Introduction
		The United States Coast Guard protects more than the coastal waters 
		of our country.  During the Korean War the 8,500+ members of this 
		branch of service oversaw merchant marine and Port Security forces that 
		loaded weapons and supplies onto vessels and aircraft heading for Korea 
		and elsewhere around the world.  They also manned ocean stations in 
		the Pacific that around-the-clock operated the LORAN radio relay 
		system that guided merchant and air traffic.  In addition, the 
		Coast Guard provided search and rescue missions in the Far East Command 
		and everywhere there were US personnel serving their country.  The 
		CG also suffered casualties and fatalities all around the world during 
		the Korean War.  To add more information to this page of the Korean 
		War Educator contact 
		lynnita@thekwe.org.  
		Most recent addition to this page: August 24, 2021  
		Table of Contents
		
			- Introduction
 
			- The Forgotten Service in the Forgotten War (Scott Price)
 
			- Coast Guard Aircraft Accidents
 
			- Gold Lifesaving Medal Recipients (Korean War)
 
			- Coast Guard Fatalities During the Korean War (chronological 
			order)
 
			- Fatality Bios (alpha order)
 
		 
         
        The Forgotten Service in the Forgotten War 
		The U.S. Coast Guard's Role in the Korean Conflict
		authored by Scott T. Price
		On June 25, 1950 six North Korean infantry divisions, supported by 
		large armor and artillery forces, brutally attacked and invaded its 
		neighbor, South Korea. The onslaught caught the South, as well as much 
		of the world, completely by surprise. As the Soviet-equipped divisions 
		advanced towards the capital, Seoul, Coast Guard officers stationed on 
		the peninsula received word that they would have to evacuate. The 
		officers were based at the former Imperial Japanese naval base at Chinae, 
		South Korea, where they had been training the nucleus of what would 
		become the South Korean navy. This little known operation was a typical 
		example of the Coast Guard's role during the coming conflict; based in 
		obscurity but nevertheless important to the United Nations' efforts to 
		halt and then reverse the Communist onslaught. The United States Navy 
		determined what the Coast Guard's missions for any post-World War II 
		conflicts were to be. In 1947 the Chief of Naval Operations suggested 
		that in future conflicts the Coast Guard should limit its contribution 
		to those peacetime tasks in which it specialized. His suggestion stated 
		that the Coast Guard's "war time functions and duties assigned should be 
		those which are an extension of normal peacetime tasks." Additionally, 
		"Coast Guard personnel, ships, aircraft and facilities should be 
		utilized as organized Coast Guard units rather than by indiscriminately 
		integrating them into the naval establishment." These duties included 
		port security, maritime inspection and safety, search and rescue, and 
		patrolling ocean stations. These, therefore, were the Coast Guard's 
		primary missions during the Korean War. 
		 Chinae
		In 1946 the U. S. Army, which commanded the military forces in South 
		Korea, asked for a contingent of active-duty Coast Guard officers to 
		organize, supervise, and train a small Korean coast guard. The Coast 
		Guard quickly complied. Captain George McCabe, a Coast Guard hero of 
		World War II and the first to command the contingent, arrived in South 
		Korea on 23 August 1946. In fact he actually commanded the nascent 
		Korean Coast Guard until the Korean government appointed Lieutenant 
		Commander Sohn Won Yil as its first native commanding officer. From then 
		on, McCabe and Sohn commanded the service jointly. Their task proved to 
		be extremely complicated. First, they had to establish an enlisted 
		training facility and begin recruiting operations. Then they needed to 
		establish an officer candidate program to train officers to command the 
		service. They also agreed to develop an academy, complete with a 
		four-year degree program much like the service academies in the United 
		States. Due to a pressing need for personnel, however, the degree 
		program was cut to two years. Despite the language difficulties, a lack 
		of equipment, and a high initial desertion rate, McCabe and his staff 
		successfully nurtured the beginnings of a new coast guard for the Korean 
		nation. They acquired former Japanese navy warships to serve as training 
		vessels and refurbished equipment left behind by the Japanese occupation 
		forces. They repaired the buildings and built barracks for the trainees. 
		In general the Coast Guard did what it has always done, successfully 
		fulfilled an assigned task with little or no support and practically no 
		resources. The whole structure of the training effort, however, was soon 
		to undergo a significant change. The Coast Guard's Advisory Team
		In May 1948 Commander William C. Achurch arrived in Korea and became 
		the "Head Advisor to Commander, Service Forces, Korean Coast Guard" and 
		commanding officer of  
		the U. S. Coast Guard Detachment at Chinhae. When the South Korean 
		government decided that it would change its coast guard to a navy in 
		1948, the active duty U. S. Coast Guard officers returned home. As one 
		officer put it, "The U.S. Coast Guard didn't feel obligated to train a 
		foreign navy and the U.S. Coast Guard Detachment was withdrawn." The 
		U.S. Army then hired a number of retired or reserve Coast Guard officers 
		and men to assist the new Korean Navy, including Commander Achurch. 
		Training continued unabated for the next few years. The training teams 
		continued to struggle with a number of difficulties including cultural 
		differences, language, and as always, funding. The base gained some 
		notoriety when Achurch hosted a conference between the Nationalist 
		Chinese leader, Chiang Kai-shek and the president of South Korea, 
		Syngman Rhee for a three-day meeting in August of 1949. Later, President 
		Rhee became a frequent visitor to the base as his interest in his new 
		navy grew. On the 19th of August, 1949 a World War II Coast Guard 
		veteran, Commander Clarence M. Speight, retired from the service for a 
		physical disability, took over Achurch's duties as "Advisor Chief, 
		Korean Navy." Achurch remained as the commanding officer of the Coast 
		Guard contingent. Both men wore their uniforms proudly and carried on 
		the operation as a Coast Guard-commanded team. 
		 Invasion
		Commander Speight found himself in Taiwan preparing a new vessel for 
		the Korean Navy when the North Koreans attacked. His wife and two 
		children in Seoul fled to Inchon. Speight arranged for their transport 
		on board a freighter bound for Tokyo and he then returned to Seoul. Six 
		hundred fifty other refugees swarmed on board the freighter designed to 
		carry only twelve passengers. Mrs. Speight and her two children stayed 
		on the main deck for the three-day trip despite the cold weather and 
		rain. Speight barely managed to leave Seoul and watched as the large 
		bridge over the Han River was blown up. After crossing the river on a 
		small boat, he eventually made it to Pusan where he met up with 
		Commander Achurch. Both were ordered back to the United States in July. 
		So ended the Coast Guard's role in creating a navy for South Korea. 
		Ocean/Weather Stations
		The ocean station program, established before World War II, proved to 
		be a vital war-time Coast Guard task and was perhaps the most direct 
		contribution made by the Coast Guard to the United Nations' effort. 
		Cutters assigned to the stations carried teams of meteorologists from 
		the U.S. Weather Bureau. These men carried out weather observations, 
		assisted by specialists in the Coast Guard crew. The cutters also served 
		as aids to navigation by providing checkpoints for military and 
		commercial maritime and air traffic and communication "relay" stations 
		for aircraft on transoceanic flights. They provided needed medical 
		services to merchant ship crews as well as any others in need and served 
		as search and rescue platforms. Some aircraft actually ditched near the 
		cutters and were quickly rescued, such as the famous rescue of the 
		Bermuda Sky Queen by the crew of the Bibb in 1947. Coast Guard cutters 
		were stationed at two ocean stations in the Pacific prior to the 
		outbreak of the Korean conflict. In concert with the Navy, the service 
		decided to add three additional stations in the North Pacific. The new 
		stations provided complete weather data and greater search and rescue 
		coverage for the growing trans-Pacific merchant and military traffic 
		brought on by the Korean conflict. Indeed, 95 percent of the war 
		material bound for Korea went by ship but nearly half of the personnel 
		went by air, making the ocean station vessels a vital link in the United 
		Nations' logistic effort. 
		 Furthermore, the Coast Guard established a chain of air search and 
		rescue detachments on islands throughout the Pacific to supplement the 
		search and rescue capabilities of the Ocean Station cutters. Cutters 
		were also assigned to these search and rescue stations to augment their 
		search and rescue capabilities. With the addition of the new stations, 
		the Coast Guard needed to find vessels to augment the already extended 
		cutter fleet. Fortunately a ready source existed within the mothball 
		fleets of  
		the Navy. The Navy turned over a number of destroyer escorts, which the 
		Coast Guard commissioned as cutters. The old war-horses had served as 
		convoy escorts in World War II, 33 of which had been manned by Coast 
		Guard crews during the war. These vessels were refitted with a shelter 
		on the stern for weather balloon storage and armed with depth charges 
		and a variety of anti-aircraft weapons. The first two to join the Coast 
		Guard fleet were the Koiner and the Falgout. Once commissioned, the new 
		cutters underwent shakedown training under the supervision of the Navy 
		and then sailed to their new homeports. Ocean station duty could be 
		monotonous at one moment and terrifying the next, as the vessels rode 
		out storms that made the saltiest sailors green. One crewman noted: 
		"After 
		twenty-one days of being slammed around by rough cold sea swells 20 to 
		50 feet high, and wild winds hitting gale force at times, within an 
		ocean grid the size of a postage stamp, you can stand any kind of duty." 
		The Koiner's operations provide a good example of the duty. After she 
		arrived in Seattle, where she joined the cutters Bering Strait, 
		Klamath, 
		Winona, and the Wachusett, a hodge podge fleet of ex-Navy seaplane 
		tenders and 255-foot Coast Guard cutters, she was first sent to Ocean 
		Station Nan in the North Pacific. There she steamed in endless circles 
		around the ocean station for three weeks before being relieved by the 
		cutter Lowe. While on the ocean station the crew quickly fell into a 
		routine. They assisted the five weather observers from the San Francisco 
		office of the U.S. Weather Bureau who accompanied each patrol. Radar and 
		radio were manned around the clock. Twice daily the crew launched 6-foot 
		diameter helium filled balloons that measured air temperature, pressure, 
		and humidity to an altitude of 10 miles. They launched another smaller 
		balloon to measure wind speed and direction. The crew also checked the 
		temperature of the water every four hours down to a depth of 450 feet 
		with a bathythermograph instrument. These cutters also served as a 
		floating aid to navigation. They contacted passing aircraft and ships by 
		radio and provided radar and navigation fixes. Such contact with anyone 
		from the outside world, even if only for a brief moment, at least broke 
		up the monotony for the crew. Then there were the daily drills such as 
		fire, collision, and boat drills. For recreation they had movies, pistol 
		matches, skeet shooting, volleyball games, and fishing. Though this was 
		often enough to keep from going stir crazy, the crew invariably counted 
		the days until their next liberty. After returning to Seattle the crew of the destroyer escort received 
		welcome liberty. Then she set sail for Ocean Station Victor, midway 
		between Japan and the Aleutian Islands, via the Midway Islands. While at 
		Midway she stood search and rescue standby duty, then set sail for 
		Victor for another three-week tour of duty. When relieved there, she 
		sailed on to Yokosuka, Japan for a twelve-day layover, which included 
		liberty for all hands. Afterward she steamed once again out to the North 
		Pacific to Ocean Station Sugar. Another three weeks later her relief 
		arrived and the Koiner returned to Seattle. And so it went, month by 
		month, year by year. These cutters assisted a number of merchant ships 
		and aircraft that were transiting the North Pacific during the war. The 
		Forster assisted the largest number of vessels while on patrol. Her crew 
		searched for and found the MV Katori Maru drifting and burning on 16-17 
		August 1952. Thereafter they assisted five more merchant and fishing 
		vessels. The Pacific ocean station cutters in all assisted over 20 
		merchant and Navy vessels, including one transoceanic airliner during 
		the war. During 1950 Station Nan was the busiest of all the ocean 
		stations, reporting that the cutters gave 357 radar fixes per patrol. 
		Each patrol averaged over 700 hours on station. The cutters steamed an 
		average of 4,000 miles per patrol. These numbers increased considerably 
		after the patrols were lengthened and expanded after the start of the 
