Coast Guard Day

Luigi59

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August 4 is celebrated as Coast Guard Day to honor the establishment on that day in 1790 of the Revenue Cutter Service, forebear of today's Coast Guard, by the Treasury Department. On that date, Congress, guided by Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, authorized the building of a fleet of ten cutters, whose responsibility would be enforcement of the first tariff laws enacted by Congress under the Constitution.

The Coast Guard has been continuously at sea since its inception, although the name Coast Guard didn't come about until 1915 when the Revenue Cutter Service was merged with the Lifesaving Service. The Lighthouse Service joined the Coast Guard in 1939, followed in 1946 by the Bureau of Navigation and Steamboat Inspection. In 1967, after 177 years in the Treasury Department, the Coast Guard was transferred to the newly formed Department of Transportation, and in 2003 to the Department of Homeland Security.

Coast Guard Day is primarily an internal activity for active duty Coast Guard personnel, civilian members, reservists, retirees, auxiliarists, and dependents, but it does have a significant share of interest outside the Service. Grand Haven, Michigan, also known as Coast Guard City, USA, annually sponsors the Coast Guard Festival around August 4. Typically it is the largest community celebration of a branch of the Armed Forces in the nation.
 
Coast Guard Day is all around fun. When it falls on a week day, we generally cut a cake. Generally on the following weekend, there's a picnic.

220 years of continuous service. For those wondering, the birthday is traced back to 1790 because the Revenue Cutter Service is really the basis of the "modern" Coast Guard. Yes, the U.S. Lighthouse Service was founded in 1789, but the Coast Guard's roots are the USRCS, and the USLHS was absorbed into it.
 
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