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  2. USCGC Cuyahoga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USCGC_Cuyahoga

    USCGC Cuyahoga (WIX-157) was an Active-class patrol boat built in 1927 which saw action in World War II. Cuyahoga sank after a night-time collision in the Chesapeake Bay while on patrol in 1978. She was later raised and re-sunk as an artificial reef off the Virginia coast and is a popular recreational dive site.

  3. List of United States Coast Guard cutters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States...

    The List of United States Coast Guard Cutters is a listing of all cutters to have been commissioned by the United States Coast Guard during the history of that service. It is sorted by length down to 65', the minimum length of a USCG cutter.

  4. Active-class patrol boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active-class_patrol_boat

    Originally designated WPC, (Coast Guard patrol craft), they were re-designated WSC, for Coast Guard sub chaser, in February 1942. The "W" appended to the SC (Sub Chaser) designation identified vessels as belonging to the U.S. Coast Guard. Those remaining in service in May 1966 were re-designated as medium endurance cutters, or WMEC.

  5. United States Coast Guard Cutter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Coast_Guard...

    The Revenue Marine and the Revenue Cutter Service, as it was known variously throughout the late 18th and the 19th centuries, referred to its ships as cutters.The term is English in origin and refers to a specific type of vessel, namely, "a small, decked ship with one mast and bowsprit, with a gaff mainsail on a boom, a square yard and topsail, and two jibs or a jib and a staysail."

  6. USCGC Cahoone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USCGC_Cahoone

    This class of vessels was one of the most useful and long-lasting in the Coast Guard with 16 cutters still in use in the 1960s. The last to be decommissioned from active service was the Morris in 1970; the last in actual service was the Cuyahoga, which sank after an accidental collision in 1978.

  7. 83-foot patrol boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/83-foot_patrol_boat

    The United States Coast Guard wooden-hulled 83-foot patrol boats (also called cutters) were all built by Wheeler Shipyard in Brooklyn, New York during World War II.The first 136 cutters were fitted with a tapered-roof Everdur silicon bronze wheelhouse but due to a growing scarcity of that metal during the war, the later units were fitted with a flat-roofed plywood wheelhouse. [4]

  8. Coast Guard stops boat with 400 Haitians off the Bahamas and ...

    www.aol.com/coast-guard-stops-boat-400-145311361...

    A U.S. Coast Guard C-144 Ocean Sentry circles above Cay Sal Bank in the Bahamas Saturday, Jan. 14, 2023. Other areas in the hemisphere also are on the receiving end of the mass flight from Haiti.

  9. Cuyahoga - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cuyahoga

    USCGC Cuyahoga (WIX-157), a U.S. Coast Guard Cutter that sank in the Chesapeake Bay in 1978 after a collision; USS Cuyahoga (AG-26), built in 1927 and transferred from the United States Coast Guard to the Navy in 1933; Cuyahoga, a Maritimer, built to the design of the United States Maritime Commission, see Lower Lakes Towing