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  • '''Hooah''' ({{IPA-en|ˈhuːɑː|pron}}) is a [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] [[battle cry]] used<ref>[http://www.cavhooah.com/hooah.htm ...ce Combat Control Team|Combat Controllers]] or "[[Hooyah]]" among [[United States Air Force Pararescue|Pararescue]]<ref>http://usmilitary.about.com/od/joints
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  • ...[[United States Navy]], which served briefly in the [[United States Coast Guard]]. She was named for Pharmacist's Mate Third Class Kenneth W. Durant. ...war in the Pacific, her stay there was brief and she returned to the east coast, arriving at New York 26 September. On 22 October she reported to Jacksonvi
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  • |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} ...escort|Edsall-class]] [[destroyer escort]] in the service of the [[United States Navy]]. She was named in honor of Lieutenant [[Joseph W. Finch, Jr.]], USNR
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  • ...ort|''Edsall''-class destroyer escort]], was the only ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named for Aviation Machinist Mate First Class [[William Henry She was transferred to the Coast Guard in June 1952. Upon her return to the Navy in 1954 ''Lansing'' was converted
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  • ...oyer escort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for Ensign [[Herbert Hugo Menges]] (a ...oast of [[Algiers]] en route to the [[East Coast of the United States|east coast of the U.S.]], was attacked by 30 [[Nazi Germany|German]] [[torpedo bomber]
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  • ...E-319)''' was an {{sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort}} built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for [[Ensign (rank)|Ensign]] [[Robert ...States)|Lieutenant Commander]] Kenneth C. Phillips, [[United States Coast Guard|USCG]], in command.
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  • ...arted with [[Task Force]] 64 escorting a convoy bound back to the [[United States]]. ...d waters off the coast of Africa for a week before returning to the United States with Convoy GUS-24.
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  • ...ter their patrol bomber splashed, and while in [[Florida]] waters as plane guard for carriers conducting operations to qualify aviators, rescued a downed pi ...months, then sailed from [[Kwajalein]] early in January 1946 for the east coast.
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  • ...r escort made four more [[transatlantic]] voyages to the [[North African]] coast as Allied forces pushed up the [[Italy|Italian]] peninsula and began their ...[Argentia, Newfoundland]], 3 April to serve as [[convoy]] screen and plane guard for escort carrier [[USS Mission Bay (CVE-59)]]. After repairs at [[New Yor
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  • ...p honours=5 [[battle stars]] plus the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...ly with five [[battle stars]] and the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]].
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  • Manned by the [[U.S. Coast Guard]], ''Howard D. Crow'' conducted [[Shakedown (testing)|shakedown]] training ..., in 1952, the ship took part in fleet [[antisubmarine]] exercises off the coast. For the next 6 years ''Howard D. Crow'' followed this pattern of operatio
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  • ...down]], ''Sellstrom'' departed [[Bermuda]] on 3 December 1943 for the east coast, arriving at [[Charleston Navy Yard]] on the 6th. On 13 December, the escor ...April, ''Sellstrom'' joined convoy GUS-36 for the trip back to the United States. As [[flagship]] of Escort Division 23, ''Sellstrom'' guided the New York s
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  • Manned entirely by a [[U.S. Coast Guard]] crew, ''Harveson'' completed shakedown out of [[Bermuda]]. Off Bermuda sh ...[[Hiro]], and [[Nagoya]]. She departed [[Yokohama, Japan]], for the United States 4 November and arrived [[Jacksonville, Florida]], in December for duty with
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  • ...aration for the assaults on southern France. After returning to the United States 16 July, the escort ship made one more cruise to Naples during the summer. ...1945, ''Kretchmer'' sailed as escort to five convoys from [[New York]] to United Kingdom ports. After victory in Europe, she prepared for Pacific Fleet duty
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  • ==Coast Guard Service== ...continuous-going sea service until 25 May 1954. Forster (given the Coast Guard hull number WDE-434) served on ocean station duty out of [[Honolulu]]. Thi
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  • ...her convoy came under tenacious enemy air attack off the [[North African]] coast. Simultaneously, two high speed wakes made directly for the [[starboard]] s ...s until 5 March 1945 when she joined TG 22.14, an exclusively [[U.S. Coast Guard]] “[[Hunter-killer armored-vehicle team|hunter-killer]]” group, with th
