Rum Patrol Explained

Rum Patrol
Objective:Enforce prohibition in United States waters
Executed:1920 - 1933
Executed By: United States

The Rum Patrol was an operation of the United States Coast Guard to interdict liquor smuggling vessels, known as "rum runners" in order to enforce prohibition in American waters. On 18 December 1917, the 18th Amendment to the Constitution was submitted to the states by Congress. On 16 January 1919, the amendment was ratified and the Liquor Prohibition Amendment, which prohibited the manufacture, sale, transportation, importation, or exportation of intoxicating liquors, came into effect on 16 January 1920.

History

Origin

The establishment of prohibition gave rise to smuggling of illicit liquor into the United States overland from Canada and from ships moored just outside the three-mile limit along the Atlantic seaboard. By 1921, "Rum Row" existed off New York City and the New Jersey shore as well as near Boston, and the Chesapeake and Delaware bays. The Florida coast and New Orleans were also points of entry used by rum runners. Smaller boats were used to transfer the cargos from the mother ships on Rum Row under cover of darkness to the shore. In February 1922, the Commandant of the Coast Guard, Rear Admiral William E. Reynolds, informed the Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, Roy Asa Haynes that although the Coast Guard was tasked with the enforcement of prohibition, Congress had not included any funding for the additional maintenance and operation of vessels. Since there was no funding, enforcement by Coast Guard vessels was in connection with other enforcement duties. The first important seizure was the British-registered schooner Henry L. Marshall by in 1921.[1]

Funding problems

Since the Coast Guard was tasked with prohibiting the importation of liquor through U.S. waters and it didn't have the resources to do so, Commandant Reynolds submitted a plan to Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon that called for 20 new cutters, 200 coastal patrol cutters and 90 fast picket boats. He also asked for 20 million dollars to fund new construction and an additional 3,500 personnel to man the new vessels.[2]

Congress acts

To deal with this problem, twenty-five destroyers were transferred by the United States Navy to the Treasury Department for service with the Coast Guard. Some began to show signs of wear and tear after the often arduous pace of operations on the Rum Patrol and required replacement. Accordingly, six of the newer flush deck destroyers were transferred to the Treasury Department in 1930 - 1932.

It was thought that adapting these older vessels for Coast Guard service would be less costly than building new ships. In the end, however, the rehabilitation of the vessels was costly because of the exceedingly poor condition of many of these war-weary ships. In many instances, it took nearly a year to bring the vessels up to seaworthiness. Additionally, these were by far the largest and most sophisticated vessels ever operated by the service, and trained personnel were nearly nonexistent. As a result, Congress authorized hundreds of new enlistees. These inexperienced men generally made up the destroyer crews.

Some of the destroyers were pre-World War I 742-ton "flivvers", capable of over 25lk=inNaNlk=in – an advantage in the rum-chasing business. They were, however, easily outmaneuvered by smaller vessels. The destroyers’ mission, therefore, was to picket the larger mother ships and prevent them from off-loading their cargo onto the smaller, speedier contact boats that ran the liquor into shore.

On 20 February 1933, the 21st Amendment to the Constitution, the repeal of Amendment 18, was proposed by Congress and ratification was completed on 5 December 1933. This eliminated prohibition, and therefore the need for the Rum Patrol. The remaining destroyers were returned to the Navy and sold for scrap.

Ships of the patrol

Coast Guard designationNavy designationShip ClassUSCG AcquiredUSCG CommissioningUSCG Decommissioning
CG-01USCGD Cassin (CG-1)[3] DD-043
CG-02USCGD Conyngham (CG-2)DD-058
CG-03USCGD Cummings (CG-3)DD-044
CG-04USCGD Downes (CG-4)DD-045
CG-05USCGD Ericsson (CG-5)DD-056
CG-06USCGD McDougal (CG-6)DD-054
CG-07USCGD Porter (CG-7)DD-059
CG-08USCGD Ammen (CG-8)[4] DD-035
CG-09USCGD Beale (CG-9)DD-040
CG-10USCGD Burrows (CG-10)DD-029
CG-11USCGD Fanning (CG-11)DD-037
CG-12USCGD Henley (CG-12)DD-039
CG-13USCGD Jouett (CG-13)DD-041
CG-14USCGD McCall (CG-14)DD-028
CG-15USCGD Monaghan (CG-15)DD-032
CG-15USCGD Upshur (CG-15)[5] DD-193
CG-16USCGD Patterson (CG-16)DD-036
CG-16USCGD Badger (CG-16)DD-196
CG-17USCGD Paulding (CG-17)DD-022
CG-17USCGD Herndon (CG-17)(CG-16)DD-198
CG-18USCGD Roe (CG-18)DD-024
CG-18USCGD Hunt (CG-18)(CG-16)DD-194
CG-19USCGD Terry (CG-19)DD-025
CG-19USCGD Wood (CG-19)(CG-16)DD-195
CG-20USCGD Trippe (CG-20)DD-033
CG-20USCGD Semmes (CG-20)(CG-16)DD-189
CG-21USCGD Davis (CG-21)DD-065
CG-22USCGD Shaw (CG-22)DD-068
CG-23USCGD Tucker (CG-23)DD-057
CG-24USCGD Wainwright (CG-24)DD-062
CG-25USCGD Wilkes (CG-25)DD-067

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Johnson, p 80
  2. Thiessen, p 44
  3. Canney, p 93
  4. Canney, p 92
  5. Canney, p 106