast Guard decommissioned fourteen buoy tenders in the 1990s and seven
more in the early years of the next decade. In early 2002, eight of the
thirty-nine 180s remained in service as USCG buoy tenders. One other 180
remained in commission as a cutter, but operated in the role of a training and
support vessel. Few of the decommissioned cutters have actually been destroyed
or dismantled. Instead, they can be found throughout the world. A number were
transferred overseas under the Foreign Military Sales Program and serve the
navies of countries friendly to the
MAINTENANCE,
REPAIR, AND OVERHAUL
The 180-footer design, drawn up before World War II and built in the early 1940s, has demonstrated remarkable longevity. The US Coast Guard decommissioned the bulk of the class only within the last decade and nine vessels continue to serve on active duty, sixty years after they were built and well past the projected life span of any military vessel. This is not to say that the 180s simply steamed out of the shipyard after their completion and were so well built that they lasted for five or six decades. To keep these buoy tenders on active duty the US Coast Guard has expended millions of dollars. The efforts that kept the 180s operating into the twenty-first century began in the early 1940s. Even as they went about their duties in the midst of war, maintenance remained a regular part of every tender's routine. Maintenance carried out by the tender crews as part of the everyday routine was interspersed with “availability” periods. During these periods, scheduled at the request of the tender's captain or by orders sent down the chain of command, the individual tenders temporarily left service while the regular crew, often augmented by ship repair specialists, addressed maintenance issues too complex to handle while the vessel pursued its regular mission. The availability periods took many forms. In the simplest incarnation, the tender would anchor out of the way or tie up alongside a dock after a long voyage or operation and the whole crew would devote a few days to putting everything in order. In instances where the vessels required extensive work, the tenders visited shipyards in the US or at naval bases overseas. A visit to a shipyard entailed any number of repairs including time in a drydock for work on the hull and exterior propulsion equipment. After the war the 180s were placed on a cyclical maintenance schedule. Exact timetables varied from ship to ship and according to the service's needs, but on average, each cutter visited a shipyard for a yard period or availability on a biannual basis. Time in the yard allowed for the undertaking of major repairs and improvements as well as routine maintenance chores like painting the hull. Some of these yard periods took place at the US Coast Guard's yard in Curtis Bay Bay, but most occurred at commercial shipyards near the individual tender's homeport. Buoy tenders were, of course, sent to the nearest yard equipped to handle the problem after groundings or other mishaps. In a few instances the Curtis Bay yard carried out special work to prepare vessels for unique projects. This was the case when Spar and Bramble were readied for a trip through the Northwest Passage and Evergreen underwent conversion to become an oceanographic research vessel. Cyclical yard periods and the efforts of personnel stationed on the buoy tenders kept them in proper shape for many years. Nevertheless, by the 1970s the vessels had reached the end of their projected thirty-year life spans and many were in need of substantial overhauls if their service careers were to continue. The first round of overhauls to affect the 180 fleet, known as Austere Renovations, began in 1974. Improvements carried out as part of the Austere Renovation program consisted of habitability improvements, engineering improvements, and equipment upgrades. The habitability improvements included modernization of the World War II-era crew quarters and sanitary facilities, installation of a crew lounge, remodeling of the dispensary area, and improved climate control systems. Work in the engineering spaces centered on the overhaul of the propulsion systems and a general modernization of the engineering plant. Equipment upgrades elsewhere included installation of modern electronics and replacement of aging deck machinery. Four buoy tenders went through the Austere Renovation program. At about the same time the Austere renovations commenced, the US Coast Guard began rotating other 180s through shipyards for more extensive improvements as part of the 'Major Renovation' (MAJREN) program. Under the MAJREN program, vessels received new diesel engines while the main electrical motor and its control systems underwent a thorough overhaul. New electrical wiring and switchboards were installed, as were entirely new water piping and sewage handling systems. Each vessel received a bow thruster to improve its maneuverability in close quarters. Future crews benefited from the replacement and modernization of all furnishings in the living areas. Decreasing the size of the forward hold allowed the expansion of the living area itself. Fourteen 180s went through the MAJREN program. These repairs and improvements extended each vessels service life by an estimated ten to fifteen years.