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  • ...il, ''Newell'' steamed to [[Florida]], where she acted as escort and plane guard for a carrier training pilots. During this period, the ship recovered six d == Temporary Duty with the Coast Guard ==
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  • ...d with three battle stars and then entered into service for the U.S. Coast Guard before final decommissioning. * [[List of United States Navy ships]]
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  • |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} ...vy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war, she was borrowed by the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] and also served as a [[radar picket]] ship on the [[Distant Early Warning
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  • ...Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. Post-war, she was loaned to the [[U.S. Coast Guard]], and also reclassified as a [[radar picket]] ship. ...final Mediterranean cruise 31 August, ''Koiner'' commenced escort duty for United Kingdom-bound ships. From 20 September 1944 to 1 May 1945, the destroyer es
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  • ...oy Orestus Hale, Jr.]] who earned the [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]] for his valiant actions during the [[Battle o ...ed five transatlantic convoys from the [[United States]] to ports in the [[United Kingdom]] and [[France]].
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  • ...and [[convoys]]. Post-war, she performed other tasks with the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] and with the U.S. Navy as a [[radar picket]] ship. ...down (testing)|shakedown]] off [[Bermuda]], ''Ramsden'', manned by a Coast Guard crew and assigned to [[CortDiv]] 23, steamed to [[New York]], whence she sa
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  • ...oyd Jones Mills]] who was awarded the [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]] posthumously for his brave actions in the [[A ...dak, Alaska]], arriving 8 July. She served there as weather station, plane guard, and escort between [[Alaska]]n ports until sailing 20 August for occupatio
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  • ...oyer escort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She served in the [[Atlantic Ocean]] and th ...d States)|Lieutenant Commander]] E. A. Coffin of the [[United States Coast Guard]] in command.
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  • ...]. From January 1945 to late May she escorted convoys between the [[United States]], [[France]], and [[Great Britain]]. That April, ''Richey'' rescued 32 men ...950 she entered the [[Atlantic Reserve Fleet]]. Loaned to the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 1 April 1952, she was subsequently returned and entered the [[Pacific Res
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  • ...ys]]. Post-war she continued an active life, serving with the [[U.S. Coast Guard]], and then being assigned as a [[radar picket]] ship. ...[[San Pedro, California]]. She put out to sea from San Pedro for the east coast 11 September, and on 22 April 1946, was decommissioned and placed in reserv
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  • ...E-397)''' was an {{sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort}} built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She served in the [[Atlantic Ocean]] and th ...returned to the [[United States]] with Convoy GUS (Gibraltar to the United States) 33 and arrived at [[New York City]] on 3 April.
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  • ..., ''Vance'' became the flagship for Escort Division (CortDiv) 45—a Coast Guard-manned unit—and convoyed a group of oil tankers from Norfolk, Va., to Por ...o participate in anything but training operations and returned to the east coast for decommissioning. In mid-October 1945, she underwent a pre-deactivation
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  • ...s destroyer escort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...l Harbor]]. Arriving 9 August, she conducted exercises and served as plane guard for {{USS|Corregidor|CVE-58}} during pilot qualification landings.
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  • ...stroyer escort|''Edsall'' class]] [[destroyer escort]], the first [[United States Navy]] ship so named. This ship was named for Chief Water Tender [[Oscar V. ...September 1943, Lieutenant Commander Richard F. Rea, [[United States Coast Guard|USCG]], in command.
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  • ...n command; and reported to the [[United States Fleet Forces Command|United States Atlantic Fleet]]. ...and a half of convoy escort operations from [[New York]] to ports of the [[United Kingdom]], guarding convoys whose ships brought troops and mountains of equ
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  • ...[[Casablanca]] 7 January. The ship got underway the next day for the east coast, arriving [[New York]] 24 January. ...d trips escorting convoys from New York or [[Boston, Massachusetts]], to [[United Kingdom]] ports.
