USCGC Northland (WPG-49) was a United States Coast Guard cruising class of gunboat especially designed for Arctic operations in commission from 1927 to 1938 and from 1939 to 1946. She served during World War II. She was the last cruising cutter built for the Coast Guard equipped with a sailing rig.[4]
After her U.S. Coast Guard career ended, the ship entered Israel service, including duty as the flagship of the Israeli Navy with the name INS Eilat.
Design
Northland was designed to be a replacement for the Arctic cutter Bear and was built at Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Corporation, Newport News, Virginia, launched on 5 February 1927 and commissioned on 7 May 1927.[2] She was 216.6 ft (66.0 m) long, had a maximum displacement of 2,150 tons, and had diesel-electric propulsion driving a single four-blade screw. She was originally fitted with auxiliary sails using yards, but they were removed and her tall masts were trimmed in 1936.[3] She was structurally reinforced to withstand hull pressures of 100 psi (689 kPa) and lined with cork for warmth. One feature used in the construction was the welding of the hull rather than riveting; this was done for strength and was not a common practice in 1926.[2]
Northland departed the United States West Coast in 1938 on her last Arctic cruise, after which she was decommissioned. In June 1939, however, she was recommissioned and transferred to Boston, Massachusetts, to prepare for the second Byrd Antarctic Expedition. With the outbreak of World War II in Europe in September 1939, Northland was removed from participation in the expedition and was assigned a new home port at Alameda, California.[3]
Northland set out on 7 April 1941 on a two-month cruise to assist in the South Greenland Survey Expedition. While conducting this survey she searched for victims of ships sunk in the North Atlantic Ocean during the Battle of the Atlantic. While on one of her many mercy missions, she was involved in a near catastrophe when, while operating only 6 nautical miles (11 km; 6.9 mi) from the scene of a battle on 26–27 May 1941 between the German battleshipBismarck and the British ships that finally sank the German warship, the British mistook Northland for a German ship and very nearly took her under fire.
Northland sighted the German-controlled NorwegiansealerSS Buskø on 12 September 1941 and sent a boarding party to investigate. Northland seized Buskø and took her to MacKenzie Bay on the Greenland coast, where Buskø became the first American naval capture of World War II. It was believed that she had been sending weather reports and information on British shipping to the Germans. A search of Buskø also led to the discovery of a German radio station about 500 miles (800 km) up the Greenland coast from Mackenzie Bay. A night raiding party from Northland detained three Germans at Peter Bregt and captured their equipment, codes, and German plans for other radio stations in the far north.
Northland sighted and attacked a submarine in Davis Strait on 18 June 1942. The presence of oil and bubbles indicated possible hits from the cutter's depth charges, but German records give no indication of a submarine sinking in this area.
By 1943, the Greenland Patrol force had grown to include 37 vessels. In July 1944 Northland discovered a German trawler believed to be the weather shipCoburg — suspected of carrying three separate German expeditions to Greenland — which had been completely gutted by a fire her crew set. A second German weather ship, (Kehdingen), was disposed of in September 1944 after Northland pursued her for 70 nautical miles (130 km; 81 mi) through ice floes off Great Koldewey Island The Germans scuttled their ship, then surrendered and were taken aboard Northland.
World War II ended in Europe in May 1945 and came to a complete end with the cessation of hostilities with Japan in August 1945. Northland received two battle stars for her World War II service. she was returned to the control of the U.S. Department of the Treasury on 1 January 1946 and remained on weather patrol duty until she decommissioned on 27 March 1946.[3]
Although sold for scrap 3 January 1947, Northland was renamed Jewish State, and transported Jewish refugees to Palestine. In 1948 she was renamed INS Eilat and became the flagship of the infant Israeli Navy. Later, she became a training ship. In 1955, the ship was renamed INS Matzpen, serving as a barracks or depothulk. The ship was decommissioned in February 1962 and sold for scrap.[3]
Scheina, Robert L. (1982). U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft of World War II. Naval Institute Press, Annapolis, Maryland. ISBN978-0-87021-717-3.
Walling, Michael G. (2004). Bloodstained Sea: the U.S. Coast Guard in the Battle of the Atlantic, 1941–1944. International Marine/McGraw-Hill, Camden, Maine. ISBN978-0-07-142401-1.
Zuckoff, Mitchell (2013). Frozen in Time. New York, New York: HarperCollins. ISBN978-0-06-213343-4.