USS Glacier (AGB-4)

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Glacier approaching the harbor at Winter Quarters Bay, McMurdo Station, Antarctica.
USCGC Glacier approaching the harbor at Winter Quarters Bay, McMurdo Station, Antarctica.
Career
Name: USS Glacier (AGB-4)
Namesake: Glacier Bay, Alaska
Builder: Ingalls Shipbuilding, Pascagoula, Mississippi
Laid down: 3 August 1953
Launched: 27 August 1954
Commissioned: 27 May 1955
Decommissioned: 30 June 1966
Struck: 30 June 1966
Identification: IMO number: 6123672
Motto: Follow Me!
Nickname: "Mighty G"
Fate: Transferred to the United States Coast Guard, 30 June 1966
Career 100x35px
Name: USCGC Glacier (WAGB-4)
Acquired: 30 June 1966
Decommissioned: 7 July 1987
Status: Laid up in the Naval Reserve Fleet, Suisun Bay, California
General characteristics
Type: Icebreaker
Displacement: 8,449 long tons (8,585 t) full load
Length: 309 ft 6 in (94.34 m)
Beam: 74 ft (23 m)
Draft: 29 ft (8.8 m)
Propulsion: Diesel-Electric
10 × Fairbanks-Morse diesels
2 × Westinghouse electric motors
21,000 hp (15,700 kW)
2 shafts
Speed: 17.6 knots (32.6 km/h)
Range: 29,200 nmi (54,080 km) at 12 knots (22 km/h)
Complement: 241
Armament: • 1 × twin 5 in (130 mm) guns
• 3 × twin 3 in (76 mm) guns
• 4 × 20 mm guns

USS Glacier (AGB-4) (later USCGC Glacier (WAGB-4)) is a history-making icebreaker which served in the first fifteen Operation Deep Freeze expeditions. Glacier was first to make its way through the frozen Bellingshausen Sea, and much of the topography in the area is named for members of its crew. When built, Glacier had the largest capacity single armature DC motors ever installed on a ship.[1]

Named for Glacier Bay, Alaska, the fourth USS Glacier (AGB-4) was launched on 27 August 1954 by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp., Pascagoula, Mississippi, sponsored by Mrs. Roscoe F. Good; and commissioned on 27 May 1955, Comdr. E .H. Mayer in command.

Service history

Antarctic operations, 1955–1960

Glacier's shakedown cruise and maiden voyage were combined in her important role in "Operation Deep Freeze I", as flagship for Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd. Her first encounter with the ice came in December 1955, when after breaking through the Ross Ice Pack, she carved out an ice harbor in Kainan Bay to permit the offloading of cargo ships at the site for Little America V. Glacier subsequently continued 400 nautical miles (740 km) west to break ice into an offloading site for the establishment of the Naval Air Facility at McMurdo Sound. In March 1956 an exploratory voyage around the Weddell Sea was completed; the icebreaker surveyed Vincennes Bay in Wilkes Land and made the first landing in history on the Princess Martha and Princess Astrid coasts. Glacier returned to Boston, her home port, 6 May 1956 after these accomplishments.

The ship returned to McMurdo Sound on 28 October 1956 for "Deep Freeze II", having made the earliest seasonal penetration in history. After supply deliveries there and at Little America, she led seven other Navy ships from New Zealand through the ice pack to the two Antarctic base sites. In January 1957 she led two cargo ships into Vincennes Bay where the last of the seven American bases for the International Geophysical Year was to be constructed. Glacier departed Wilkes Station on 17 February for the United States via Melbourne with the termination of the operation.

During "Deep Freeze III" and the IGY of 1957-58, Glacier participated as a launching platform for extensive "rockoon" tests during which balloon-lifted rockets gained information useful to the "Explorer" space satellite program. In addition, the icebreaker continued her usual ice clearing and escort duties and conducted oceanographic studies in the Ross Sea.

The summer of 1958 found Glacier escorting ships participating in "Operation Sunec" for the resupply of North Polar radar and weather stations. By November of that year, however, she was again near the South Pole at McMurdo Sound, and after supplying the base steamed to Little America V to begin deactivation of that station. Subsequently, while operating in the Terra Nova Bay on the coast of Victoria Land, she discovered two previously unknown islands and what was possibly the largest Emperor Penguin rookery in the Antarctic, home of over 50,000 of the large birds. Glacier came to the assistance of the Belgian expedition ship Polarhav near Breid Bay, halfway around the Antarctic continent from the Ross Sea area.

Fifth of the Navy's Antarctic support operations, "Deep Freeze 60" (for the season 1959-60) took the ship once more to McMurdo and on a tour of exploration into the Bellingshausen Sea. Oceanographic and cartographic studies were discontinued in late February 1960 when Glacier steamed to assist Argentine icebreaker General San Martin and Danish cargo ship Kista Dan. With these missions accomplished, Glacier sailed for Boston via Rio de Janeiro, and while at that port provided emergency assistance to flooded areas in Brazil, finally sailing for Boston 17 April 1960.

Antarctic operations, 1960–1966

The icebreaker departed Boston on 13 October 1960 on her sixth Antarctic voyage and reached Lyttelton, New Zealand on 21 November to unload cargo. Most of December was spent in breaking a 21-nautical-mile (39 km) channel through McMurdo Sound to open the way for the thin-hulled supply ships. Following a return voyage to Wellington for repairs and to receive the Navy Unit Commendation for her Bellingshausen achievement of the preceding expedition, she again entered the ice-choked Amundsen and Bellingshausen Seas on a voyage of exploration and discovery. Oceanographic work continued until March 1961 when she sailed for Boston, arriving on 27 April.

Underway again on 8 October 1961 for "Deep Freeze 62", she loaded cargo at Lyttelton, New Zealand in early November and encountered the Ross Sea ice pack on 13 November, reaching McMurdo Sound by the end of the month. After repairs at Wellington Glacier returned to McMurdo and pressed on to the site of Little America V for cartographic studies. She returned to New Zealand on 6 March 1962 and subsequently put in at Boston on 5 May after steaming 36,000 nautical miles (66,700 km).

The busy ship stood out of Boston on 17 September for "Deep Freeze 63", entering the pack ice on 6 November and reaching the edge of the fast bay ice of McMurdo Sound a week later. The thickness of the ice necessitated repairs at Wellington, by 31 December 1962 Glacier was again churning through McMurdo Sound en route to McMurdo Station. She continued operations off McMurdo Station through 1965. One of her many duties was to keep the channel open for supply ships. On 29 December 1965 Atka (AGB-3) and Burton Island (AGB-1) assisted her in pushing an iceberg out of the shipping lane. After further participation in her 11th "Operation Deep Freeze", Glacier returned to her home port, Boston, Massachusetts, in the late spring of 1966. On 1 July 1966 Glacier was struck from the Navy List after transfer to the Coast Guard on 30 June.

Coast Guard operations, 1966–1987

Prior to her transfer to the Coast Guard, Glacier had her smaller armament removed. In 1969 the 5-inch guns were also removed. During 1972, she and her helicopters were painted red for improved Arctic visibility.

Decommissioning

Following 29 Antarctic and 10 Arctic deployments, Glacier was decommissioned in 1987. She is currently under the control of the Maritime Administration, located in the Naval Reserve Fleet, Suisun Bay, on the Sacramento River, California. The Glacier Society [1] saved the Glacier from the scrapyard in 2000 and plans to convert it into a hospital/research vessel.

References

  1. Janes Fighting Ships 1979-80, Captain John E Moore (ed), Janes Yearbooks, London, 1979. ISBN 0-354-00587-1

External links

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