1950s U.S. NAVY ICEBREAKER DOCUMENTARY FILM 76934
This
1952 U.S. Navy film entitled "
Icebreaker" shows a U.S. Navy ship the
USS Burton Island traveling from
San Diego to
Kodiak, Alaska,
St. Lawrence and
King Island in the
Bering Sea. USS Burton Island (AG-88) was a
United States Navy Wind-class icebreaker that was later re-commissioned in the
United States Coast Guard as the
USCGC Burton Island (WAGB-283). She was named after an island near the coast of
Delaware, and carried a helicopter on board.
Burton Island's mission in the film was supposedly to survey ice conditions in the Bering Sea, but the ship was also part of an effort by the U.S. Navy to establish a presence in the arctic during the
Cold War against the
Soviet Union.
A
Regulus missile submarine, likely the
USS Tunny but possibly USS Cusk, is seen at the 2:45 mark with a hangar on the deck.
Burton Island was one of the icebreakers designed by
Lieutenant commander Edward Thiele and
Gibbs & Cox of
New York, who modeled them after plans for
European icebreakers he obtained before the start of
World War II. She was the sixth of seven completed ships of the
Wind-class of icebreakers operated by the United States Coast Guard. Her keel was laid on 15
March 1946 at
Western Pipe and Steel Company shipyards in
San Pedro, California, she was launched on 30
April 1946, and commissioned on
28 December 1946.
Her hull was of unprecedented strength and structural integrity, with a relatively short length in proportion to the great power developed, a cut away forefoot, rounded bottom, and fore, aft and side heeling tanks.
Diesel electric machinery was chosen for its controllability and resistance to damage. Burton Island was built during peacetime, so she had a much lighter armament than her war-built sisters, one 5 in (130 mm) 38 cal. deck gun and three quad-mounted
Bofors 40 mm anti-aircraft autocannons when in
Navy service, and unarmed for the
Coast Guard.
On
17 January 1947, Burton Island, loaded with supplies, steamed from San Diego to
Ross Sea,
Antarctica where she met with units of TF 68 on the first Antarctica
Development project,
Operation Highjump. After returning from Antarctica, Burton Island departed 25 July 1947 for the
Point Barrow expedition to
Alaska. From
April 1948 to December
1956, Burton Island participated in 19 Arctic and
Alaskan cruises, including
Operation Windmill. During Operation Windmill Burton Island was the flagship of
CDR Gerald L. Ketchum,
USN commander of
Task Force 39. Duties on the cruises varied including, supply activities, helicopter reconnaissance of ice flows, scientific surveys, underwater demolition surveys, and convoy exercises. In
March 1949, Burton Island was redesignated AGB-1. One prominent excursion was with the
USS Seadragon (
SSN-584) and
USS Skate (
SSN-578) in 1962, in which torpedoes were tested underneath the polar ice pack after the two subs had rendezvoused at the
North Pole.
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This film is part of the
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