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  • ...ched July 15, 1943; and commissioned on October 29, 1943 manned by a Coast Guard crew under the command of Lieutenant Commander Oscar C. Rohnke, USCG. On 1 ...ce was engaged in escorting convoys of 60 to 80 merchant ships from United States ports to the Mediterranean Theatre.
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  • ...1944, the hunter-killer group, aided by a [[Canadian]] [[corvette]] and [[United Kingdom|British]] aircraft, sank [[U-575]] on the 23rd of March. With some ...oy escort duty from [[Saipan]] to [[Okinawa]]. She patrolled the [[China]] coast and then streamed her homeward-bound [[Pennant (commissioning)|pennant]], r
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  • ...[Bizerte]], [[Tunisia]]. She then escorted a return convoy to the [[United States]], subsequently escorting two more convoys to Bizerte. ...Harbor]] 27 July. On 31 August she got underway for [[Eniwetok]] as plane guard and escort for {{USS|Kula Gulf|CVE-108}}. She subsequently put into [[Ulith
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  • |Operators={{navy|United States}}<br>{{navy|United States|coast guard}}<br>{{navy|South Vietnam}}<br>{{navy|Philippines}}<br>{{navy|Tunisia}}<br> ...class in which all the ships originally ordered were completed as [[United States Navy]] Destroyer Escorts.<ref>U.S. Destroyers, an illustrated design histor
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  • {{otheruses4|the United States Navy ship|other meanings|Chincoteague}} |Ship caption=USS ''Chincoteague'' (AVP-24) off the [[United States West Coast]] in mid-1945 after an [[wikt:overhaul|overhaul]].
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  • |Ship country=United States ...o [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 5 January 1949<br/>Permanently transferred to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Transferred to [[South Vietnam]] 15 June 1972<br/>Cap
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  • ...U.S. Coast Guard]] September 14, 1948<br/>Permanently transferred to Coast Guard September 26, 1966<br/>Transferred to [[South Vietnam]] January 1, 1971<br/ |Ship notes=Served as U.S. Coast Guard [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|cutter]] [[USCGC Bering Strait (WAVP-382)|USCGC ''Bering Strait'' (W
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  • |Ship country=United States ...tates Coast Guard]] 16 September 1948<br/>Permanently transferred to Coast Guard 26 September 1966
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  • |Ship namesake=[[Cook Inlet]], on the coast of [[Alaska]] north of [[Kodiak]] ...[U.S. Coast Guard]] 20 September 1948<br/>Transferred permanently to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Transferred to [[South Vietnam]] 27 December 1971<br/
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  • ...GP-8)]] 1944-1946<br/>Served as [[U.S. Coast Guard]] [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|cutter]] [[USCGC McCulloch (WAVP-386)|USCGC ''McCulloch'' (WAVP-386) ...rchives/09/43/4356.htm) agree with ''Jane{{'}}s''. The United States Coast Guard Historian{{'}}s Office (see http://www.uscg.mil/history/webcutters/McCulloc
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Transferred to [[United States Coast Guard]] 27 May 1946
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  • |Ship namesake=[[Yakutat Bay]] on the southern coast of [[Alaska]] ...d to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 31 August 1948; permanently transferred to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Transferred to [[South Vietnam]] 10 January 1971<br/>
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • |Ship namesake=[[Casco Bay]] on the coast of [[Maine]] |Ship fate=Loaned to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 19 April 1949<br/>Returned to [[U.S. Navy]] March 1969<br/>Sunk as target
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  • ...etime between the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships and her [[Ship decommissioni |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship namesake=[[Humboldt Bay]], on the northern coast of [[California]], some 250 miles north of [[San Francisco, California]] ...[[U.S. Coast Guard]], 24 January 1949<br/>Transferred permanently to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Transferred to [[U.S. Navy]] 30 September 1969<br/>So
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • ...1949 and the U.S. Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship namesake=[[Coos Bay]] on the coast of [[Oregon]]
