History – Milestones of the U.S. Life-Saving Service

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Post Written by William H. Thiesen, Ph.D., Atlantic Area Historian

Life-Saving Station crew

A U.S. Life-Saving Station crew pulls a Monomoy surf boat on it's beach trailer. U.S. Coast Guard photo.

Coast Guard history has been shaped in no small part by the nation’s response to natural and man-made disasters. Nowhere is that lesson clearer than in the evolution of the service’s search and rescue mission. Interestingly, many milestones in the history of the U.S. Life-Saving Service took place in the month of December. This was due in part to the heavy loss of life resulting from severe weather experienced during the autumn and early winter.

Life-Saving Station crew

The crew of the Vermillion Point Life-Saving Station in July 1914. U.S. Coast Guard photo.

A series of marine accidents that befell the East Coast beginning in 1837 highlighted the need for a formal search and rescue organization. That year, the Barque Mexico came ashore near New York Harbor with the loss of over 100 passengers and crew. This tragedy is what led Congress to recognize the need for government assistance to vessels in distress. On December 22, Congress passed legislation assigning naval vessels and, later, Revenue Cutter Service vessels the responsibility for patrolling during severe weather and aiding ships in distress.

Two major maritime disasters in 1854 led Congress to enact one of the most sweeping bills in the history of the Life-Saving Service. In April, more than two hundred lives were lost when the Powhattan wrecked off the New Jersey shore and, in November, nearly 220 lives were lost when the New Era also came ashore. These incidents demonstrated flaws in earlier lifesaving legislation – legislation which provided funding to build and furnish lifesaving stations, but left the facilities manned by disorganized groups of local volunteers that were untrained and unreliable during severe weather.

Life-Saving Service Superintendents

U.S. Life-Saving Service Superintendents around 1898-1901. Photo courtesy of Coast Guard Station Chatham website.

In response to this horrific loss of life, Congress passed what came to be known as the Act of December 15, 1854. This act greatly expanded the ability of the federal government to support lifesaving operations. It allowed for the construction of new stations along the New Jersey and Long Island coasts and a superintendent for both districts to oversee their operation. Furthermore, it provided upgrades necessary to existing stations and their gear. Most importantly, it funded the appointment of a salaried keeper for each station. These paid keepers were responsible for maintaining the stations, their boats and gear; as well as training volunteers. And these keepers led the volunteer crews in carrying out rescue operations and responding to vessels in distress.

The late summer and early winter of 1870 proved a deadly season for ships in U.S. waters. Storms and severe weather swept the Great Lakes and East Coast, blowing ashore numerous ships with the loss of countless lives. These fatalities pointed to the need for further improvements in the government’s effort to prevent loss of life in marine accidents.

Sumner I. Kimball

Sumner I. Kimball

George S. Boutwell, Treasury Secretary under President U.S. Grant, responded in part by appointing a qualified superintendent to oversee a Revenue Marine Division which included steamboat inspection, marine hospitals and lifesaving stations. By December 1870, Secretary Boutwell had in mind a skillful manager and administrator named Sumner Kimball. Appointed in February 1, 1871, Kimball oversaw the expansion of the lifesaving station network from the Long Island and New Jersey to encompassing the Great Lakes, Gulf of Mexico, West Coast and all of the East Coast. His appointment initiated a rapid expansion of the government’s lifesaving service and, in 1878, he oversaw the formal establishment of the U.S. Life-Saving Service as a separate agency within the Treasury Department.

The marine accidents listed above are but a few of many that helped shape the U.S. Life-Saving Service. After its official founding in 1878, the service would continue to experience growing pains, but the shipwrecks and maritime disasters that helped start the service would continue to help shape its development into an effective shore-based search and rescue organization. And, in much the same way, marine accidents would help shape other Coast Guard missions, such as marine safety, marine environmental protection, law enforcement and several others.

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  • Joanie Gentry

    I just finished reading a fascinating book on this period; “They Had To Go Out”, True Stories of America’s Coastal Life-savers from the Pages of “Wreck & Rescue Journal”, with a Foreword by Frederick Stonehouse. I highly recommend it to anyone interested in more detailed information on this period, as well as many riveting stories of individual wrecks and rescue.
    It is Copyrighted 2007 by Avery Color Studios, Inc. and The United States Life-saving Service Heritage Association.

  • Carole Tullos

    Does anyone know if there is still an Auxiliary Coast Guard?

  • LT Connie Braesch

    Yes, Carole, the Coast Guard does have an auxiliary. You can find out more here – .

    LT Connie Braesch
    Public Affairs Officer

  • Joanie Gentry

    Carole, I am currently in the process of becoming a USCG Auxiliary member and I absolutely LOVE it! I highly recommend joining – I can’t imagine a finer group of people to associate with or a more noble service to be a part of.

    Joanie

  • Taylor

    this website has helped be understand how the coast gaurd came bout. i might just join

  • Hope Wright

    I worked as a Docent at the Lifesaving Museum of Virginia, which was an old lifesaving station of the Revenue Cutter Service on the coast of Virginia, and we had some astonishing exhibits demonstrating the bravery of these men who saved so many lives in storms. Now I live in New York and am in the USCG Auxiliary, Sector New York, Division Staff Officer Public Affairs and just love it and admire the men and women I work with! We are all part of “Team Coast Guard”!!!

  • James

    The history of the Coast Guard is fascinating. I wonder if there is any sort of record that might give an idea of how many people have been rescued by the Coast Guard? I suspect it would be more than most people would imagine.

  • LTJG Stephanie Young

    James,

    Thank you for your comment and interest in our missions. You can find a consolidated list of search and rescue statistics from 1964 until present day at the below link.

    Also, another great link to read more about the history of search and rescue with the Coast Guard and its predecessor services is the Coast Guard’s History page.

    Very Respectfully,
    LTJG S. M. Young
    Coast Guard Public Affairs

  • Karen Lowe

    Thank you for an most interesting post with excellent links for further information. Great photos, too!

  • CameoRose

    Ireally want to become one of the people you can trust to save your life when your in the water drowing

  • Parke

    Just to clarify one of your photo descriptions, the photo labeled as the life saving crew in Unalaska, Alaska ia actually the life saving crew of Vermilion Point life saving station located on the south shore of Lake Superior. The keeper in the photo is Captain James A. Carpenter who was stationed there from 1900 thru 1913.

  • LTJG S. M. Young

    Parke,

    Thanks for letting us know about this error. I have checked with the historians and you are correct, the photograph is from Vermillion Point Life-Saving Station. We have made the correction in the above post.

    There is also a bit more information on the Vermillion Point Life-Saving station here.

    Thank you again for pointing out this factual error and for reading the Coast Guard Compass.

    Very Respectfully,
    LTJG S. M. Young
    Coast Guard Public Affairs