		Korean  
		conflict. Twenty-four cutters served on the stations that fell within 
		the perimeters of the Korean conflict and thus, they and their crews 
		earned the Korean Service Medal. Unsung but always ready, the cutters 
		insured the timely and safe arrival of United Nations' troops and 
		supplies throughout the Korean conflict. Pacific Search and Rescue 
		Airstations
		The Coast Guard established a number of Pacific air search and rescue 
		detachments throughout the Pacific in support of the Korean operation. 
		The Coast Guard commissioned  
		air detachments on Wake and Midway islands and increased the strengths 
		of the existing detachments at Guam, Hawaii, and the Philippine Islands. 
		They were on call, 24 hours a day, to respond to any calls for 
		assistance. One of the most dangerous search and rescue cases 
		undertaken by the Coast Guard took place off the coast of mainland China 
		in early 1953. Communist Chinese forces shot down a Navy P2V Neptune in 
		the Formosa Strait while the aircraft was on a covert patrol along the 
		Chinese coast. The crew ditched their burning plane and escaped into a 
		life raft to await rescue. The Coast Guard search and rescue station at 
		Sangley Point responded to the call for assistance by immediately 
		scrambling one of its two Martin PBM-5G Mariner seaplanes. 
		 In command was Lieutenant "Big John" Vukic, one of the most 
		experienced seaplane pilots in the Coast Guard. Vukic and his crew of 
		seven took off and flew their large aircraft towards Communist China and 
		imminent danger. They were followed by the other PBM shortly thereafter, 
		piloted by then-Lieutenant Mitchell A. Perry. After arriving on scene 
		Vukic noticed that the seas were running 15-feet. Even though the 
		survivors managed to climb into a raft he thought they must have been 
		suffering from hypothermia. He decided to attempt an open water landing, 
		always a dangerous affair but something he had done many times 
		successfully. With darkness setting in he landed near the survivors. His 
		crewman managed to pull these men on board while other crewman prepared 
		a jet-assisted packs for each side of the aircraft. These devices, known 
		as JATO [Jet Assisted Take-Off] packs, permitted aircraft to lift off in 
		an extremely short take-off run. While the Coast Guard crew rescued 
		all eleven in the raft, two other Navy crew, in a separate raft, were 
		swept ashore and captured by the communist Chinese. Not knowing their 
		fate, Vukic taxied his big PBM near the crash site searching for them. 
		After fifteen minutes, with the seas rising he gave up the search and 
		attempted to take off. 
		The JATO rockets fired as the PBM lifted into the air. Vukic remembered: 
		"There was a 15-foot sea and a 25-mile wind." He feared that the heavy 
		seas would swamp his seaplane if he waited for the seas to abate or a 
		surface ship to come to their aid. Weighing each of the consequences, he 
		decided to fly. Vukic noted that: "Everything was rolling very well and 
		I thought it was in the bag. And so I fired my JATO bottles to help my 
		plane get airborne." Suddenly the plane lurched to the left. He saw 
		the left wing float rise above the sea but the port engine seemed to be 
		losing power. He quickly decided to ditch and made for the crest of a 
		wave with the plane's hull. "My seat suddenly broke and that was the 
		last thing I knew." The PBM slammed back into the sea and broke up. Once 
		again the Navy survivors were back in the water, at least, the seven 
		that survived this crash. Vukic managed to escape as well and inflated a 
		raft. He pulled two surviving Navy crew in with him. He said "We were so 
		cold we didn't care who got us, just so they had a fire to keep us 
		warm." Two others of his Coast Guard crew, Aviation Machinists Mate 
		Joseph Miller and Aviation Mechanic Robert Hewitt, also managed to 
		escape before the PBM sank. These men were eventually rescued by the 
		Navy destroyer U.S.S. Halsey Powell later that night. But the 
		other five Coast Guard and four Navy crewmen perished. Apparently some 
		of these nine men escaped the sinking PBM but were captured by Communist 
		Chinese forces and executed as spies. All five of these Coast Guardsmen, 
		who had died in the line of duty, were awarded the Gold Lifesaving Medal 
		posthumously. Port Security
		Anticommunist sentiment in the country, already at a fever pitch 
		after the communist victory in China the year before, was only 
		aggravated by the North Korean attack. As a result, the government 
		reacted against domestic communist activity. President Harry Truman 
		signed Presidential Executive Order 10173, thereby implementing the 
		Magnuson Act, which authorized the Coast Guard to conduct duties it had 
		carried out during both World Wars to insure the security of U.S. ports 
		"from subversive or clandestine attacks." The Coast Guard established 
		port security units to take charge of and secure the major ports of the 
		United States. Their function was to prevent sabotage and insure the 
		timely loading and sailing of merchant ships, especially those sailing 
		to Japan and Korea to deliver ammunition needed by the United Nation 
		forces. The most controversial power extended to the Coast Guard was 
		the authority to check the backgrounds of merchant sailors, 
		longshoremen, warehouse employees and harbor pilots, in order to 
		determine their loyalty, or lack thereof, to the United States. The 
		immediate problem with implementing these duties was the lack of 
		personnel. There was no organized reserve program of any great scale as 
		the World War II program had been emasculated with the demobilization of 
		the United State's military at the end of the war. Indeed, in June 1949 
		there were only 252 enlisted reserve personnel, and a few women SPARs 
		[the nickname of the Coast Guard's Women's Reserve] working at 
		headquarters. The President, through a supplemental appropriation, 
		approved the immediate increase in financing necessary to implement an 
		organized reserve. The budget for the following year did show a 
		substantial funding increase that permitted the Coast Guard to expand 
		and develop an adequate reserve to meet the service's new demands. 
		Fears of a Eastern-bloc freighter sailing into a port, armed with a 
		nuclear bomb, gave the service a unique Cold War task. Since the Soviet 
		Union and its communist allies had no 
		long-range bomber force and ballistic missiles were ten years in the 
		future, delivery of a bomb by a vessel sailing into an unsuspecting port 
		and then being detonated was the most likely form of nuclear attack on 
		the United States. From August 1951 every vessel entering into a U.S. 
		anchorage had to notify Customs of its intended destination and cargo 24 
		hours before it was to arrive. The names of these vessels were passed to 
		the appropriate Captain of the Port and Coast Guard patrol boats 
		identified and checked each, boarding and examining those that appeared 
		suspicious. The boats patrolling harbor entrances in the major ports 
		were occupied 24 hours a day and in New York, for example, there were 
		two stations on continuous duty. For the next two years off the coast of 
		New York, near the Ambrose lightship station, the Coast Guard inspected 
		over 1,500 ships. Each of the two patrols inspected an average of 40 
		vessels per month with each inspection lasting four hours. Armed with 
		Geiger counters, they searched for atomic weapons, general explosives, 
		and bacteriological weapons. Fortunately, the patrols never encountered 
		anything worth reporting. Another Coast Guard security duty that had a 
		direct impact on the combat in Korea was that of the men who supervised 
		the loading of high explosives on board merchantman. Special explosive 
		loading detachment teams conducted the incredibly dangerous job of 
		supervising the loading of ammunition. It was sometimes conducted under 
		the most primitive conditions. On the coast of Oregon, for example, 
		ammunition was transported from the Umatilla Ordnance Depot to a loading 
		site on the Columbia River about 10 miles downstream from the Depot. A 
		privately owned tow and barge company held the contract for transporting 
		government goods down the river. Coast Guard officers and men supervised 
		the loading of the  
		ammunition onto barges that each held 500 tons. Typically one powered 
		vessel would push two barges at a time down the 200 miles to the Beaver 
		Ammunition Storage Point,  
		accompanied by an armed Coast Guardsman. The ammunition was then loaded 
		onto cargo vessels for transportation to Korea. The LORAN Station at 
		Pusan
		The LORAN [Long Range Aid to Navigation] station at Pusan is one of 
		the truly unsung Coast Guard stories of the war. Established to assist 
		the growing air and sea traffic brought on by the Korean conflict, the 
		station's crew has the distinction of being the only Coast Guard 
		personnel serving under a Coast Guard command on the peninsula during 
		the fighting. It was code named ELMO-4. The prospective commanding 
		officer of the station, Lieutenant John D. McCann, USCG, reconnoitered 
		the area around the city of Pusan, which gave the LORAN station its 
		official Coast Guard designation, and picked a hill some twenty miles 
		from the city. His crew consisted of twelve men who served on a one-year 
		tour. On June 6 1952 the U. S. Air Force generously agreed to support 
		the station logistically, relieving the 14th Coast Guard District of
		such responsibilities. The support included providing for the security 
		of the station. Despite attacks by local vandals and some guerrilla 
		units, as well as a typhoon in August of 1952, construction progressed 
		with the assistance of units of the U. S. Army and logistically 
		supported by the U.S. Air Force. By the time ELMO-4 was ready to begin 
		operation the station boasted modern plumbing, electric clothes washing 
		machines, and a hot water heater. McCann noted "We are probably living 
		on one of the most comfortable bases in Korea. But don't forget that we 
		built it ourselves. Last August all we had were tents." The only Coast 
		Guard outfit stationed in Korea began transmitting its signal on 5 
		January 1953. In concert with the other eight Coast Guard-manned LORAN 
		stations in the Far East, including stations O'Shima Island in Tokyo 
		Bay, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa, these lonely Coast Guard outposts provided 
		around-the-clock navigation assistance to United Nations' maritime and 
		air forces. Every UN vessel and aircraft utilized the new technology 
		that permitted navigation under any weather conditions during the day or 
		night, provided courtesy of the United States Coast Guard. With the 
		signing of the cease-fire on 26 July 1953, the Coast Guard, as it had 
		after World War II, demobilized quickly. The Coast Guard abandoned the 
		ocean stations added for  
		wartime purposes and decommissioned the destroyer escorts. All of the 
		overseas air detachments and search and rescue stations were 
		decommissioned as well and the service  
		returned to its normal peacetime operations. Coast Guard operations 
		during the Korean War supported the United Nations' efforts to throw 
		back the Communist invaders. Coast Guard Merchant Marine Inspection and 
		Port Security forces insured the safe and timely loading and departure 
		of munitions and supplies bound for the troops in Korea. The Coast Guard 
		also supported the transport of combat troops to Korea. Manning the 
		lonely ocean stations in the middle of the Pacific, day in and day out, 
		cutters on these stations provided navigation support and stood by for 
		rescue, if need be, to transports, freighters, and aircraft bound for 
		the far Pacific. Coast Guard air  
		detachments stood by as well, ready to assist any in need. Finally, 
		the Coast Guard LORAN chain provided the most direct support of any 
		Coast Guard operation to the combat and logistic efforts against the 
		Communist invasion of South Korea. As it had during the air offensive 
		against Japan during World War II, Coast Guard LORAN stations provided 
		around the clock precise navigation assistance to all U.N. vessels and 
		aircraft throughout the far Pacific. The Korean War left a number of 
		legacies for the Coast Guard. Port security became a preeminent mission 
		of the service in large part due to fears generated by the Cold War.  
		Force levels had increased to well over what they were before North 
		Korea invaded its neighbor. Indeed, the service almost doubled in size 
		from its 1947 low of just over 18,000 
		men and women until June, 1952 when 35,082 officers and enlisted men 
		served on active duty, including 1,600 reservists. Women also continued 
		to serve in the Coast Guard, albeit in far fewer numbers than served 
		during World War II. In November 1952, 215 SPAR officers and 108 
		enlisted SPAR's served in the reserve and 15 officers and 19 enlisted 
		served on active duty. The final and, perhaps, most important legacy was 
		that the future leaders of the service would look for a more active role 
		for the Coast Guard in any conflict. Worried that its vital duties during 
		the Korean War still left the Coast Guard in obscurity, future 
		commandants would offer Coast Guard forces for use in combat. This is 
		exactly what  
		happened some ten years later during the Communist onslaught in Vietnam. 
		Coast Guard Units Eligible for the Korean Service Medal 1950-1954
		