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  • ...me before the Coast Guard{{'}}s 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship namesake=[[Rockaway Inlet]], on the southwestern coast of [[Long Island]], [[New York]], at the entrance to [[New York Bay]] ...[[U.S. Coast Guard]] 24 December 1948<br/>Transferred permanently to Coast Guard 26 September 1966
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  • ...ween 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship namesake=[[Half Moon Bay, California|Half Moon Bay]], on the coast of [[California]] south of [[San Francisco, California|San Francisco]]
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  • |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} |Ship namesake=[[Unimak Bay]] on the coast of [[Unimak Island]] in [[Alaska]] (previous name retained)
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  • ...rd]] 14 September 1948<br/>Permanently transferred from U.S. Navy to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Sunk as [[artificial reef]] after decommissioning in |Ship notes=Served as [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|Coast Guard cutter]] [[USCGC Unimak (WAVP-379)|USCGC ''Unimak'' (WAVP-379)]], later WHE
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  • ...1949 and the Coast Guard{{'s}} 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships.. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship namesake=[[Barataria Bay]], also "Barrataria Bay", on the coast of [[Louisiana]]
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  • ...] in 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship fate=Transferred to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 10 July 1946<br/>Transferred to U.S. Navy and sunk as target 1968 |Ship notes=Served as U.S. [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|Coast Guard cutter]] [[USCGC Dexter (WAVP-385)|USCGC ''Dexter'' (WAGC-18, WAVP-385, WHE
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  • ...ometime after the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Transferred to [[United States Coast Guard]] 27 May 1946
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • ...ween 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • ...P-35)]] 1944-1946<br/>Served as [[U.S. Coast Guard]] [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|cutter]] [[USCGC Castle Rock (WAVP-383)|USCGC ''Castle Rock'' (WAVP- ...tter|''Casco''-class]] [[high endurance cutter]]s received from the United States after the [[Vietnam War]], two of which were cannibalized for spare parts w
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  • ...ween 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing strip"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship fate=Turned over to the [[United States Coast Guard]] |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • |Ship fate=transferred to U.S. Coast Guard, 2 April 1926<ref name=DANFS /> |Ship acquired=returned from U.S. Coast Guard, 27 April 1934<ref name=DANFS />
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  • |Ship fate=transferred to U.S. Coast Guard, 7 June 1924<ref name=DANFS /> |Ship acquired=returned from U.S. Coast Guard, 30 June 1933<ref name=USCG />
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Transferred to Coast Guard 25 March 1926. Transferred back to USN 30 June 1933 and sold for scrapping
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  • '''USS ''Big Horn'' (AO-45/IX-207)''' was a [[Q-ship]] of the [[United States Navy]] named for the [[Bighorn River]] of [[Wyoming]] and [[Montana]]. ...such a position that no action could be taken without damaging the United States troopship ''Mexico'' or the Egyptian ship ''Raz El Farog''. At 16:27, looko
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  • |Ship in service=2 June 1944<br/> for the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] ...ficers, 8 CPOs, 164 enlisted men, 1 Public Health Service doctor; US Coast Guard Passengers 25 officers, 315 men
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  • |Ship fate= Transferred to the Coast Guard, 28 June 1946, commissioned CGC ''Magnolia'' 19 October 1947, decommissione ...''Barricade'' (ACM-3)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]].
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  • |Ship fate= Transferred to the Coast Guard, 18 June 1946; decommissioned on 15 September 1969 ...SS ''Bastion'' (ACM-6)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]].