The third renovation program to affect members of the 180 classes was the Service Life Extension Program (SLEP). This program began in 1983 and culminated a decade later. These renovations all took place at Curtis Bay and involved vessels that previously went through the MAJREN program. Whereas, Austere and MAJREN had entailed significant overhaul, the SLEP was the most extensive effort to extend the class' life span. During the yard periods new main engines and generators replaced the aging power plants. Upgrades and replacement components served to modernize the electrical systems. Shipyard technicians installed new navigational systems and computer controls for the engineering systems. SLEP work was far more than the replacement or upgrade of various systems or simply the addition of new equipment; it also entailed significant structural changes. Workers sandblasted each vessel throughout to remove all paint and expose the underlying steel for careful inspection. Shipyard workers tore away the existing deckhouse and replaced it with a new structure that included an expanded pilothouse, ship's office, and radio room. Internal changes included the installation of smaller forward tanks and the conversion of the forward cargo hold to make room for the installation of more berthing space, including bunks and heads for female sailors and a crew lounge. The reconfigured space also included boatswain, electrical, damage control, and electronics workshops. Work was done in the internal spaces to improve the watertight integrity of the vessel. Up on deck, a hydraulic system replaced the electric weight handling gear and the boom operator's booth was relocated. For Cactus class vessels SLEP included removal of the A-frame and reconfiguring the cargo handling system so the boom attached to the bridge wings. Hydraulic weight handling systems were also added to the boat davits on either side of the superstructure. The SLEP overhauls were extensive and they were also time consuming and costly. The average cost for a single tender to pass through the SLEP was $11 million. Time spent in the yard averaged eighteen months or, according to the analysis of two representative overhauls, 210,000-215,000 man-hours by shipyard workers. Like the earlier programs, the SLEP helped to extend the service life span of the aging buoy tenders. Coast Guard projections during the period estimated the SLEP would extend vessel life spans by fifteen to twenty years. Three SLEP vessels remain in service as of 2002. All other 180s that went through the SLEP program left service beginning in 1999.THE REPLACEMENTS
Renovating and improving the 180s bought time, but it did not ameliorate a basic problem facing the service. The US Coast Guard would eventually need to replace the 180s. While a steel vessel can be kept functioning almost in perpetuity, the cost of doing so eventually reaches a point where replacement is the preferred option. The savings can be measured in monetary terms as well as improved efficiency resulting from fewer breakdowns, less frequent yard periods, and the use of more advanced technologies. By the 1990s it was time to begin the lengthy process of creating a successor for the vessels one authority called, ". . . quite possibly the most versatile and useful cutter ever built for the Coast Guard," and, ". . . clearly the most multi-mission capable ship in the Black Fleet." An initial planning and consultation period ended in January 1993 when the USCG awarded a contract to Marinette Shipbuilding for the production of a new class of seagoing buoy tenders. Marinette Shipbuilding won a second contract in June 1993 for the construction of a new class of coastal buoy tender. The new seagoing tender class took the name of the prototype vessel: Juniper. The coastal tenders became the Keeper class, each named for a well-known lighthouse keeper from the past. The Juniper class vessels measure 225 feet in length, 46 feet in beam, and are propelled by two diesel engines driving a single reduction gear and a Controllable Pitch Propeller (CPP). Marinette builds them with both a bow and stern thruster, which combined with the CPP makes for a maneuverable platform. Like the 180s, they can handle limited icebreaking duties. The new seagoing tender incorporates many advances in maritime technology that allow the tenders, though larger than their predecessors, to operate effectively with a smaller crew.
Perhaps the most
significant advance is the use of a dynamic positioning system (DPS) to help
keep the tender on station. The DPS involves computerization of the systems
that maneuver the vessel, namely propulsion and steering, combined with the
latest in satellite navigation technology. This system allows the Juniper class
vessels to maintain position within a 10-meter radius in 30-knot winds and 8'
seas. Juniper passed from Marinette Shipbuilding to the USCG in 1996.
Projections call for a total of sixteen Juniper class tenders. Keeper
class tenders measure 175
feet in length and have a beam of 36 feet. They are the first USCG cutters
propelled by a twin Z-Drive. This propulsion system is essentially a
propeller installed within a nozzle that can rotate 360 degrees. This means
thrust, in any amount manageable by the vessel's diesel engine, can be applied
in any direction. The Z-Drive system, popular with many newer tugboats,
combined with a bow thruster ensures the Keeper class tenders have
excellent maneuverability and station-keeping qualities. Each vessel also
carries dynamic positioning systems, honing the vessel's ability to hover on
station even further. As of 2002 the USCG has fourteen Keeper class
tenders in service.