			- USCGC Bering Strait; WAVP 382
 
			- USCGC Chautauqua; WPG 41
 
			- USCGC Durant; WDE 489
 
			- USCGC Escanaba; WPG 64
 
			- USCGC Falgout; WDE 424
 
			- USCGC Finch; WDE 428
 
			- USCGC Forster; WDE 434
 
			- USCGC Gresham; WAVP 387
 
			- USCGC Ironwood; WAGL 297
 
			- USCGC Iroquois; WPG 43
 
			- USCGC Klamath; WPG 66
 
			- USCGC Koiner; WDE 431
 
			- USCGC Kukui; WAK 186
 
			- USCGC Lowe; WDE 425
 
			- USCGC Minnetonka; WPG 67
 
			- USCGC Newell; WDE 442
 
			- USCGC Planetree; WAGL 307
 
			- USCGC Pontchartrain; WPG 70
 
			- USCGC Ramsden; WDE 482
 
			- USCGC Richey; WDE 48
 
			- USCGC Taney; WPG 37
 
			- USCGC Wachusett; WPG 44
 
			- USCGC Winnebago; WPG 40
 
			- USCGC Winona; WPG 65
 
			 
			Commander, Coast Guard Far East Section, Tokyo Coast Guard 
			Merchant Marine Detachment, Japan
			
				- LORAN Station Bataan
 
				- LORAN Station Pusan
 
				- LORAN Station Ichi Banare, Okinawa
 
				- LORAN Station Iwo Jima
 
				- LORAN Station Matsumae, Hokkaido
 
				- LORAN Station Niigata, Honshu
 
				- LORAN Station Oshima, Honshu
 
				- LORAN Station Riyako Jima
 
				- LORAN Station Tokyo, Honshu
 
				 
				U.S. Coast Guard Korean War Chronology
				
					- 26 June 1950
 
					 
					Retired Coast Guard officers, hired to help train the Korean 
					Navy, are ordered to evacuate the Korean peninsula. The 
					first Coast Guard contingent arrived in South Korea on 13 
					September 1946 to train a Korean "coast guard." The active 
					duty officers came back to the U.S. when the Koreans decided 
					to establish a navy in lieu of a "coast guard." Retired 
					officers were then recruited to train the nascent naval 
					force. 
  
