This Day in Coast Guard History – March 10

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

1909- The British barkentine Ladysmith, during a thick fog, stranded three miles WSW of the Fisher's Island Life-Saving Station.  The keeper was notified by telephone and the life-savers, in surfboat, proceeded to the scene.  They safely rescued the Ladysmith's master, his wife, and 9 seamen.

1983- The Coast Guard retired the last operational HU-16E Albatross, ending the "era of seaplanes" for the service.

(Source: USCG Historian’s Office)

Categories: Coast Guard History

Related Stories

Swire Shipping Announces New Branch Office in Timor-Leste

Panama Reinstated on Paris MoU White List

Boskalis, Van Oord to Expand Swedish Port with $570M Dredging Job

Current News

CMA CGM Celebrates Naming NOTRE DAME, the Largest French-Flagged Containership

Swire Shipping Announces New Branch Office in Timor-Leste

ICS Publications Releases 6th Edition of Environmental Compliance Shipping Guide

Fleetwork: Posidonia 2026 Signals Turning Point for Al, Cloud Adoption in Shipping

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News