Sand Pounders: An Interpretation of the History of the U.S. Life-Saving Service, Based on Its Annual Reports for the Years 1870 Through 1914U.S. Coast Guard Historian's Office, U.S. Coast Guard, Headquarters, 1998 - Lifesaving stations - 193 pages In January 1915, two Treasury Department agencies merged to form the United States Coast Guard. One of these agencies, the United States Life-Saving Service (USLSS) had been created in August 1848 for the purpose of rescuing people who were ship-wrecked on the coast of New Jersey. That federal organization, manned primarily by volunteers, was reorganized in 1870 to included paid surfmen who patrolled our coastline during stormy seasons. Eventually the scope of the USLSS included the nation's Atlantic, Great Lakes, Gulf of Mexico, Pacific, and Alaskan coats. For 44 years, the surfmen of the USLSS dutifully pounded their feet along mostly sandy pathways in all kinds of weather, occasionally discovering a vessel in distress and, then, acting to initiate the rescue operations that would demand their fullest participation. And, sometimes, even their sacrifice. These surfmen have been called "sandpounders." It was a title that they could wear proudly. This is the story of that organization as gleaned from the official Annual Reports of the USLSS and the correspondence files of the National Archives. |
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Annual Report assistant inspector beach breeches buoy Cape Disappointment Capt Captain Coast Guard coastal Congress construction Date Lives lost disasters District Superintendent documented vessels duty efforts equipment fiscal Harbor Huron inches Inlet involved Jersey Jersey coast keeper Kimball Kimball's Kraljevica Lake launched Lieut Lieutenant McLellan Life-Saving Service Life-Saving Stations lifeboat Lives lost Place Long Island loss Lyle gun Massachusetts ment Michigan mile North miles East miles South miles SW mortar motor life boats North Carolina North Manitou Island Ocean City operating season patrol Peaked Hill Bars persons on board Point Revenue Cutter Service Revenue Marine Officers Rig Date Lives salvage Saving Service Schooner Secretary ship Shoal shore shot line Station 1 mile Station 1/2 Station Unnamed stations authorized Steamer storm surf surfboat surfmen tion Treasury U. S. Life-Saving Service undocumented craft Unnamed Fishboat Unnamed Rowboat Unnamed Skiff Vessel Rig Date Virginia wrecking companies wreckmasters yards York


