USCGC Bering Strait (WAVP-382, WHEC-382), 1970 In Subic Bay Vietnam War service. |
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Career (United States) | |
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Name: | USCGC Bering Strait |
Namesake: | The Bering Strait, which connects the Arctic Ocean with the Bering Sea (previous name retained) |
Builder: | Lake Washington Shipyard, Houghton, Washington |
Laid down: | 7 June 1943 |
Launched: | 15 January 1944 |
Completed: | July 1944 |
Acquired: | Loaned by United States Navy to Coast Guard 14 September 1948 Transferred permanently from Navy to Coast Guard 26 September 1966 |
Commissioned: | 14 December 1948 |
Decommissioned: | 1 January 1971[1] |
Reclassified: | High endurance cutter, WHEC-382, 1 May 1966 |
Fate: | Transferred to South Vietnam 1 January 1971 Taken over by the Republic of the Philippines April 1975 Transferred to Philippines on 5 April 1976 Discarded in July 1990, probably sold for scrapping |
Notes: | Served as United States Navy seaplane tender USS Bering Strait (AVP-34) 1944-1946 Served as South Vietnamese patrol vessel RVNS Tran Quang Khai (HQ-02) 1971-1975 Served as Philippine Navy patrol vessel BRP Diego Silang (PF-9) 1975-1985 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Casco-class cutter |
Displacement: | 2,498 tons (full load) in 1964 |
Length: | 311 ft 7 in (94.97 m) overall; 299 ft 11 in (91.41 m) between perpendiculars |
Beam: | 41 ft 0 in (12.50 m) maximum |
Draft: | 13 ft 1 in (3.99 m) maximum in 1964 |
Installed power: | 6,400 bhp (4,800 kW) |
Propulsion: | Fairbanks-Morse geared diesel engines, two shafts; 165,625 US gallons (626,960 L) of fuel |
Speed: | 17.3 knots (32.0 km/h) (maximum sustained in 1966) 10.0 knots (18.5 km/h) (economic in 1966) |
Range: | 10,138 nautical miles (18,776 km) at 17.3 knots (32.0 km/h) in 1966 20,000 nautical miles (37,000 km) at 10.0 knots (18.5 km/h) in 1966 |
Complement: | 151 (10 officers, 3 warrant officers, 138 enlisted personnel) in 1966 |
Sensors and processing systems: |
Radars in 1966 (one each): AN/SPA-4A; AN/SPS-23; ID-445/SPS; IP-307/SPS; IP-452/SPS; Mark 34 M11 ; AN/SPS-29B; AN/UPA-24A; AN/UPX-1A |
Armament: | In 1966: 1 x single 5-inch (127 mm) 38-caliber Mark 12-1 gun mount; Mark 57 M4 director; Mark 4 M4 fire control radar; 2 x .50-caliber (12.7-millimeter machine guns; 1 x Mark 10-1 antisubmarine projector; 2 x Mark 32 Mod 2 torpedo launchers with 3 torpedo tubes each) |
USCGC Bering Strait (WAVP-382), later WHEC-382, was a Casco-class United States Coast Guard cutter in service from 1948 to 1971.
Contents |
Bering Strait began life as the United States Navy Barnegat-class seaplane tender USS Bering Strait (AVP-34). She was laid down on 7 June 1943 by Lake Washington Shipyard at Houghton, Washington, launched on 15 January 1944, and commissioned into the U.S. Navy on 19 July 1944. She served in the Central Pacific during World War II, including in the Okinawa campaign, and on occupation duty in Japan postwar. She was decommissioned on 21 June 1946 and placed in reserve at Alameda, California.
Barnegat-class ships were very reliable and seaworthy and had good habitability, and the Coast Guard viewed them as ideal for ocean station duty, in which they would perform weather reporting and search and rescue tasks, once they were modified by having a balloon shelter added aft and having oceanographic equipment, an oceanographic winch, and a hydrographic winch installed.
The Navy loaned Bering Strait to the United States Coast Guard on 14 September 1948. After undergoing conversion for Coast Guard use, she was commissioned into the Coast Guard on 14 December 1948 as USCGC Bering Strait (WAVP-382).
Bering Strait was stationed at Seattle, Washington, beginning on 14 December 1948. Her primary duty during her Coast Guard service was to serve on ocean stations in the Pacific Ocean to gather meteorological data. While on duty in one of these stations, she was required to patrol a 210-square-mile (544-square-kilometer) area for three weeks at a time, leaving the area only when physically relieved by another Coast Guard cutter or in the case of a dire emergency. While on station, she acted as an aircraft check point at the point of no return, a relay point for messages from ships and aircraft, as a source of the latest weather information for passing aircraft, as a floating oceanographic laboratory, and as a search-and-rescue ship for downed aircraft and vessels in distress, and engaged in law enforcement operations. During her Coast Guard career she also visited places as diverse as Adak, Alaska; Yokosuka, Japan; the French Frigate Shoals, and Laysan Island.