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  • |Ship builder=United Engineering Co., [[San Francisco]], [[California]] |Ship fate= Loaned to the [[United States Coast Guard]], 30 September 1980
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  • |Ship flag={{USN flag|2004}} {{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} |Ship fate=On loan to the United States Coast Guard
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  • |Ship namesake= an inlet of [[Long Island Sound]] on the coast of [[Long Island, New York]] |Ship fate= sold by the [[U.S. Coast Guard]], 16 October 1946
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] ([[United States Navy|Navy]]) |Ship fate=Transferred to <br/>[[United States Coast Guard]]
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  • |Ship namesake= A point and island off the west coast of [[Cape Cod]] in [[Nantucket]] Shoals ...nd to act as escort vessel when required. She was manned by a [[U.S. Coast Guard]] crew and was eventually transferred to that agency as '''USCGC ''Monomoy'
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  • |Ship fate= Transferred to the Coast Guard, 28 June 1946, commissioned 1 February 1947 as USCGC ''Heather'' [http://ww ...''Obstructor'' (ACM-7)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]].
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  • === Transferred to the Coast Guard === ..., 30 June, the miscellaneous auxiliary was transferred to the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] and served with the North Atlantic Weather Patrol into the fall of 1942.
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] |Ship fate=Transferred to the [[United States Coast Guard]]
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  • |Ship caption=''Escape'' in Coast Guard colors ...ted at Norfolk for salvage and towing services to the Fleet along the east coast, and from 1954, spent alternate years in the [[Caribbean]], based on [[San
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} ...(PF-16)''', a {{sclass|Tacoma|frigate}}, is the only ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named for [[Bangor, Maine]].
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  • ...es Coast Guard|Coast Guard]] on the suitability of these vessels for Coast Guard service noted: ...ssel can be operated at higher speed without storm damage than other Coast Guard vessels."
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  • The '''''Barnegat'' class''' was a large class of [[United States Navy]] small [[seaplane tender]]s built during [[World War II]]. Thirty wer Before World War II, the United States Navy foresaw a need for a large force of seaplane tenders in the event of a
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} {{USN flag|1967}}
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  • ...Point'' (PCH-1)''' was a ''High Point''-class patrol craft of the [[United States Navy]], and was launched August 17, 1962 by [[J. M. Martinac Shipbuilding C ...n March 1975 from the US Navy and transferred to the [[United States Coast Guard]] on April 4, 1975 and commissioned as USCGC ''High Point'' (WMEH-1). She w
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  • |Ship country=United States ...transferred to the Atlantic Fleet in August. After operating off the east coast into 1971, ''Tucumcari'' was slated to deploy to northern [[Europe]] and to
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} ...k numbers) of this caliber were used by the [[U.S. Navy]] and [[U.S. Coast Guard]] from 1915<ref name="dg"/> through the 1990s on a variety of combatant and
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= US Navy, US Coast Guard, Royal Navy, Danish Navy, Italian Navy, Japanese Navy, South Vietnamese Nav
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= US Navy, US Coast Guard, Royal Navy
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  • ...3 has been adopted by the [[United States Navy]] and [[United States Coast Guard]] as the [[Mk 110 57 mm gun]].
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  • ...ti-aircraft gunnery school on the range at [[Stiffkey]] on the [[Norfolk]] coast delivered a workable solution, a simple trapeze-like arrangement that moved The [[United States Navy]]'s [[Bureau of Ordnance]] purchased a twin-mount air-cooled example d
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  • ...oat howitzers were manned by Company I of the [[71st Regiment, NY National Guard]]. The unit had trained on boat howitzers while deployed at Washington D.C ...s expeditions. The unit participated in 16 raids along the North Carolina coast employing their boat howitzers. The New York Marine Artillery was issued t
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  • | origin = [[United States]] [[Image:LAV25-1.jpg|thumb|right|The United States Marine Corps' LAV-25.]]