					- 9 August 1950
 
					 
					Congress enacts Public Law 679, known as the Magnuson Act, 
					which charged the Coast Guard with ensuring the security of 
					the United States' ports and harbors, reinstituting a duty 
					carried out during both World Wars. The Coast Guard 
					establishes 29 new port security units to fulfill the task. 
					The primary concern of the Coast Guard was to prevent 
					sabotage of military cargoes bound for Japan and Korea. The 
					law also authorized the Coast Guard to determine the loyalty 
					of U.S. licensed merchant sailors, one of the more 
					controversial duties assigned to the service since the Coast 
					Guard enforced Prohibition. 
  
					- 20 June 1951
 
					 
					The Coast Guard commissions two former-Navy destroyer 
					escorts, the Forster and Koiner, the first two 
					of a total of twelve that ultimately join the Coast Guard 
					fleet. They were assigned to newly established ocean-weather 
					stations in the Pacific designed to assist merchant and air 
					traffic bound to and from the Korean peninsula. They 
					provided accurate and up to date weather information, served 
					as radio relay stations, and search and rescue platforms. 
					The Coast Guard established new air search and rescue 
					stations on Wake, Midway, and Adak islands as well. 
  
					- 20 December 1951
 
					 
					The cutter Koiner, homeported at Seattle, assisted 
					the tanker Bulkfuel and escorted it to safety. 
  
					- 16-17 August 1952
 
					 
					The cutter Forster, while on Ocean Station Sugar, 
					searched for and found the merchant vessel Katori Maru 
					drifting and burning. The vessel was not salvageable and 
					sank soon thereafter. 
  
					- 16 October 1952
 
					 
					The Coast Guard establishes a Merchant Marine Detail in 
					Yokohama, Japan to deal with the increased merchant marine 
					traffic through Japan as a result of the Korean conflict. 
  
					- 5 January 1953
 
					 
					Coast Guard LORAN Station Pusan, code-named Elmo 4, 
					commenced transmitting. The LORAN station, along with the 
					other stations in the Far East Chain, guided both merchant 
					and air traffic in the region. 
  
					- 18 January 1953
 
					 
					A Coast Guard PBM-5A, based out of Sangley Point, 
					Philippines, crashed after attempting to take off in heavy 
					seas near the coast of China. The crew had just rescued the 
					survivors of a U.S. Navy P2V that had been shot down by 
					Communist Chinese forces while it was flying a surveillance 
					flight. Four Navy and five Coast Guard personnel perished in 
					the crash. The survivors were rescued the following day by a 
					U.S. Navy destroyer. 
  
					- 15 May 1953
 
					 
					The cutter Forster, homeported in Honolulu, assisted 
					the merchant vessel Creighton Victory. 
  
					- 12 July 1953
 
					 
					The cutter Finch, while on Ocean Station Nan, 
					unsuccessfully searched for the downed Transoceanic Plane 
					806 in the vicinity of Midway Island. 
  
					- 30 July 1953
 
					 
					The cutter Lansing, homeported in Honolulu, assisted 
					the grounded merchant vessel Hawaii Bear at Maculabo Island. 
  
					- 19-20 September 1953
 
					 
					The cutter Ramsden, while on Ocean Station Uncle, 
					stood by the USNS Private Frank J. Petrarca, until relieved 
					by a tug 
					 
					 
					Coast Guard Aircraft Accidents
					
					
					Korean War Educator: Topics - Coast Guard Aircraft Accidents 
					 
					Gold Medal Lifesaving Medal Recipients
		This medal is given for "extreme and heroic daring." 
					
						- Permenter, BMC Fred - April 5, 1951 - St. George's 
						Reef Light Station, California
						- Date of Rescue: 5 April 1951/Station: St. George's 
						Reef Light Station, CA/Date of Award: 31 March 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Kiely, Ens. William R. Jr. - May 28, 1951 - U.S. 
						Coast Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 78
 
						- Lundberg, Erick - US Coast Guard Auxiliary
						- Date of Rescue: 28 May 1951/Station: U.S. Coast 
						Guard Auxiliary Flotilla 78/Date of Award: 27 June 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Webber, Coxswain Bernard - February 18, 1952 - 
						CG-36500, Chatham, Massachusetts
						- Date of Rescue: 18 February 1952/Station: Chatham 
						LBS, MA/Date of Award: 7 May 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Maske, EN2(P) Ervin E. - February 18, 1952 - CG-36500, 
						Chatham, Massachusetts
						- Date of Rescue: 18 February 1952/Station: Chatham 
						LBS, MA/Date of Award: 7 May 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Fitzgerald, EN2(P) Andrew J. - February 18, 1952 - CG-36500, 
						Chatham, Massachusetts
						- Date of Rescue: 18 February 1952/Station: Chatham 
						LBS, MA/Date of Award: 7 May 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Livesey, SN Richard P. - February 18, 1952 - CG-36500, 
						Chatham, Massachusetts
						- Date of Rescue: 18 February 1952/Station: Chatham 
						LBS, MA/Date of Award: 7 May 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Kiely, Ens. William R. Jr. - February 18 and 19, 
						1952 - USCGC Yakutat
						- Date of Rescue: 18 & 19 February 1952/Station: USCGC 
						Yakutat/Date of Award: 7 May 1952
 
						 
						 
						- Vukic, Lt. John - January 18, 1953 - Coast Guard Air 
						Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						 
						 
						- Stuart, Lt.jg Gerald W. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						 
						 
						- Miller, ADC Joseph M. Jr. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
							- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast 
							Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine 
							Islands/Date of Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						- Hammond, ALC Winfield J. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						- Tornell, AL1 Carl R. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						- Bridge, AO1 Joseph Richard - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						- Miller, AD3 Tracy W. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
						- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast Guard 
						Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands/Date of 
						Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						- Hewitt, AM3 Robert F. - January 18, 1953 - Coast 
						Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine Islands
							- Date of Rescue: 18 January 1953/Station: Coast 
							Guard Air Detachment Sangley Point, Philippine 
							Islands/Date of Award: 16 November 1955
 
						  
						 
						 
						Coast Guard Fatalities During the Korean War
		[KWE Note: The official time period of the Korean War is June 27, 
		1950 to January 31, 1955.  The following fatalities are listed in 
		chronological order rather than alpha order.] 1950
		
			- Hinnant, James Reed - Ocean Weather Station HOW - 
			December 06, 1950
 
		 
		1951
		
			- Massey, Charles Gray - from Maryland, January 6, 1951
 
			- Harwood, BM3 Bruce L. - USCGC Foxglove, August 14, 
			1951
 
			- Wage, EN1 Max Joseph Jr. - Station Wilmette Harbor, 
			Illinois, October 28, 1951
 
			- Sawyer, BM3 Robert P. - Station Wilmette Harbor, 
			Illinois, October 28, 1951
 
			 
			1952
			
				- Tomozer, Lt.jg. Richard Joseph - Air Station Port 
				Angeles, Washington, May 27, 1952
 
				- Moore, AL1 Bernard - Air Station Port Angeles, 
				Washington, May 27, 1952
 
				- Woodard, AL2 Blaine Edward - Air Station Port Angeles, 
				Washington, May 27, 1952
 
				- Lefebvre, BM3 J.L. - Station Kennebec, Maine, May 29, 
				1952
 
				- McClendon, LtCd Robert Stancell - Air Station Guam, 
				November 11, 1952
 
				- McGregor, Lt. Milton Lee - Air Station Guam, November 
				11, 1952
 
				- Beltz, SK3 Russell W. - Air Station Guam, November 
				11, 1952
 
				- McCue, Cdr Joseph Francis - Air Station, Salem, 
				Massachusetts, November 13, 1952
 
				- White, AD1 Henry J. - Air Station, Salem, 
				Massachusetts, November 13, 1952
 
				- Fredey, SN Richard B. - Boston Lighthouse, November 
				21, 1952
 
				 
				1953
				
					- Blucker, Boatswain's Mate 2C Guy Clifford "Dickie"
					- CG Station New London, Connecticut, February 15, 1953
 
					- Whittemore, Chief Engineman Dee Amos - CG Station 
					New London, Connecticut, February 15, 1953
 
					- Stuart, Lt.jg. Gerald William - Air Det Stangley 
					Point, Philippines, January 18, 1953
 
					- Hammond, ALC Winfield J. - Air Det Stangley 
					Point, Philippines, January 18, 1953
 
					- Tornell, AL1 Carl Raymond - Air Det Stangley Point, 
					Philippines, January 18, 1953 
 
					- Bridge, AO1 Joseph Richard "Dick" - Air Det Stangley 
					Point, Philippines, January 18, 1953
 
					- Miller, AD3 Tracy Wesley - Air Det Stangley Point, 
					Philippines, January 18, 1953
 
