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Press Release | March 22, 2023

MEDIA AVAILABILITY: Second New England-based Fast Response Cutter to be commissioned in Boston

Editors' Note: Media interested in attending the ship’s commissioning ceremony are requested to RSVP with d1publicaffairs@uscg.mil no later than 4 p.m. Wednesday, March 29. Media are requested to arrive by 9:30 a.m. to clear security and be escorted to the event. To gain access to the base, be prepared to provide media credentials and government-issued photo ID. Additionally, Pamela Jackson, the ship’s sponsor is available for interviews prior to the event, which can be requested by contacting the District 1 Public Affairs office at d1publicaffairs@uscg.mil.

WHO: Vice Admiral Kevin Lunday, the Coast Guard Atlantic Area commander, Chief Warrant Officer Lance DeFoggi, the Coast Guard Cutter Warren Deyampert commanding officer, Pamela Jackson, the ship’s sponsor, who is a cousin of Deyampert, along with additional Deyampert family members

WHAT: Commissioning ceremony for the Coast Guard Cutter Warren Deyampert

WHEN: Thursday, March 30 at 10:00 a.m.

WHERE: Coast Guard Base Boston at 427 Commercial St., Boston, MA 02109

BOSTON — The Coast Guard Cutter Warren Deyampert (WPC-1151) is scheduled to be commissioned during a ceremony at Coast Guard Base Boston March 30.

The Coast Guard's newest cutter was accepted by the Coast Guard on Dec. 23, 2022 and will be the second of six Fast Response Cutters homeported in Boston.

The Sentinel-class fast response cutter (FRC) is designed for multiple missions, including drug and migrant interdiction; ports, waterways and coastal security; fishery patrols; search and rescue; and national defense. The Coast Guard has ordered 65 FRCs to replace the 1980s-era Island-class 110-foot patrol boats. The FRCs feature advanced command, control, communications, computers, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance equipment; over-the-horizon cutter boat deployment to reach vessels of interest; and improved habitability and seakeeping.

Born in Attalla, Alabama, the cutter’s namesake joined the Coast Guard at age 19, and served aboard the Coast Guard Cutter Escanaba during World War II, beginning in August, 1941. Deyampert’s primary role was within the food service rating, but he also served as one of the ship’s three rescue swimmers.

Following a torpedo attack on the U.S. Army transport ship Dorchester in North Atlantic waters on Feb. 3, 1943, Deyampert swam in absolute darkness to rescue survivors in the freezing waters of the North Atlantic. His efforts affected the rescue of more than 100 crewmembers, many of whom were hypothermic and unable to swim.

Four months later, June 13, 1943, the Escanaba sank, following an explosion onboard that was believed to be from a torpedo attack. All but two crewmembers were killed in the explosion. Deyampert was posthumously awarded the Navy and Marine Corps Medal and Purple Heart Medal for his heroic rescue of the Dorchester crew.