2512. Noble, Dennis. RESCUED BY THE UNITED STATES COAST GUARD – Great Acts of Heroism since 1878. Annapolis. 2005
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2512. Noble, Dennis. RESCUED BY THE UNITED STATES COAST GUARD – Great Acts of Heroism since 1878. Annapolis. 2005
2512. Noble, Dennis. RESCUED BY THE UNITED STATES COAST GUARD – Great Acts of Heroism since 1878. Annapolis. 2005. 328 p. Although the U.S. Coast Guard enjoys a reputation as the best maritime rescue service in the world, details of its heroic history are not well known. Dennis Noble has corrected this oversight with a book that highlights dramatic rescues over the past century carried out from shore-based Coast Guard stations and aircraft and patrol boats. He writes about a day shortly before Christmas in 1885 when Keeper Benjamin Dailey and his U.S. Life-Saving Service crew rowed five miles in seas almost higher than the length of their boat to pick up shipwrecked sailors and then bring them safely to shore. He also describes a 1918 rescue when a USCG boat crew pulled through burning gas and oil to extricate sailors from a sinking tanker. Among the most memorable is Paul A. Langlois, who during the darkness of a gale swept night, maneuvered his helicopter around rocky pinnacles thrusting higher into the air then the helicopter, to rescue two people from a sailboat. But as Noble makes clear, not every rescue is successful and attempts that ended in deaths are included as well. Maritime rescue specialists and historians will be drawn to the author’s overview of the change in equipment and the array of aircraft used by Coast Guard lifesavers. (M). Published at $32.95. Our price $29.95.