Subj : Marines To : GEORGE POPE From : Mike Powell Date : Sat Apr 16 2022 10:21:00 > > Back in the time he is referring to, the Coast Guard also used to escort > > marine traffic beyond the US Coast. As Joe pointed out, that changed > > sometime during or after WWII and may have only been a war-time thing. > > Early in that war, we lost some Coast Guard vessels in the North Atlantic > > to enemy fire (U-boats, I think). > Something like this happened in Canada, too -- the Navy did the full escorting > of suypply vessels, but our domestic coat guard expanded their purviewfarther > way from land than they'd normally be -- more as an early waerning system than > s an actual fighting unit. I don't recall reading of any that were sunk -- j > t RCNavy ships, by, likewise, uboats. I expanded my knowledge of the US Coast Guard, and also the Canadian armed forces, while touring the Great Lakes. I have forgotten much (I need to go back and read my notes), but that is where I learned that our Coast Guard was not always restricted to domestic operations in the past. There are a few memorials/historical markers dedicated to Coast Guard units lost during the early days of WWII on the lakes. > War just plain sucks, even when necessary (as a few were) Yes indeed it does. Most serious conflict, whether it be large wars or small, interpersonal conflicts, plain suck. Mike * SLMR 2.1a * Error #0099: Dead mouse in hard drive. --- SBBSecho 3.14-Linux * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (1:2320/105) .