Bollinger Shipyards will produce four Arctic security cutters for the Coast Guard, with delivery expected to begin in 2029.
An estimated $20 billion Coast Guard shipbuilding program that has failed to put a cutter into service amid ballooning costs and lengthy delays must have better oversight, according to a government ...
If you missed touring the U.S. Coast Guard Barque Eagle during L.A. Fleet Week, you’ll get another chance this weekend. The Eagle will be moored in the Port of Los Angeles’ Outer Harbor — at Berth ...
The U.S. Coast Guard's Cutter Eagle made a heavily anticipated return to the seawall of Waterfront Park for Portland's 118th Fleet Week. Fleet Week is part of the Portland Rose Festival and military ...
Mobile-based shipbuilder Austal USA and the U.S. Coast Guard came together Monday to celebrate work on a ship that represents a critical future for both parties – if they can overcome problems so ...
The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Eagle, the only active-duty tall ship in the U.S. military, will return to Portland in late July ...
The newest U.S. Coast Guard vessel in Alaska was commissioned at Base Kodiak last week and is set to officially begin service. The Earl Cunningham is the second of three new cutters to be homeported ...
The U.S. Coast Guard faces increasing challenges operating and maintaining its fleet of 241 cutters—vessels 65 feet or greater in length with accommodations for crew to live on board. Since fiscal ...
The term "cutter" has roots in maritime history, long before the modern Coast Guard even existed. In the 18th century, a cutter was a specific type of small, fast sailing ship, usually with a single ...
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