					- Coble, BM2 Howard M. - USCGC Mahoring, 
					February 12, 1953
 
					- Leslie, Rear Admiral Norman Henry - Washington, 
					DC, March 15, 1953
 
					- Franz, ENC Otto A. - CGC Sassafras, March 30, 
					1953
 
					- Felts, LtCdr LeWayne N. - Wisconsin, July 06, 
					1953
 
					- Fleck, ENS Vernon C. - Air Station Biloxi, 
					Mississippi, July 07, 1953
 
					- Netherland, AD2 John Clifford - Air Station Biloxi, 
					Mississippi, July 07, 1953
 
					- Calderone, FN Joseph D. - CGRECEN, Cape May, New 
					Jersey, November 21, 1953
 
					 
					1954
					
						- Day, Lt. John William - Port Angeles, Washington, 
						January 20, 1954
 
						- Chauvin, AD3 Robert Allen - Port Angeles, 
						Washington, January 20, 1954
 
						- Littleford, AD3 Dale Richard - Port Angeles, 
						Washington, January 20, 1954
 
						- Palombini, AD3 Pete Anthony - Port Angeles, 
						Washington, January 20, 1954
 
						- Goodman, AD3 William J. - Port Angeles, 
						Washington, January 20, 1954
 
						- Teifer, Lt.jg. Donald George - Mexico, May 06, 
						1954
 
						- Ortman, Cdr. Paul Arthur - Melville Bay, 
						Greenland, June 26, 1954
 
						- Leone, SA Carmen A. - SCGC Woodbine, November 
						23, 1954
 
						- Habecker, AL1 Clifford Earl - Air Station 
						Annette, Alaska, December 14, 1954
 
						- Turnier, AD1 Andrew P. - Air Station 
						Annette, Alaska, December 14, 1954
 
						- Jahn, AL3 Doyle E. - Air Station Annette, 
						Alaska, December 14, 1954
 
						 
						 
						Fatality Bios (alpha order)
						Beltz, Russell Wayne 
		
			Russell was born November 20, 1930 in Griswold, Iowa, the son of 
			Clara Mueller Beltz.  Storekeeper Third Class Beltz was assigned to the US Coast Guard 
			Detachment, Agana, Guam. On November 11, 1952, he was flying as an 
			observer in a Coast Guard PBY-6 rescue aircraft on a training 
			flight, which crashed after its engine caught fire on takeoff 
			killing him, the pilot and the co-pilot.   
		 
		Blucker, Guy Clifford "Dickie" 
		
			Dickie Blucker was born May 09, 1931 in Pulaski County, Arkansas, 
			a son of Oscar R. Blucker (1898-1968) and Linnie Viola Blucker 
			(1901-1986).  His siblings were Oscar Wayne Blucker 
			(1927-2018), Major Blucker, Ruth Blucker Crosser, Edith Blucker 
			Jones and Shirley Blucker Sullivan.  Guy Blucker is buried in 
			Bethel Methodist Church Cemetery, Jacksonville, Arkansas.  
			"Blucker and Waddell were part of a seven-person repair crew who had 
			been sent out to fix a failed engine on a launch that was taking 
			crew members to a lightship off Old Saybrook. The article describes 
			how the crew worked until midnight on Sunday, February 15 [1953], 
			making repairs when it was decided that [Russell] Waddell, [Amos] 
			Whittemore and Blucker would pilot the launch to Old Saybrook 
			Harbor, about three and a half miles away.  But as they were 
			heading back to the harbor, the engine failed again. The three men 
			scrambled onto the stone breakwater off the harbor, which was close 
			but not connected to land. By the time they were spotted, only 
			Waddell was still conscious. Whittemore and Blucker died of exposure 
			to the raging elements at the ages of 32 and 22, respectively."  
			[KWE Note: Dickie Blucker's tombstone lists his death date as 
			January 15, 1953, not February 15, 1953.] 
		 
		Bridge, Joseph Richard 
		
			Joseph was born on July 7, 1920 in Salt Lake City, Utah, a son of 
			John James Kirkman Bridge (1886-1930) and Nellie Josephine Johnson 
			Bridge (1890-1982).  His sibling was John Johnson Bridge 
			(924-1924).  He was a World War II and Korean War veteran.  
			Aviation Ordnanceman First Class Bridge was a crew member of a 
			rescue patrol bomber stationed at the Coast Guard Air Detachment, 
			Sangley Point, Philippines. On January 18, 1953, after rescuing 
			survivors from a Naval P2V Neptune patrol aircraft off Swatow, 
			China, his aircraft crashed on takeoff. He was listed as Missing in 
			Action and was presumed dead on September 15, 1955. He is 
			memorialized in Wasatch Lawn Memorial Park, Millcreek, Utah. 
		 
		Calderone, Joseph D. 
						
							Joseph D Calderone was born in 1932, the son of 
							Carmelo Calderone (1902-1981) and Katherine Carmelo 
							(1908-1956).  Age 21, he was leveling coal in a 
							bin at the U.S. Coast Guard base in Cape May when he 
							fell into the coal loading chute and became buried 
							for two hours under tons of coal. He was survived by 
							his wife of one month, the former Frances Rabbitt of 
							Hammonton (daughter of Mr. & Mrs. James Rabbitt).  
							Joseph is buried in Oak Grove Cemetery, Hammonton, 
							New Jersey. [Source: From page one of The News
							of Egg Harbor City, 25 November 1953] 
						 
						Chauvin, Robert Allan 
		
			Robert was born February 6, 1931.  Aviation Machinist's Mate 
			Third Class Chauvin was assigned to the Coast Guard Station, Port 
			Angeles, Washington. On January 20, 1954, he was the pilot of a 
			Coast Guard HO4S helicopter on a training flight which crashed in 
			the Port Angeles area killing him and four crewmembers.  His 
			body was recovered and he was buried in Sacred Heart Catholic 
			Cemetery, Roseville, Michigan. 
		 
		Coble, Howard Marvin 
		
			Howard was born September 24, 1926, the son of James Oscar Coble 
			(1902-1983) and JoFleta Williams Coble (1900-1969).  His 
			siblings were Mrs. Robert (Eunice Coble) Tingen (1928-2011) and Mrs. 
			E. Sammy (Eula Mae Coble;) Coble (1932-1958.  Howard was 
			assigned to the USCGC Mahoring when he died 
					February 12, 1953.  He is buried in Mt. Hermon Memorial 
			Cemetery, Graham, North Carolina. 
		 
		Day, John William 
		
			John was born October 09, 1924, the second son of Samuel Day 
			(1882-1949) and Blanche Idella Burdsal Day (1885-1982).  He 
			married Marie Day (later Reyes) in 1950.  Marie lived from 1920 
			to 2003).  His sibling was World War II veteran Robert Sherwood 
			Day (1919-2008).  On January 20, 1954, he was in a Coast Guard 
			HO4S helicopter on a training flight which crashed in the Port 
			Angeles area killing him and four crewmembers.John is buried in the 
			Masonic Cemetery in Nashville, Illinois. 
		 
		Felts, LeWayne Newcomb 
		
			LeWayne Felts was born February 27, 1921 in Waterloo, Iowa, the 
			son of Mott Thayer Felts (1896-1988) and Floy Alta Newcomb Felts 
			(1896-1994).  He married Ethel Sproul of Ridgewood in November 
			1943 and they were parents of three children.  His sister was 
			Floy Alene Felts Strong (1919-2008).  Felts attended the 
			University of Cincinnati and graduated from the US Coast Guard 
			Academy.  After World War II he got his wings in April 1947.  
			He was assigned to the US Air Force Institute of Technology at 
			Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio as a student in the Graduate 
			Aeronautical Engineering Course.  On July 5, 1953 he was on a 
			training flight piloting a twin engine Beechcraft C-45B from Sioux 
			City, Iowa to his home station at Wright-Patterson Field in Ohio. 
			The C-45B was 34'. 3" long, 9' 2" high, weighed 8,725 pounds loaded 
			and had a wing span of 47' 8". The crew of two could carry up to 
			seven passengers. The plane was powered by two Pratt & Whitney 450 
			horsepower engines which took the plane to a maximum speed of 218 
			miles per hour. It had a range of 1,200 miles and a ceiling of 
			18,500'. A planned refueling stop in Madison, Wisconsin was canceled 
			due to bad weather and he was forced to land early and spend the 
			night in LaCrosse, Wisconsin. The next day he refueled and took off 
			for Wright-Patterson. Shortly after take-off the left engine went 
			out and Felts started a steep turn back to the field in an attempt 
			to land but the plane crashed one mile short of the runway near 
			Sparta, Wisconsin. He was thrown out of the cockpit and died of a 
			skull fracture and burns. Two other officer-students and a passenger 
			also died. Felts had over 1,500 hours as a pilot the day he took off 
			on his last flight, as did his co-pilot. Felts is buried in Section 
			7, Grave 10173-A at Arlington National Cemetery. At death he was 33 
			years old.  
		 