As
the new seagoing and coastal tenders have entered service, the US Coast Guard
has decommissioned the older 180s. At the beginning of 2002
there were nine of the old buoy
tenders still in commission. They will phase out slowly and tentative plans
call for Acacia to be
the last in service with a decommissioning date sometime in 2006.
A
GREAT DESIGN
The 180-foot buoy-tending cutters built for the US Coast Guard during the early 1940s are remarkable in terms of their longevity. Except the US Coast Guard's Storis, no other military vessels on active duty today served in World War II. The 180s longevity is not a case of superior construction, though they were undoubtedly built quite solidly. The service performed by the class for over sixty years is a function of their design. The 180s were extremely versatile and perfectly suited for their multifaceted role. They could break ice, replace a buoy, and save a sinking ship all in the course of a day's work. Moreover, they could complete these missions within sight of their homeport or steam across thousands of miles of ocean to complete an assigned task. They did not become outmoded until computers, satellites, and automation changed the way ships are built and equipped. The US Coast Guard spent time and money keeping the 180s in service long beyond their projected life span because that remained the best option. These ships that fought U-boats in World War II have spent millions of hours since making the world's waterways a safer place for science, commerce, and recreation. This was possible due to the design’s versatility and reliability. Obsolescence crept up on the 180s very slowly, producing a tenure unmatched in twentieth-century American maritime history. The 180-foot buoy tenders proved to be extremely versatile vessels during their long careers. Though all spent some portion of their time afloat servicing buoys, they served in many other pursuits as well. Many of these alternate activities revolved around the vessel's intended secondary missions, search and rescue, law enforcement, and icebreaking. Often, however, the tenders carried out missions never envisioned by their designers, ranging from transporting rare tropical fish to landing scientific parties on drifting icebergs. This plethora of pursuits when combined with the wide geographic distribution of the 180s makes it difficult to describe a typical or generic career for a 180. The oceangoing buoy tenders built for the US Coast Guard in the early 1940s served around the world and fulfilled the service's requirement for a true multi-mission capable platform.
Cutter History:
World War II
After commissioning USCGC Sorrel was used on the Great lakes for general ATON duties and ice-breaking. In mid-1943 Sorrel was re-assigned to the 8th Coast Guard District and stationed at Galveston, TX. Later in 1943 and lasting until the end of the war, Sorrel was assigned to CINCLANT and stationed at Boston, MA. The cutter served on weather stations in the North Atlantic and also served in the waters around Greenland where it was used for general ATON, ice-breaking, and the conduct of combat patrols.
Postwar
From the end of the war until 25 July 1947 Sorrel continued to be stationed at Boston, MA and used for ATON and icebreaking, frequently working out of Argentia, Newfoundland. From 25 July 1947 to 25 October 1948 Sorrel was stationed at Rockland, ME and used for ATON and icebreaking. The cutter continued to work frequently out of Argentia. On 8 December 1948 Sorrel freed USS Whitewood from ice at 60 00 N, 45 54 W. From 25 October 1948 to 1 May 1954 Sorrel was stationed at Boston and used for ATON and icebreaking and again often worked out of Argentia. On 23-24 October 1950 rescued eight survivors from MV North Voyager at 45 40 N, 52 17 W. On 29 November 1951 Sorrel provided assistance following the collision between MV Ventura and FV Lynn near Boston. From 1 May 1954-1 July 1965 Sorrel was stationed at Sitka, AK and used primarily for ATON. On 10-11 July 1958 Sorrel assisted following the earthquake at Lituya Bay and Yakutat Bay. On 22 October 1962 Sorrel assisted after the ditching of a DC-7 aircraft 1 mi north of Biorka Island, Sitka Sound. There were 102 survivors. On 5 June 1963 Sorrel unsuccessfully searched for survivors of Northwest Orient aircraft crash. From 1 July 1965 to18 April 1973 stationed at Seward, AK and used primarily for ATON. From 18 April 1973 to 31 March 1976 Sorrel was stationed at Cordova, AK, and used for ATON. From 31 March 1976-1982 Sorrel underwent a major renovation at the Coast Guard Yard at Curtis Bay, MD. After the renovation, from 2 December 1982 to 1996 stationed at Governors Island, NY and used primarily for ATON and icebreaking.
Sources:
Cutter File, Coast Guard Historian's Office.
HABS/HAER, National Park Service, US Department of the Interior. US Coast Guard 180-Foot Buoy Tenders. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office, 2003.
Robert Scheina. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft of World War II. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1981.
Robert Scheina. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft, 1946-1990. Annapolis: Naval Institute Press, 1990.