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} ...e War]] <br>[[Falklands War]] <br>[[South African Border War]]<br>[[United States invasion of Panama]] <br>[[Gulf War]] <br>[[Somali Civil War]] <br>[[Operat
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  • ...ent and proposed mounting for the weapon include the [[United States Coast Guard]]'s [[National Security Cutter]], the upcoming [[Zumwalt class]] destroyer, [[Category:Naval guns of the United States]]
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  • ...ted States Navy|U.S. Navy]]{{Fact|date=October 2008}} and the [[U.S. Coast Guard]].<ref name=uscg> | publisher =US Coast Guard
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  • [[Category:United States Coast Guard weapons]]
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  • | origin = United States ...G Maritime Security Cutter, Large|''Legend'']] class [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|cutters]] and the navies of 23 allied nations.{{Citation needed|date
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  • ...switched off before the run was complete, and the computer was allowed to coast down. Easy manual cranking of the time line brought the dynamic test to its ....pdf | format = pdf | accessdate = 2006-08-26}}</ref> This gave the United States Navy a major advantage in World War II, as the Japanese did not develop rad
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  • ...hedrine fights the ensuing drowsiness. Commonly referred to as the [[Coast Guard cocktail]], ephedrine may still be available for prescription for this purp ...[[methcathinone]]. Ephedrine is listed as a Table I precursor under the [[United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotrop
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  • ...p]]s. Colza is extensively cultivated in [[France]], [[Belgium]], [[United States of America]], the [[Netherlands]] and [[Germany]]. In France, especially, t ...CG/USQUE_Early_Lights |title=USQUE AD MARE - Early Lights - Canadian Coast Guard |publisher=Ccg-gcc.gc.ca |date=2008-03-31 |accessdate=2010-03-14}}</ref> th
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  • ...NIOSH Commercial Fishing in Alaska |accessdate=2007-10-13|publisher=United States National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health}}</ref> ...escue is still dependent on the expertly trained personnel of the US Coast Guard [[Search and Rescue]] operations, and such efforts can be hindered by the h
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  • ...it (economics)|profit]]. The ''[[Organized Crime Control Act]]'' ([[United States|U.S.]], 1970) defines organized crime as "The unlawful activities of [...] ...ed in [[Sicily]], known to its members as [[Cosa Nostra]]. In the [[United States]], "the Mafia" generally refers to the [[American Mafia|Italian American Ma
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  • ...y ride |first=Nikkii |last= Joyce |date= 3 August 2009 |newspaper=Sunshine Coast Daily |url=http://www.sunshinecoastdaily.com.au/story/2009/08/03/police-bl ...club's colors.{{Citation needed|date=August 2009}} A member must closely guard their colors, for allowing one's colors to fall into the hands of an outsid
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  • |opponents = [[United States]], [[Israel]], [[United Nations]], [[United Kingdom]], Afghan National Army, Iraqi Armed Forces, Coalition Forces/Tribe ...</ref><br />Designated as [[Terrorism Act 2000|Proscribed Group]] by the [[United Kingdom|UK]] [[Home Office]]<ref name=UKTerrorList>{{Cite web|url=http://ww
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  • ...weak its border security policy to address the threats posed to the United States through the form of human terrorism or the smuggling and detonation of a [[ ...tioniss>.</ref>, which means they were legally allowed to be in the United States. If nineteen men who were committed to causing harm to Americans were capa
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  • ...iveNews.aspx?Id=1394366&SM=1</ref> the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[United States]]. Other nations who have participated include [[Australia]], [[Italy]], [[ |publisher=[[United States Navy]]
    15 KB (2,036 words) - 17:28, 27 September 2010
  • ...sets from the [[United States Navy]] and [[United States Coast Guard|Coast Guard]], the [[Royal Australian Navy]] and the [[Royal Navy]], working alongside [[Category:Counter-terrorism policy of the United States]]
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  • ...October 17, 2006. Drafted in the wake of the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]'s decision on ''[[Hamdan v. Rumsfeld]]'',<ref name="nytimes ...alien unlawful enemy combatants engaged in hostilities against the United States for violations of the law of war and other offenses triable by military com
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  • |caption=[[United States Marine Corps|U.S. Marines]] during Operation El Dorado. **{{flagicon|US}} [[United States]]
    32 KB (4,484 words) - 17:31, 27 September 2010
  • ...mage:Flag of the United States.svg|20px]] [[Cedar Rapids, Iowa]], [[United States|USA]] | revenue = $4.47 billion [[United States dollar|USD]] ({{profit}} $594M [[Fiscal year|FY]] 2009)
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