		Fleck, Vernon Chester 
		
			Vernon was born November 11, 1919.  During the Korean War he 
			was assigned to the Coast Guard Air Detachment, Biloxi, Mississippi. 
			On July 7, 1953, he was the pilot of a Coast Guard PBY-5 rescue 
			aircraft on a mission to evacuate an injured seaman aboard a shrimp 
			boat in the North Pass of the Lower Mississippi (Louisian). The 
			aircraft went out of control upon landing and sank killing him and 
			two other crewmen.  This World War II/Korean War veteran is 
			buried in Memorial Park Cemetery, Topeka, Kansas. 
		 
		Franz, Otto A.  
		
			Otto Franz was born about 1903 in Ohio.  He was married to 
			Helen L. Franz (1910-1979).  He died while serving on the Coast 
			Guard cutter Sassafras on March 30, 
					1953 in Cape May County, New Jersey.  He is buried in 
			Cold Spring Presbyterian Cemetery, Cape May, New Jersey. 
		 
		Fredey, Richard B. 
						
							Richard B. Fredey was an Assistant Lighthouse Keeper 
							at Boston Light.  Fredey died in the line of duty on 
							21 November 1952 along with contractor Wilfred 
							MacNeill, a civilian employee of the Coast Guard, when they disappeared en-route back to 
							Boston Light while aboard the station's 14-foot 
							boat.  Born in 1920 in Waban, Massachusetts, he 
							left a wife, Barbara Hutchings Rand Williams 
							(1930-2020) and baby daughter Jill (who later became 
							Mrs. Ron Doerig). 
						 
						Goodman, William J. 
		
			William was born September 16, 1928 in Mount Vernon, New York, a 
			son of Frank Goodman (died 1941) and Catherine Goodman.  He 
			lived in Yonkers, New York before joining the Coast Guard in 
			September of 1951.  He graduated from Oswego State Teacher's 
			College in June of 1951 and also attended St. Denis' School and 
			Saunders Trade School.  William's siblings were his sister Mrs. 
			Andrew (Mary Catherine Goodman) Scrobola (1922-2001), and brothers 
			Philip, Frank and Thomas Goodman.  His crew was practicing auto 
			rotations from an altitude of 1,500 feet. Upon reaching 500 feet the 
			helicopter appeared to go out of control. Upon partial recovery at 
			100 feet, the main rotor departed the aircraft, followed by the tail 
			rotor, tail boom and drive assembly. The helicopter plunged into the 
			water near Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles.  Goodman had 
			been attached to the Air Sea Rescue Squad at Port Angeles for two 
			years before his death.  He is memorialized in Gate of Heaven 
			Cemetery, Hawthorne, New York. 
		 
		Habacker, Clifford Earl 
		
			Clifford was born February 10, 1920, a son of William Habecker 
			(1884-1933) and Mabel Armstrong Habecker (1886-1964).  He was 
			the husband of Ruth Carlson, and the brother of Mrs. Henry (Wiona) 
			Gaebel, LaVerne Wallace Habecker (1913-2008), Howard William 
			Habecker (1918-2004) and Sherman Leland Habecker (1921-1980).  
			Clifford is buried in Mendon Cemetery, Mendon New York.  
			"Haines, Alaska (AP) -- Four men, including a strait-jacketed mental 
			patient being flown to Juneau for hospitalization apparently were 
			killed yesterday in the crash of a Coast Guard amphibious plane 
			during a take-off from Haines harbor. Seven men were aboard the 
			plane when it cracked up and four of them were taken from the water 
			within an hour while three still are missing. Injuries received in 
			the crash took the life of AL1 Clifford E. Habecker, 34, Pittsford, 
			New York, a coastguardsman. Still missing are Fred Harrington, the 
			mental patient from Haines, and two other coastguardsmen AD1 Andrew 
			P. Turnier, 39, Landsdowne, Pennsylvania, and AL3 Doyle E. Jahn, 21, 
			Roseland, Nebraska. Although search still is continuing for these 
			men virtually no hope is held they will be found alive. Survivors 
			are Lt. Cmdr. Frederick J. Hancox, 34, the pilot, of Reading, 
			Pennsylvania; Lt. William P. Butler, 25, Hyattsville, Maryland, the 
			co-pilot and U.S. deputy marshal Darrell  Miller, Juneau.  
			Hancox's condition was listed as fair and Butler's as critical. 
			Miller, escorting Harrington to Juneau, suffered only slight 
			injuries. The plane was from the Annette Island Coast Guard station 
			and was taking off when the crackup occurred. It was not determined 
			whether the craft had left the water or struck some submerged 
			object. The survivors were taken from the water by fishermen. The 
			Coast Guard cutter Storis was due to arrive in Juneau this 
			afternoon with the survivors and Habecker's body. Rescuers said the 
			plane fell in Portage bay and remained afloat almost 30 minutes 
			before sinking nose first in 400 feet of water. The Coast Guard 
			tender Citrus is remaining at Haines to continue the search for the 
			missing men. The survivors will be taken to St. Anne's hospital in 
			Juneau."  [Source: Daily Sitka Sentinel Alaska 
			1954-12-15] 
		 
		Hammond, Winfield James 
		
			James Hammond was born September 15, 1920, in Mankato, Minnesota.  
			He served in the military from 1941 to 1953.  Chief Aviation 
			Electronicsman Hammond was a crew member of a rescue patrol bomber 
			stationed at the Coast Guard Air Detachment, Sangley Point, 
			Philippines. On January 18, 1953, after rescuing survivors from a 
			Naval P2V Neptune patrol aircraft off Swatow, China, his aircraft 
			crashed on takeoff. He was listed as Missing in Action and was 
			presumed dead on September 15, 1955. 
		 
		Harwood, Bruce L. 
		
			Bruce Harwood was born February 27,1926.  His tombstone, 
			located in West Lawn Memorial Park, China Grove, North Carolina, 
			lists Missouri as his home of record.  He died while serving on 
			the Coast Guard cutter Foxglove, a 114 foot river buoy tender, on 
			August 14, 1951.  Twenty-five years old and from St. Louis, 
			Bruce drowned in the Mississippi River opposite Jefferson Barracks when a 
			motorboat capsized during Coast Guard exercises. Harwood was a 
			boatswain's mate. 
		 
		Hinnant, James Reed 
		
			James was born in 1909 in South Carolina, a son of Fletcher Elkin 
			Hinnant (1872-1960) and Elinor Murray Hinnant (1880-1969).  He 
			was married to Sena Margaret Wilton in 1934 in North Carolina, and 
			they had a daughter, Sena Patricia Hinnant.  His siblings were 
			Fletcher Edward "Ned" Hinnant, Lucy Reed Hinnant Tharin Wood 
			(1913-2008), and Eleanor Hinnant Fishburne.  Commander Hinnant 
			was a veteran of World War II. During the Korean War, he was the 
			Commanding Officer of the US Coast Guard ship Rockaway 
			(WAVP-377) on the Ocean Weather Station HOW. On The evening of 
			December 6, 1950, he made a dive below the ROCKAWAY attempting to 
			free a line from a target raft, which had fouled in the port screw. 
			He did not resurface. His remains were not recovered.  
		 
		Jahn, Doyle Eugene 
		
			Doyle was born in April of 1933, a son of Christopher Benjamin 
			Jahn (1902-1982) and Opal M. Rhine Jahn (1912-2008).  His 
			siblings include Donald L. Jahn (1937-2005), Constance "Connie" 
			Margaret Jahn Sirokman (1940-2021), Barbara Lou Jahn Kudrna 
			(1945-2020) and Eleanor Jahn DeMaio.  Doyle is memoralized at 
			Blue Hill Catholic Cemetery, Blue Hill, Nebraska.  "Haines, 
			Alaska (AP) -- Four men, including a strait-jacketed mental patient 
			being flown to Juneau for hospitalization apparently were killed 
			yesterday in the crash of a Coast Guard amphibious plane during a 
			take-off from Haines harbor. Seven men were aboard the plane when it 
			cracked up and four of them were taken from the water within an hour 
			while three still are missing. Injuries received in the crash took 
			the life of AL1 Clifford E. Habecker, 34, Pittsford, New York, a 
			coastguardsman. Still missing are Fred Harrington, the mental 
			patient from Haines, and two other coastguardsmen AD1 Andrew P. 
			Turnier, 39, Landsdowne, Pennsylvania, and AL3 Doyle E. Jahn, 21, 
			Roseland, Nebraska. Although search still is continuing for these 
			men virtually no hope is held they will be found alive. Survivors 
			are Lt. Cmdr. Frederick J. Hancox, 34, the pilot, of Reading, 
			Pennsylvania; Lt. William P. Butler, 25, Hyattsville, Maryland, the 
			co-pilot and U.S. deputy marshal Darrell  Miller, Juneau.  
			Hancox's condition was listed as fair and Butler's as critical. 
			Miller, escorting Harrington to Juneau, suffered only slight 
			injuries. The plane was from the Annette Island Coast Guard station 
			and was taking off when the crackup occurred. It was not determined 
			whether the craft had left the water or struck some submerged 
			object. The survivors were taken from the water by fishermen. The 
			Coast Guard cutter Storis was due to arrive in Juneau this 
			afternoon with the survivors and Habecker's body. Rescuers said the 
			plane fell in Portage bay and remained afloat almost 30 minutes 
			before sinking nose first in 400 feet of water. The Coast Guard 
			tender Citrus is remaining at Haines to continue the search for the 
			missing men. The survivors will be taken to St. Anne's hospital in 
			Juneau."  [Source: Daily Sitka Sentinel Alaska 
			1954-12-15]  
		 
		Lefebvre, J.L.  
		
