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The Fighting Coast Guard

The Fighting Coast Guard
Author: Mark A. Snell
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Total Pages: 452
Release: 2022-12-09
Genre: History
ISBN: 0700633944

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This collection of essays, written by some of the foremost historians in the field of Coast Guard history, highlights the wartime roles played by the United States’ oldest federal maritime service, from its inception through the last decade of the twentieth century. The Fighting Coast Guard features three distinct sections: “Beginnings,” which includes a short overview of the US Revenue Cutter Service (the USCG’s primary forerunner, established in 1790) and two chapters on World War I; “Conflagration,” the role of the USCG during the World War II era; and “The Cold War and Beyond,” an assessment of the Coast Guard’s participation in the Korean Conflict, the Vietnam War, and the Persian Gulf War of 1991. The Fighting Coast Guard is a significant contribution to the limited historiography of the Coast Guard and a critical analysis of various wartime roles undertaken by the Coast Guard during America’s twentieth-century conflicts. Because the Coast Guard operated as part of the Department of the Navy during the two world wars, its service and history is often overlooked or envoloped by the larger service, while the USCG’s limited participation in cold and hot wars since 1945 is often ignored altogether. This anthology provides readers with a solid overview while highlighting some of the service’s most important contributions as a combatant force. This definitive study of the role of the US Coast Guard in wartime, from its modern inception in 1915 through the end of the twentieth century, is long overdue and will shed new light on America’s smallest military service.


The U.S. Life-Saving Service

The U.S. Life-Saving Service
Author: Ralph C. Shanks
Publisher: Costano Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 1996
Genre: Coast Guard-History
ISBN: 9780930268169

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Subtitled Heroes, Rescues and Architecture of the Early Coast Guard, this very complete record of the people, technology, architecture and exploits of the U.S. Life-Saving Service is a large-format book illustrated with 446 photographs and maps. It is especially strong on the wonderful and regionally varied architecture of the Service's stations, of which there were more than today's mariners or beachcombers can imagine -- 41 on the New Jersey coast, 31 on Lake Michigan, 13 on Cape Cod alone. In the last half of the nineteenth century, when coasting vessels numbered in the tens of thousands, the stations and their beach patrols were a necessity, and the surfmen managed dramatic rescues, many of which are recounted here.


Red Crew

Red Crew
Author: Jim Howe
Publisher: Naval Institute Press
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2018-06-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1682473023

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Red Crew is a first-hand account of U.S. Coast Guard anti-smuggling operations during the early years of the nation’s maritime war on drugs. Jim Howe describes his experience as the executive officer of a specialized drug-hunting crew that sailed in then-state-of-the-art “surface effect ships,” a small flotilla of high-speed vessels pressed into the drug war on short notice. In the early 1980s, South Florida and the Caribbean were awash in illicit drugs, with hundreds of smuggling organizations bringing huge loads of marijuana, and later cocaine, into the United States. To fight this epidemic, the Reagan administration led a massive effort to disrupt shore-side gangs while bolstering interdiction activity at sea. To increase the number of days at sea for each surface effect ship, a “multi-crewing” concept was employed, with four teams of sixteen sailors—the Red, Blue, Green, and Gold Crews—rotating among three hulls. Through its first-person narrative, Red Crew offers a rare glimpse into the day-to-day pressures, challenges, failures, and successes of Coast Guard cuttermen as they carried out complex and dangerous missions. Red Crew provides a unique historical view of the early days in the Coast Guard’s war on drugs, and is the only book-length history of the diminutive, one-of-a-kind surface effect ship fleet.


My Life in the Coast Guard

My Life in the Coast Guard
Author: James Coghill
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 136
Release: 2005-08-28
Genre:
ISBN: 9781717474698

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This book covers the events I encountered as an active duty member of the U.S. Coast Guard.


My Life in the Coast Guard

My Life in the Coast Guard
Author: David Oliver
Publisher:
Total Pages: 70
Release: 2000
Genre: Wilmington (N.C.)
ISBN:

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Oral history of Capt. David Oliver, USCG (Ret.) concerning his career with the Coast Guard. Oliver describes how he enters the Coast Guard just before the U.S. enters WWII.; his first sea duty assignment at Norfolk, Va., aboard the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Dione; transatlantic convoy duty aboard the Dione (1941-1942); patroling for German U-boats; pilot training; air-sea rescue duty at San Diego, Calif. (1942-1944); learning to land seaplanes at sea; helicopter training and early work with helicopters (1944-1946); rejoining the Coast Guard as a regular officer and flying rescue seaplanes out of Salem, Mass. (1946-1947); working with Coast Guard Lt. Frank Erickson in rotary wing development and air-sea rescue duty and North Atlantic ice patrol from Elizabeth City, N.C. (1947-1950); commanding officer of the first helicopter detachment based at Floyd Bennett Field, in Brooklyn, N.Y.; Coast Guard duty at Kodiak, Alaska (1954-1956) and at the San Francisco air station (1956-1958); Coast Guard duty in New Orleans, La., learning to fly jets, and test piloting jet fighter planes (1958-1960); Coast Guard duty at Juneau, Alaska; sea duty aboard the Ingham (1962-1964); duty at Coast Guard headquarters in Washington, D.C., relating to small boat safety in the U.S. (1964-1968); final Coast Guard assignment as captain of the port in Chicago (1968-1970); and managing the American Boat and Yacht Council, New York, N.Y. (1970-1973).


The Grit Factor

The Grit Factor
Author: Shannon Huffman Polson
Publisher: Harvard Business Press
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2020-08-18
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1633697274

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What does it take for women to succeed in a male-dominated world? The Grit Factor. At age nineteen, Shannon Huffman Polson became the youngest woman ever to climb Denali, the highest mountain in North America. She went on to reach the summits of Mt. Rainier and Mt. Kilimanjaro and spent more than a decade traveling the world. Yet it was during her experience serving as one of the Army's first female attack helicopter pilots, and eventually leading an Apache flight platoon on deployment to Bosnia-Herzegovina, that she learned the lessons of leadership that forever changed her life. Where did these insights come from? From her own crucibles of experience—and from other women. In writing The Grit Factor, Polson made it her mission to connect with an elite pack of tough, impressive female iconoclasts who shared with her their candid stories of combat and career. This slate of decorated leaders includes Heather Penney, one of the first female F-16 pilots, who was put on a suicide mission for 9/11; General Ann Dunwoody, the first female four-star general in the Army; Amy McGrath, the first female Marine to fly the F/A-18 in combat and a 2020 candidate for the US Senate—and dozens of other unstoppable women who got there first, including Polson herself. These women led at the highest levels in the most complicated, challenging, and male-dominated organization in the world. Now, in the post–#MeToo era, when positive role models of women leading are needed as never before, Polson brings these voices together, sharing her own life lessons and theirs with storytelling flair, keen insight, and incisive analysis of current research. With its gripping narrative and relatable takeaways, The Grit Factor is both inspiring and pragmatic, a book that will energize and enlighten current and aspiring leaders everywhere—whether male or female.