A longtime resident of the Coast Guard base at Port Angeles left the harbor on May 5 but parts of it will return.
The Coast Guard decommissioned Coast Guard cutter Cuttyhunk (WPB 1322) Thursday, May 5, during a ceremony at Air Station Port Angeles that was presided over by Capt. Mark McDonnell, 13th Coast Guard District chief of response, the Coast Guard said in a press release.
“It was like saying goodbye to an old friend,” Jim Stoffer said.
He had served as the cutter’s commanding officer from 2002-2005.
“It was a lot of good memories and a lot of good work,” said the Sequim resident, the cutter’s eighth commanding officer out of 16, and one of four of its commanding officers who retired in the area.
“It’s no longer a cutter.”
The Cuttyhunk was to leave the Port Angeles Harbor at 5 p.m. Friday, Stoffer said earlier in the day, flying its largest flag on its way to Ketchikan, Alaska.
The cutter’s engines and generator will be put into the Anacapa, another 110-foot Island-class patrol boat, which will then come to Port Angeles for a couple of years, Stoffer said.
The remainder of the Cuttyhunk will be scrapped.
The Cuttyhunk spent its entire 34-year career in Port Angeles, Stoffer said.
It’s rare for a ship to stay in one place like that, he said.
“For one to be here for 34 years is a pretty big deal,” he commented.
The Cuttyhunk was one of the Coast Guard’s 37 remaining 110-foot Island-class patrol boats; the fleet — including the Anacapa — is being replaced by the larger cutters.
The Cuttyhunk assisted in one of the largest maritime drug seizures in the Pacific Northwest. It was near Cape Flattery in December 1997. More than 3,500 pounds of marijuana, estimated at a street value of $15 million, was recovered from the OK Jedi, a 60-foot sailboat with three people onboard.
The cutter was nicknamed “The Pest of the West,” according to the Coast Guard, which said the cutter’s crews completed over 1,000 operations ranging from law enforcement boardings to search-and-rescue responses throughout the region.
“We did a lot of enforcement, a lot of search and rescue. Boaters would say, here comes that pest again,” Stoffer said.
Commissioned on Oct. 5, 1988, the Cuttyhunk was the 22nd of 49 110-foot patrol boats built in support of the Coast Guard’s maritime homeland security, migrant and drug interdiction, fisheries enforcement, and search-and-rescue missions.
“It has been an honor and privilege to serve alongside the final crew of Coast Guard Cutter Cuttyhunk,” said Chief Warrant Officer Daniel Garver, commanding officer, according to the press release.
“During my time onboard, there have been many engineering challenges on our aging 110-foot ship, and I have witnessed the resiliency of our crew as they spent time away from families in selfless service to our country,” he continued. “I am grateful for the crew’s dedication which echoes the hard work put forth by our predecessors during the cutter’s 34 years of service.”
The Cuttyhunk was built by Bollinger Shipyards in Lockport, La. It was named after Cuttyhunk Island, the site of the first English settlement in New England, located off the southern coast of Massachusetts. The Cuttyhunk assisted U.S. Naval Base Kitsap Bangor in several submarine escorts before Coast Guard Maritime Force Protection Unit Bangor was established to ensure the safe transport of Ship Submersible Ballistic Submarines.