- USS Manasquan (AG-36)
"Manasquan" (AG‑36) was built in 1918 as "Lake Catherine" by
Toledo Shipbuilding Co. ,Toledo, Ohio ; taken over by theU.S. Shipping Board atNew York City 4 October 1918 ; and commissioned the same day for duty with NOTS, Lt. Comdr. Richard F. McNabb, USNRF, in command.After steaming to
Norfolk and back to load cargo, "Lake Catherine" departedNew York in convoy 19 October and steamed toRochefort ,France , where she arrived 10 November. Assigned to coaling duty, she operated between British and French ports until24 February 1919 when she arrivedRotterdam, Holland . Two days later she began service for theU.S. Food Administration . While en route toDanzig ,Germany , she rescued nine survivors 3 March after the German trawler "Berthold" struck a mine and sank."Lake Catherine" continued food relief runs until 5 July when she departed
Barry, Wales , for theUnited States . Loaded with general military cargo, she arrivedNew York 8 August. She decommissioned 15 August and was returned to theUSSB the same day.Subsequently, "Lake Catherine" resumed merchant service. She was renamed "Oscar J. Lingeman" in 1926 and "Aetna" in 1937. "Aetna" was purchased by the
Maritime Commission from her owner. Mid‑West Transportation Co., Inc., Bay City, Mich., in 1941; transferred to the Navy 14 October 1941; renamed "Manasquan" (AG‑36)15 October 1941 ; converted for use as a weather patrol ship byBethlehem Steel Co. East Boston , Mass.; and commissioned under loan to theU.S. Coast Guard 2 April 1942 ."Manasquan" served the important but little praised weather patrol stations in the stormy,
U-boat ‑infested North Atlantic. Equipped with special meteorological instruments, she plied her assigned patrol areas out ofBoston , andArgentia, Newfoundland . Braving dangers of the sea and submarines, she operated in isolation for weeks at a time to collect valuable weather data used in forecasting weather for the Atlantic area, north Africa, and Axis‑occupied. Western Europe. Realizing the strategic importance of data collected by weather patrol ships such as "Manasquan", the chief of theU.S. Weather Bureau wrote duringWorld War II : “...the weather reports from these vessels were among the most vital meteorological information for war operations of theUnited Nations ....The difficulty and hardships of service on these station vessels was fully recognized but the value of their reports more than compensated for those difficulties, and the men so serving were performing duties of high priority in the war effort.”In addition, "Manasquan" took part in the initial at‑sea testing of
LORAN (long‑range navigation) system, which became of inestimable value both to naval and merchant ships and to military and commercial aircraft. As a highly accurate and reliable electronics position finding system, loran emerged to become a revolutionary navigation aid in all kinds of weather and at great distances from land.As a result of experiments conducted by
MIT ’s Radiation Laboratory, by the Bell Telephone Laboratory, and by theNational Defense Research Committee during the final months of American neutrality in 1941, the impetus for the nurturement, and full development occurred in the hectic months afterPearl Harbor . Under Rear Adm. Julius A. Furer, coordinator of research and development for theSecretary of the Navy , the Navy provided “active and aggressive sponsorship” for the project. Capt. Lawrence M. Harding, USCG, who later coined the wordloran , played an important role in the research aspects of its development.By June 1942 the system was ready for environmental testing. From mid‑June to mid‑July "Manasquan", equipped with special receiving instruments, successfully carried out the first shipboard tests which proved the feasibility and practicality of the system. As a result of these tests, construction and completion of the important seven‑unit northwest Atlantic chain, which extended from
Delaware toGreenland , was completed in less than a year."Manasquan" continued weather patrol duty during the remainder of
World War II . The Navy transferred her to theU.S. Coast Guard 22 October 1943 , and she continued to serve as "Manasquan" (WAG‑273). Her name was struck from theNavy List 30 October 1943 . Following the end of the war, she was sold11 March 1946 .
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