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The Coast Guard Cutter BRAMBLE was commissioned in 1944 at a cost of just over $925,000. Following World War II, the
BRAMBLE participated in “Operation Crossroads,” the first test of an atomic bomb’s effect on surface ships, at Bikini Island. In 1957, along with the cutters
Spar and Storis, she headed for the Northwest Passage, traveling through the Bering Straits and Arctic Ocean. Traveling for 64 days through 4500 miles of partially uncharted waters, the vessels finally reached the Atlantic Ocean. These three surface vessels were the first to circumnavigate the North American Continent, an ambition mariners have had for more than 400 years.
In 1962, the BRAMBLE transferred to Detroit to perform the missions of search and rescue, icebreaking, and law enforcement throughout the Great Lakes, in addition to aids to navigation. In 1975, the
BRAMBLE reported to Port Huron. The cutter's areas of responsibility included eastern Lake Erie, southern Lake Huron and Saginaw Bay, and maintaining 187 buoys, one NOAA weather buoy, and three fog signals. During winter months, its capabilities as an icebreaker enabled her to escort ships through ice and assist ships in distress. The
BRAMBLE was decommissioned in 2003 to be used as a museum.
If you have any questions or comments, please email Site Manager, Mike Popelka at BRAMBLE@phmuseum.org.
All who served on U.S. Coast Guard cutters Storis, BRAMBLE, or
Spar have created a website in preparation for a 50-year reunion www.storisBRAMBLEspar.org
The BRAMBLE can be seen and toured at the Acheson Ventures Port Huron Seaway Terminal. For more information, follow the links on your left.
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