In 1954 she was transferred to Honolulu, Hawaii, which remained her home port for the rest of her Coast Guard career, and continued her ocean station duties in the Pacific from there.
In January 1956, Bering Strait evacuated an injured seaman in need of medical assistance from the merchant ship Madaket.
On 13 February 1960, used one ton of concrete patch material that had been air-dropped to her to assist the Japanese training ship Toyama Maru in making emergency repairs off Palmyra Island.
Bering Strait conducted oceanographic experiments on Ocean Station Victor in December 1964 and January 1965. On 13 January 1965, she relieved Coast Guard cutter USCGC Matagorda (WAVP-373), which had been damaged while standing by the disabled Liberian merchant ship Saint Helena, which was in danger of breaking in two 1,000 nautical miles (1,900 km) northwest of Midway Atoll, and herself stood by Saint Helena until a commercial tug arrived to assist the merchant ship.
Bering Strait was reclassified as a high endurance cutter and redesignated WHEC-382 on 1 May 1966. She again conducted oceanographic experiments at Ocean Station Victor from 19 June 1966 to 10 July 1966. Her loan period from the Navy came to an end on 26 September 1966, when she was transferred permanently from the Navy to the Coast Guard.
In 1967, Bering Strait was assigned to Coast Guard Squadron Three, which was designated Task Unit 70.8.6. The squadron was activated at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on 24 April 1967 when its commander, Captain John E. Day, hoisted his pennant aboard his flagship, Coast Guard cutter USCGC Gresham (WHEC-387).
Coast Guard Squadron Three was tasked to operate in conjunction with U.S. Navy forces in Operation Market Time, the interdiction of communist coastal arms and munitions traffic along the coastline of Vietnam during the Vietnam War. The squadron's other Vietnam War duties included fire support for ground forces, resupplying Coast Guard and Navy patrol boats, and search-and-rescue operations. Serving in the squadron with Gresham and Bering Strait were cutters USCGC Yakutat (WHEC-382), USCGC Barataria (WHEC-381), and USCGC Half Moon (WHEC-378); like Bering Strait and Gresham, they all were former Navy Barnegat-class ships. They departed Pearl Harbor on 26 April 1967 and reported to Commander, United States Seventh Fleet, for Market Time duty on 4 May 1967. They were joined by Navy radar picket destroyer escorts (DERs) of Escort Squadrons 5 and 7.
The ten Market Time ships arrived at Subic Bay in the Philippines on 10 May 1967. The five Coast Guard cutters and five Navy destroyer escorts continuously manned four Market Time stations off Vietnam, while only Navy warships served on two Taiwan patrol stations. One ship rotated duty as the station ship in Hong Kong. Bering Strait remained in the Western Pacific until 18 February 1968, then returned to the United States.
Bering Strait returned to her conventional Coast Guard duties in 1968, still operating from Honolulu. From 24 February 1970 to 1 March 1970 she fought fire on the Panamanian merchant ship Grand Ocean in the mid-Pacific.
Bering Strait returned to Coast Guard Squadron Three for service in the Vietnam War on 17 May 1970. Her second Vietnam tour of duty ended on 31 December 1970.
The Coast Guard decommissioned Bering Strait in South Vietnam on 1 January 1971, the day after her second Vietnam War tour ended.
Bering Strait was transferred to South Vietnam on 1 January 1971 and commissioned into the Republic of Vietnam Navy as patrol vessel RVNS Tran Quang Khai (HQ-02). When South Vietnam collapsed at the end of the Vietnam War in April 1975, Tran Quang Khai fled to Subic Bay in the Philippines.
On 22 May 1975 and 23 May 1975, a U.S. Coast Guard team inspected Tran Quang Khai and several other former Casco-class cutters which had been transferred to South Vietnam in 1971 and 1972 and, like Tran Quang Khai , fled to the Philippines in April 1975. One of the inspectors noted: "These vessels brought in several hundred refugees and are generally rat-infested. They are in a filthy, deplorable condition. Below decks generally would compare with a garbage scow."[2]
After Tran Quang Khai was cleaned, repaired, and made ready to return to service, the U.S. Navy transferred her to the Republic of the Philippines, with the formal transfer occurring on 5 April 1976.
Commissioned into the Philippine Navy, she served as patrol vessel BRP Diego Silang (PF-9) until decommissioned in June 1985. She was discarded in July 1990 and probably scrapped.
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