USCGC Woodrush


USCGS Woodrush (WLB-407)
History
United States
NameWoodrush.
NamesakeWoodrush
BuilderZenith Dredge Company, Duluth, Minnesota.
Cost$926,156.00 USD.
Laid down4 February 1944.
Launched28 April 1944.
Commissioned22 September 1944.
Decommissioned2 March 2001, sold to Republic of Ghana.
In service1944.
Out of service2001.
RefitJuly 1978 to March 1980 at CGY, Curtis Bay, Maryland.
HomeportDuluth, Minnesota (1944). Sitka, Alaska (1980).
Nickname(s)Woodie
FateSold to Ghana Navy.
Ghana
NameAnzone
Commissioned2001
StatusActive
General characteristics
Class and typeIris or C class 180-foot buoy tender.
TypeCoast Guard, Auxiliary, General, Lighthouse (tender) WAGL. Coast Guard, Large, Buoy (tender) WLB.
Length180 ft (55 m)
Beam37 ft (11 m)
Draft12 ft (3.7 m) 6 inches (150 mm).
Ice classNotched forefoot, ice-belt at waterline, reinforced bow and stern.
Propulsion2 Cooper-Bessemer Diesel Engines; 1,200 SHP; single screw (1944).
Speed13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph).
Range8,000 nmi (15,000 km; 9,200 mi) at 13 knots (24 km/h; 15 mph).
EnduranceMax: 13.5 knots, 10,000-mile range (1962) Economic: 10.5 knots, 13,000-mile range (1962).
CapacityDiesel Oil: 43,000 gallons. Potable Water: 12,500 gallons.
Complement47 (1962).
Sensors and
processing systems
Electronics: Radar SL-1. Sonar QCU.
ArmamentWartime: 20mm guns, 1 × 3 inch gun, depth charges, M2 Browning machine guns and small arms. Peacetime: M2 Browning machine guns, M60 machine guns, and small arms.
NotesShip USCG callsign was NODZ. Ship was equipped with a 20-ton electric boom.

USCGC Woodrush (WLB-407) was a buoy tender that performed general aids-to-navigation (ATON), search and rescue (SAR), and icebreaking duties for the United States Coast Guard (USCG) from 1944 to 2001 from home ports of Duluth, Minnesota and Sitka, Alaska. She responded from Duluth at full speed through a gale and high seas to the scene of the SS Edmund Fitzgerald sinking in 1975. In 1980, she took part in a rescue rated in the top 10 USCG rescues when she helped to save the passengers and crew of the cruise ship Prinsendam after it caught fire in position 57°38"N 140° 25"W[1] then while being towed sank off Graham Island, British Columbia. She was one of the first vessels to respond to the Exxon Valdez oil spill in 1989. She was decommissioned on 2 March 2001 and sold to the Republic of Ghana to serve in the Ghana Navy.

  1. ^ Ring Jr., David J. (4 October 1980). "Distress Log "Williamsburgh" of SOS from ms Prinsendam". Website of David J. Ring Jr., SOS of ms Prinsendam. David J. Ring, Jr. Retrieved 21 July 2016.