			Loss of life, Station Kennebec, Maine, May 29, 1952 
		 
		Leone, Carmen A.  
		
			Loss of life, SCGC Woodbine, November 23, 1954 
		 
		Leslie, Norman Henry 
		
			Norman was born August 25, 1898 in Chicago, Illinois, the son of 
			Henry Thomas Leslie (1855-1918) and Myrtie Oliver Leslie 
			(1869-1962).  A former machinist, he enlisted in the Coast 
			Guard on June 01, 1918, was commissioned as an Ensign on March 07, 
			1921, and rose to the rank of Rear Admiral.  He served in the 
			Coast Guard during World War I, World War II, and the Korean War.  
			He was the Commander, Thirteenth Coast Guard 
			District in Seattle, Washington, when he died of a heart attack on 
			March 15, 1953.  Rear Admiral Leslie was married to Unis 
			Frazier on September 25, 1926, and they were parents of one 
			daughter. 
		 
		Littleford, Dale Richard 
		
			Dale was born January 05, 1933.  Aviation Machinist's Mate 
			Third Class Littleford was assigned to the Coast Guard Station, Port 
			Angeles, Washington. On January 20, 1954, he was the pilot of a 
			Coast Guard HO4S helicopter on a training flight which crashed in 
			the Port Angeles area killing him and four crewmembers.  Dale 
			is buried in Hanover Cemetery, Hanover, Pennsylvania. 
		 
		McClendon, Robert S. 
		
			Robert was born September 15, 1915, son of John Robertson 
			McLendon (1879-1926) and Bedie Stancell McClendon.  He was 
			married and had a son, Robert McClendon Jr.  His siblings were 
			Margaret McClendon, Mildred McClendon Hamer, and brother Benjamin 
			McClendon.  Robert McClendon was born and reared in Rockingham 
			and was a star athlete at Rockingham High School.  He attended 
			Wake Forest College and graduated from Naval Coast Guard Academy in 
			1941.  He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. 
		 
		McCue, Joseph F. 
		
			Beverly, Mass., (AP) -- Two Coastguards were killed today in the 
			crash and explosion of a Coast Guard helicopter. Although there were 
			no witnesses of the actual crash, residents reported that just 
			before the explosion, the helicopter came over at a low altitude, 
			its engine sputtering and back-firing. Names of the victims were 
			withheld. Arthur Litka dashed out of his garage, 75 feet away, just 
			as the helicopter plunged into a yard behind a residence in the 
			Beverly Cove section of this socially important North Shore 
			community 18 miles north of Boston. He said there were indications 
			the aircraft struck once, bounced and then exploded, possibly in the 
			air. The helicopter was demolished and both bodies badly mangled. 
			The helicopter, equipped with pontoons, was one of those operated by 
			the Coast Guard from its nearby Salem base in rescue and patrol 
			operations.  Joseph F. McCue was the commanding officer of the 
			Coast Guard air station in Salem, Massachusetts.  He was the 
			son of Capt. Patrick McCue and Elizabeth McCue.  Patrick McCue 
			was a Silver Star recipient in the Spanish-American War.  
			Joseph's brother was John J. McCue of Arlington. 
		 
		McGregor, Milton Lee 
		
			Milton was born March 15, 1920, a son of William Fergus and Birtha 
			Tucker McGregor.  He was the husband of Carolyn Birch McGregor 
			and the father of two children.  Lieutenant McGregor was a veteran of World War II. During the 
			Korean War he was assigned to the US Coast Guard Detachment, Agana, 
			Guam. On November 11, 1952, he was the co-pilot of a Cost Guard 
			PBY-6 rescue aircraft on a training flight, which crashed after its 
			engine caught fire on takeoff killing him, the pilot and an 
			observer. McGregor is buried in the Golden Gate Cemetery, San Bruno, 
			California.   
		 
		Miller, Tracy Wesley 
		
			Tracy was born June 08, 1929.  Aviation Machinist's Mate 
			Third Class Miller was a crew member of a rescue patrol bomber 
			stationed at the Coast Guard Air Detachment, Sangley Point, 
			Philippines. On January 18, 1953, after rescuing survivors from a 
			Naval P2V Neptune patrol aircraft off Swatow, China, his aircraft 
			crashed on takeoff. He was listed as Missing in Action and was 
			presumed dead on September 15, 1955.  Tracy Miller is 
			memorialized in Arlington National Cemetery. 
		 
		Moore, Bernard 
		
			His home of record was Newport County, Rhode Island.  Port Angeles (AP) -- A Coast Guard flying boat crashed on a 
			takeoff here Tuesday and four men were lost as it broke apart. The 
			Coast Guard announcement of the crash said the four apparently were 
			carried down with the main part of the plane. Twelve were aboard the 
			PM plane on the takeoff for a flight to Prince Rupert, B.C.
			Two survivors were reported injured seriously; five received minor 
			injuries and one was uninjured. The plane crashed in the Straight of 
			Juan de Fuca at the mouth of Port Angeles Bay. The plane crashed 
			after climbing about 200 feet on the takeoff. It broke up on hitting 
			the water. Some broken parts of the craft were towed ashore later. 
			Names of the missing and injured were not announced immediately. 
			Salvage operations were begun at the scene. The Coast Guard said the 
			plane was an "administrative flight." [Source: The Daily 
			Chronicle Centralia Washington 1952-05-27] 
		 
		Netherland, John Clifford 
		
			John was born December 31, 1920 in Louisiana, a son of 
			George Washington Netherland (1890-1970) and Necie Esther Tippit 
			Netherland (1900-1997).  He enlisted in the military on August 
			9, 1941.  He married Allie Mae Jackson (later Doyle) 
			(1927-2012).  They were parents of John Larry Netherland 
			(1947-2011) and David C. Netherland.  His siblings were Rev. 
			Clyde Edward Netherland (1922-1989) and Carl Samuel Netherland 
			(1929-1970).  John C. Netherland died at Air Station Biloxi, 
					Mississippi on July 07, 1953.  He is buried in Welcome 
			Cemetery, Simpson, Louisiana.   
		 
		Ortman, Paul Arthur 
		
			Paul was born April 16, 1909 in New London, Connecticut, the son 
			of Julius Ortman (1872-1955) and Mary A. Lehn Ortman (1878-1969).  
			His wife was Genevive Louise McIntosh Ortman (1909-1992).  
			Commander Ortman was a veteran of World War II. During the Korean 
			War, he was the executive officer of the Coast Guard Ship 
			Westwind. On June 26, 1954, he was riding as an observer in the 
			ship's HLT-1 helicopter, when it crashed on ice floes in Baltic Bay, 
			Greenland. Commander Ortman was awarded the National Defense Service 
			Medal and the Coast Guard Arctic Service Medal.  His memorial 
			stone is in Jordan Cemetery, Waterford, Connecticut. 
		 
		Palombini, Peter Anthony 
		
			The KWE believes, but has not confirmed, that Pete Palombini is 
			the son of Paul Palombini (1891-1959) and Marianna DiCosmo Palombini 
			(1903-1936) of Beaver County, Pennsylvania, and the brother of Emma 
			Palombini Persi (1926-2015) and Felicia Persi of California.  
			Pete was on a crew that was practicing auto rotations from an 
			altitude of 1,500 feet. Upon reaching 500 feet the helicopter 
			appeared to go out of control. Upon partial recovery at 100 feet, 
			the main rotor departed the aircraft, followed by the tail rotor, 
			tail boom and drive assembly. The helicopter plunged into the water 
			near Coast Guard Air Station Port Angeles. 
		 
		Sawyer, Robert P. 
						
							
							On the night of October 28, 1951, between 1:00 and 
							2:00 A.M., radio contact was lost with CG30315, 
							which was manned by BM3 Robert Sawyer and EN1 Max 
							Wage. The vessel was out on the lake searching for a 
							vessel with three duck hunters that was reported as 
							missing. The vessel was found a half-mile off the 
							Waukegan Harbor entrance. One of the hunters' bodies 
							was recovered, the others were lost. CG30315 was 
							never found.  
						 
