![]() USCGC Spencer during WWII
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History | |
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Name: | USCGC Spencer |
Builder: | New York Navy Yard |
Laid down: | 11 September 1935 |
Launched: | 6 January 1937 |
Commissioned: | 1 March 1937 |
Decommissioned: | 23 January 1974 |
Fate: | Sold for scrapping on 8 October 1981 to North American Smelting Co. |
General characteristics | |
Class and type: | Treasury-class cutter |
Displacement: | 2,216 long tons (2,252 t; 2,482 short tons) |
Length: | 327 ft (99.67 m)o/a |
Beam: | 41 ft (12.50 m) |
Draught: | 12.5 ft (3.81 m) |
Propulsion: |
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Speed: | 20.5 knots (38.0 km/h) |
Range: | 12,300 nautical miles (22,780 km) at 11 knots (20.4 km/h) |
Capacity: | 135,180 US gallons (511,712 L) |
Complement: |
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Sensors and processing systems: |
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Armament: |
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Aircraft carried: | 1 Grumman JF-2 Duck or Curtiss SOC-4 |
USCGC Spencer (WPG-36) was a Treasury-class cutter of the United States Coast Guard that served during World War II. She was named for U.S. Treasury Secretary John Canfield Spencer.
Commissioned in 1937, she was first used as a search and rescue unit off Alaska's fishing grounds. When the United States entered World War II the Coast Guard temporarily became part of the United States Navy. Spencer saw service in the Pacific War. During the Battle of Atlantic she acted as a convoy escort, hunting German U-boats, and was responsible for sinking U-175 in 1943.
Spencer was assigned to the US Navy's Seventh Fleet, in the Pacific in late 1944, where she served as a Communications Command Ship. There she was credited with taking part in numerous amphibious assaults including Luzon and Palawan in the Philippines Campaign.
After the war Spencer returned to her Coast Guard duties, serving in the Atlantic Ocean. Here she provided navigational assistance for the fledgling Trans-Atlantic air industry and acted as a search and rescue platform both ships and aeroplanes.
She returned to combat duty off the Vietnam coast in February 1969. For ten months she carried out surveillance to prevent troops and supplies from getting into South Vietnam. She detected over 4,200 suspicious vessels and craft, closely monitored the movement of more than 1,320 of them and boarded 27 vessels to inspect of both their cargo and crew. Spencer detained 52 "enemy suspects" and turned them over to the South Vietnamese military for questioning. She also executed 13 naval gunfire missions in support of operations on land, destroying or damaging over 160 enemy structures, bunkers, and base camps. Spencer left Vietnam at the end of September and returned to the United States.