This Day in Coast Guard History – Jan. 25

January 23, 2010

1799- Having existed essentially nameless for 8-1/2 years, Alexander Hamilton's "system of cutters" was referred to in legislation as "Revenue Cutters."  Some decades later, the name evolved to Revenue Cutter Service and Revenue Marine.

1940- The ocean station program was formally established on 25 January 1940 under orders from President Franklin Roosevelt.  The Coast Guard, in cooperation with the U. S. Weather Service, were given responsibility for its establishment and operation.  The program was first known as the Atlantic Weather Observation Service and later known (and "beloved') by thousands of Coast Guardsmen who served after World War II as the "Ocean Station" program.  Cutters were dispatched for 30-day patrols to transmit weather observations and serve as a SAR standby for transoceanic aircraft.  The program ended in the 1970s.

2004-A helicopter crew from AIRSTA Detroit helped rescue 14 people stranded on an ice floe about one mile west of Catawba Island, Ohio.

(Source: USCG Historian’s Office)

Logistics News

Hormuz Disruption Drives Panama Canal Transits

Hormuz Disruption Drives Panama Canal Transits

Jotun's Hull Skating Solutions Receives DNV Verification

Jotun's Hull Skating Solutions Receives DNV Verification

Rio Tinto Ships Eight Billionth Tonne of Iron Ore from the Pilbara

Rio Tinto Ships Eight Billionth Tonne of Iron Ore from the Pilbara

Third VLCC Exits Strait of Hormuz

Third VLCC Exits Strait of Hormuz

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

Official: Trump will delay Biden's refrigerant regulations in an effort to reduce costs
Telecom Italia converts its savings shares ahead of Poste
Cruise operators get a refund from the US Supreme Court for confiscations of Cuban goods