						Stuart, Gerald William 
		
			Gerald was born May 5, 1922 in Marinett County, Wisconsin, the 
			son of William Frederick Stuart (1901-199) and Margaret Edna 
			Trippler Stuart (1904-1939.  His sister was Bonnie Jean Stuart 
			(1924-1986).  Lieutenant Junior Grade Stuart was the co-pilot of a rescue 
			patrol bomber stationed at the Coast Guard Air Detachment, Sangley 
			Point, Philippines. On January 18, 1953, after rescuing survivors 
			from a Naval P2V Neptune patrol aircraft off Swatow, China, his 
			aircraft crashed on takeoff. He was listed as Missing in Action and 
			was presumed dead on September 15, 1955.  There is mention of 
			Gerald and his Coast Guard service on the back of his father's 
			tombstone.  There is also a military marker for this World War 
			II and Korean War veteran in the VFW section of Forest Home 
			Cemetery, Marinette, Wisconsin. 
		 
		Teifer, Donald George 
		
			Donald was born November 23, 1926, a son of Stanley Edward Teifer 
			(1895-1950) and Loretta Mary George  Teifer of Wayne County, 
			Michigan, and the brother of Joseph Edward "Joe" Teifer (1930-1984).  
			Lieutenant Junior Grade Teifer was a crew member of a PBM-5S 
			Catalina patrol bomber with Advance Training Unit 700, based at 
			Corpus Christi, Texas. On May 5, 1954, the aircraft was on a 
			navigation training flight when it crashed 120 miles southwest of 
			Brownsville, Texas near Carricitos, Tamaulipas, Mexico, killing 10 
			crewmen. 
		 
		Tomozer, Richard Joseph 
		
			Richard was from New York County, New York.  Port Angeles (AP) -- A Coast Guard flying boat crashed on a 
			takeoff here Tuesday and four men were lost as it broke apart. The 
			Coast Guard announcement of the crash said the four apparently were 
			carried down with the main part of the plane. Twelve were aboard the 
			PM plane on the takeoff for a flight to Prince Rupert, B.C.
			Two survivors were reported injured seriously; five received minor 
			injuries and one was uninjured. The plane crashed in the Straight of 
			Juan de Fuca at the mouth of Port Angeles Bay. The plane crashed 
			after climbing about 200 feet on the takeoff. It broke up on hitting 
			the water. Some broken parts of the craft were towed ashore later. 
			Names of the missing and injured were not announced immediately. 
			Salvage operations were begun at the scene. The Coast Guard said the 
			plane was an "administrative flight." [Source: The Daily 
			Chronicle Centralia Washington 1952-05-27] 
		 
		Tornell, Carl Raymond 
		
			Carl was born January 18, 1953 in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, 
			the son of Carl Johan Nilsson Tornell (1882-1964) and Hulda 
			Albertina Sundellin Tornell (1884-1962).  Aviation Electronics 
			Technician First Class Tornell was a crew member of a rescue patrol 
			bomber stationed at the Coast Guard Air Detachment, Sangley Point, 
			Philippines. On January 18, 1953, after rescuing survivors from a 
			Naval P2V Neptune patrol aircraft off Swatow, China, his aircraft 
			crashed on takeoff. He was listed as Missing in Action and was 
			presumed dead on September 15, 1955. 
		 
		Turnier, Andrew P. 
		
			 Andrew was from Landsdowne, Pennsylvania.  "Haines, Alaska (AP) -- Four men, including a 
			strait-jacketed mental patient being flown to Juneau for 
			hospitalization apparently were killed yesterday in the crash of a 
			Coast Guard amphibious plane during a take-off from Haines harbor. 
			Seven men were aboard the plane when it cracked up and four of them 
			were taken from the water within an hour while three still are 
			missing. Injuries received in the crash took the life of AL1 
			Clifford E. Habecker, 34, Pittsford, New York, a coastguardsman. 
			Still missing are Fred Harrington, the mental patient from Haines, 
			and two other coastguardsmen AD1 Andrew P. Turnier, 39, Landsdowne, 
			Pennsylvania, and AL3 Doyle E. Jahn, 21, Roseland, Nebraska. 
			Although search still is continuing for these men virtually no hope 
			is held they will be found alive. Survivors are Lt. Cmdr. Frederick 
			J. Hancox, 34, the pilot, of Reading, Pennsylvania; Lt. William P. 
			Butler, 25, Hyattsville, Maryland, the co-pilot and U.S. deputy 
			marshal Darrell  Miller, Juneau.  Hancox's condition was 
			listed as fair and Butler's as critical. Miller, escorting 
			Harrington to Juneau, suffered only slight injuries. The plane was 
			from the Annette Island Coast Guard station and was taking off when 
			the crackup occurred. It was not determined whether the craft had 
			left the water or struck some submerged object. The survivors were 
			taken from the water by fishermen. The Coast Guard cutter Storis 
			was due to arrive in Juneau this afternoon with the survivors and 
			Habecker's body. Rescuers said the plane fell in Portage bay and 
			remained afloat almost 30 minutes before sinking nose first in 400 
			feet of water. The Coast Guard tender Citrus is remaining at Haines 
			to continue the search for the missing men. The survivors will be 
			taken to St. Anne's hospital in Juneau."  [Source: Daily 
			Sitka Sentinel Alaska 1954-12-15] 
		 
		Wage, Max J. Jr. 
						
							On the night of October 28, 1951, between 1:00 
							and 2:00 A.M., radio contact was lost with CG30315, 
							which was manned by BM3 Robert Sawyer and EN1 Max 
							Wage. The vessel was out on the lake searching for a 
							vessel with three duck hunters that was reported as 
							missing. The vessel was found a half-mile off the 
							Waukegan Harbor entrance. One of the hunters' bodies 
							was recovered, the others were lost. CG30315 was 
							never found.  
						 
				White, Henry J. 
		
			Henry was born December 21, 1914.  He is buried in Fort 
			Hill Cemetery, Hingham, Massachusetts.  Aviation Machinist's 
			Mate First Class White was a veteran of World War II. During the 
			Korean War he was assigned to the U.S. Coast Guard Station, Salem, 
			Massachusetts. On November 13, 1952, he was the crewman of a Coast 
			Guard HTL-1 helicopter on a routine training flight, which crashed 
			in the Beverly, Massachusetts area killing him and the pilot.   
		 
		Whittemore, Dee Amos 
		
			Amos Whittemore was born in 1920, a son of Dee Thomas Whittemore 
			(1890-1951) and Mertie Lee Spafford Whittemore (1893-1985).  He 
			was married to Ruth B. Whittemore (1917-1989).  Amos and Ruth 
			were parents of a daughter Alene (Mrs. William Baxter), who was just 
			one and a half years old whe her father died.  Anos' siblings 
			were Frances Aline Whittemore (1915-1938) and Thomas Lee Whittemore 
			(1927-1941).  There are markers for Dee Amos Whittemore at 
			Beth-el Cemetery, Groton, Connecticut, and the Palmer Cemetery, 
			Palmer, Texas.  "Whittemore, [Guy] Blucker and [Russell] 
			Waddell were part of a seven-person repair crew who had been sent 
			out to fix a failed engine on a launch that was taking crew members 
			to a lightship off Old Saybrook. The article describes how the crew 
			worked until midnight on Sunday, February 15 [1953] making repairs 
			when it was decided that Waddell, Whittemore and Blucker would pilot 
			the launch to Old Saybrook Harbor, about three and a half miles 
			away. But as they were heading back to the harbor, the engine failed 
			again. The three men scrambled onto the stone breakwater off the 
			harbor, which was close but not connected to land. By the time they 
			were spotted, only Waddell was still conscious. Whittemore and 
			Blucker died of exposure to the raging elements at the ages of 32 
			and 22, respectively." [Source: The Day newspaper, August 05, 
			2016, written by Julia Bergman] 
		 
		Woodard, Blaine Edward 
		
			Blaine Woodard was born November 26, 1922, in Stuttgart, Kansas.  
			Woodard was a veteran of World War II and the Korean War.  "Port Angeles (AP) -- A Coast Guard flying boat crashed on a 
			takeoff here Tuesday and four men were lost as it broke apart. The 
			Coast Guard announcement of the crash said the four apparently were 
			carried down with the main part of the plane. Twelve were aboard the 
			PM plane on the takeoff for a flight to Prince Rupert, B.C.
			Two survivors were reported injured seriously; five received minor 
			injuries and one was uninjured. The plane crashed in the Straight of 
			Juan de Fuca at the mouth of Port Angeles Bay. The plane crashed 
			after climbing about 200 feet on the takeoff. It broke up on hitting 
			the water. Some broken parts of the craft were towed ashore later. 
			Names of the missing and injured were not announced immediately. 
			Salvage operations were begun at the scene. The Coast Guard said the 
			plane was an "administrative flight." [Source: The Daily Chronicle 
			Centralia Washington 1952-05-27]  
		 
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