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USCGC Eagle

barque built in 1936


Country of Registry
United States
Service Entry
1936
Manufacturer
Blohm+Voss
Operator
United States Coast Guard
Vessel Type
training vessel: , three-masted barque, Gorch Fock-class training ship
Ship Type
training vessel
Call Sign
NRCB
IMO Number
6109973
Aliases
SSS Horst Wessel and IMO 6109973

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The USCGC Eagle (WIX-327), also known as Barque Eagle, is a 295-foot (90-meter) tall ship serving as a training cutter for future officers of the United States Coast Guard. Built in 1936 as the German sail training vessel Horst Wessel, she is a large, steel-hulled barque of the Gorch Fock class, larger than her sister ship Gorch Fock, with a displacement of approximately 1,824 tons. Her hull is constructed from riveted Krupp steel, with two full-length steel decks and a platform deck below. The ship features a raised forecastle and quarterdeck made of steel overlaid with teak, as well as weather decks similarly finished in teak. Eagle’s sail rig comprises three masts with over 6 miles (9.7 km) of running rigging and approximately 22,280 square feet (2,070 m²) of sail area. The fore- and main masts are fully rigged with square sails, while the mizzen mast carries fore-and-aft sails, providing both power and maneuverability. The yards atop the fore- and main masts are moveable, lowered when not sailing to lower her center of gravity, and she can house the topgallant masts to clear low bridges. Her auxiliary propulsion has evolved from an original 750-horsepower diesel to a modern 1,200-horsepower MTU engine, allowing speeds up to 17 knots. Constructed by Blohm+Voss in Hamburg, Germany, she was commissioned as Horst Wessel in September 1936, serving as the flagship of the Kriegsmarine sail training fleet during the pre-WWII years. She participated in training cruises, including voyages to the Caribbean, and was visited by Adolf Hitler during her early years. During WWII, she was fitted with anti-aircraft armament and served various training roles in the Baltic. She was damaged by a mine in 1944 and later surrendered to British forces in 1945. In 1946, she was awarded to the United States as war reparation, commissioned into the U.S. Coast Guard as USCGC Eagle, and has since become a symbol of maritime tradition and officer training. Her crew of officers and enlisted personnel, along with cadets and officer candidates, conduct annual training cruises, exercises, and public relations events, including participation in tall ship races and international events. Eagle's role in training, diplomacy, and maritime heritage makes her one of the few active commissioned sailing vessels in the U.S. military, embodying over 80 years of history and tradition.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

42 ship citations (8 free) in 27 resources

Eagle (bark) Subscribe to view
Eagle (USCG) Subscribe to view
Eagle (WIX 327) Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark historical references Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark in photo list Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark mentioned Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark model by Preston mentioned Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark model kit Subscribe to view
Eagle, ex-Horst Wessel, USCG training bark query on figurehead Subscribe to view
Eagle, USCG Subscribe to view
Eagle, USCG. Bark Subscribe to view
Eagle, USCGC
Book Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia Illustration
Author Lincoln P. Paine
Published Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
ISBN 0585109486, 9780585109480, 0395715563, 9780395715567
Pages 131, 156, 380
Eagle, USCGC (clipper ship) Subscribe to view
Eagle, WIX-327 (Steel Bark) Subscribe to view
Eagle: William G. Muller aboard USCG Barque EAGLE at sea in May 1998 Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel
Book An Encyclopedia of Naval History
Author Anthony Bruce, and William Cogar
Published Checkmark Books, New York,
ISBN 0816026971, 9780816026975
Pages see Eagle, Bark
Horst Wessel Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel (1936; German)
Book Merchant Sail
Author William Armstrong Fairburn
Published Fairburn Marine Educational Foundation, Inc., Center Lovell, Maine,
Page IV: 2717
Horst Wessel
Book Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia
Author Lincoln P. Paine
Published Houghton Mifflin, Boston,
ISBN 0585109486, 9780585109480, 0395715563, 9780395715567
Pages 131, 156, 380
Horst Wessel
Book Naval Warfare: An International Encyclopedia
Author Spencer C. Tucker, ed.
Published ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, CA,
ISBN 1576072193, 9781576072196, 1576077403, 9781576077405
Page 346
Horst Wessel (1936) (Steel Bark) Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel (3m barque; launched 1936) Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel (bark) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Horst Wessel (barque; built 1936; Germany) Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel (Ger.) Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel (Gorch Fock-class Barque; Germany; launched in 1936) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Horst Wessel (United State ship) Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel, German training bark: historical references Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel, German training bark: in photo list Subscribe to view
Horst Wessel, German training bark: plans source Subscribe to view