Historic Documents & Official Publications (Database)

Documents, including PDF photo collections, reproductions and scans of drawings, illustrations, and images, from the archives of the U.S. Coast Guard and its five predecessor agencies: the Revenue Cutter Service, the Life-Saving Service, the Lighthouse Service, the Bureau of Navigation, and the Steamboat Inspection Service from the Coast Guard Archives and Special Collections, Coast Guard, and National Archives.

NOTE: Documents provided are in the public domain.

U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office
2703 Martin Luther King, Jr., Ave, SE
Washington, DC 20593-7031


U.S. Coast Guard Museum
Coast Guard Academy - Waesche Hall
15 Mohegan Ave
New London, CT 06320-8100

Contacting us:  U.S.C.G. Historian's Office

Images & Photographs

1935 Article "Escanaba, Coast Guard Cutter."

An article from The Yachtsman Magazine, June, 1935 by D. E. "Gim" Hobleman entitled "Escanaba, Coast Guard Cutter," pp. 7-8, 16. The following article appeared in the June, 1935 issue of the magazine The Yachtsman (pages 7-8, 16). The author was granted permission to visit and examine the newly commissioned cutter Escanaba, a 165-foot "A" Class cutter, while she was tied up in Chicago prior to her sailing on an icebreaking mission to the Straits of Mackinac. This was an annual spring cruise undertaken to open the Great Lakes to merchant traffic. Mr. Hobelman interviewed the officers and crew of Escanaba and was granted a tour of the entire ship, which he describes in great detail. It is included on our website for its historical interest; read on and find out what a First Class Cruising Cutter in the mid-1930's was all about!

VIRIN: 1935_ESCANABA_ARTICLE.PDF
Photo by: "The Yachtsman" Magazine & USCG Historian's Office

Photo Details

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