The Smilax (USCG)
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By U.S. Coast Guard News 2019-10-01 21:10:57
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[By Walter T. Ham IV]
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When the U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Smilax was commissioned in 1944, allied forces had landed at Normandy five months earlier and had another 10 months of fighting ahead before victory in Europe and the Pacific would bring World War II to an end.
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With nearly seven and a half decades of water in her wake, Smilax is the oldest U.S. Coast Guard cutter in service today and she turns 75 on November 1.
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The septuagenarian inland construction tender was enthroned as the Coast Guard’s “Queen of the Fleet” in 2011 when the Ketchikan, Alaska-based medium endurance cutter Acushnet was decommissioned after 67 years of service.
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To mark her special status, Smilax displays a gold hull number instead of a white hull number like the rest of the Aids to Navigation (ATON) or “Black Hull” cutters. Smilax crewmembers wear a gold 315 insignia on their nametags.
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The “Queen of the Fleet” program started in the 1970s, and four cutters have sailed with the gold hull number since then: USCGC Fir, USCGC Storis, USCGC Acushnet and now Smilax.
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Built at the Dubuque Boat & Boiler Works in Dubuque, Iowa, for $194,238, Smilax has previously been homeported in Fort Pierce, Florida; New Smyrna, Florida; and Brunswick, Georgia.
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Along with maintaining buoys and beacons, the “Black Hull” cutter has proven her multi-mission mettle during her long and storied history, from search and rescue missions to a unique salvage operation. While previously homeported in Florida, the crew of the Smilax came to the aid of mariners on stranded and inoperable fishing vessels and yachts.
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Now homeported in Atlantic Beach, N.C., Smilax tends the beacons and buoys that mark the waterways around the scenic shores of the Outer Banks. They service Aids to Navigation from the Alligator River and Kitty Hawk Bay to Calabash Creek and the North Carolina/South Carolina state line.
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“The crew of the Smilax maintains 1,300 fixed aids and 25 floating aids that guide mariners around the shallows and the shifting shoals of North Carolina,” said Chief Warrant Officer Jacob M. Carawan, the commanding officer of Smilax. “We maintain buoys in Oregon Inlet, Hatteras Inlet, Ocracoke Inlet and Beaufort Inlet and inlets, shoals and channels in between.”
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Smilax pushes a 70-foot barge with a crane that can lift up to 8.2 tons. She can also get underway without the barge and the crew can use her buoy deck crane to lift aids that weigh up to five tons.
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With a cutter draft of 5 feet and barge draft of 2.6 feet, Smilax is able to maintain Aids to Navigation in shallow waterways that fluctuate from 24-foot-deep water in the Pamlico Sound to shoals that can be walked on in other areas.
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“The area of operations that we work is unique because most of the eastern North Carolina waterways are shallow and have perpetually shifting shoals,” said Carawan, who grew up in Swan Quarter, N.C., across the Pamlico Sound from Ocracoke Island in the Outer Banks. “Even the Coast Pilot (the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s navigation guide) doesn’t recommend transiting the Outer Banks inlets without local knowledge.”
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USCGC Smilax crewmembers pose with cannons they helped to salvage from the Queen Anne’s Revenge (North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources)
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In 2013, Smilax crewmembers worked with divers from the North Carolina Department of Natural and Cultural Resources to salvage five cannons and multiple barrel hoops from the Queen Anne’s Revenge, the flagship for Edward Teach, the legendary pirate captain better known as Blackbeard. The ship ran aground in Beaufort Inlet, North Carolina, in 1718, and was discovered in 1996.
Weighing almost a ton each, the cannons that struck fear in the hearts of 18th century seafarers spent nearly 300 years on the seafloor before the Smilax crew hoisted them on to the cutter’s buoy deck. Today, the cannons are stored with other pirate artifacts from the legendary ship in conservation tanks at the Queen Anne’s Revenge Labon East Carolina University in Greenville, N.C.
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Not only is the Smilax the oldest cutter in the U.S. Coast Guard but she is also part of the service’s oldest fleet. The 35 cutters from the inland fleet have averaged 55 years of service. The inland fleet is made up of Western Rivers tenders, inland buoy tenders and inland construction tenders that maintain Aids to Navigation on waterways across the nation.
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According to Carawan, operating and maintaining a Coast Guard cutter that is more than half a century older than most of its crewmembers is a relentless but rewarding mission.
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“Even the smallest repair can turn into a project,” said Carawan. “The facts are that she isn’t an easy vessel and this isn’t an easy area of operations. You have to work to be on this crew – and it helps if you enjoy working.”
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