Eagle is slightly larger than her
sister ship Gorch Fock. Overall
Eagle displaces 1,824 tons. The hull is riveted
Krupp steel four-tenths of an inch thick (10 mm). There are two full-length steel decks with a platform deck below. The raised
forecastle and
quarterdeck are made of quarter inch steel overlaid with of
teak, as are the weather decks. Auxiliary propulsion was originally provided by a single
Burmeister & Wain diesel with reduction gear producing horsepower. She was refitted with a
Caterpillar D399 V16
diesel engine in 1980, and again with a
MTU 8V 4000 in 2018, providing speeds up to under power. There are two Caterpillar generators that can be run by themselves or in parallel together.
Eagle has a range of at her cruising speed of under diesel power. She carries a
reverse osmosis system that replenishes the ship's fresh water supply at sea.
Eagle has a three-masted
barque sailing rig, with two masts fully rigged with 'square sails' and one mast with only 'fore-and-aft' sails. The large sail area of the 'square sails' provide much of the power while the 'fore-and-aft' sails enable superior maneuverability. The ship has over of running rigging and approximately of sail area. To protect sails from chafing,
Eagle uses
baggywrinkle extensively. The top three yards of the fore- and main masts are moveable, and are kept lowered when not sailing to lower the ship's center of gravity. In addition, the top portion of the fore- and main masts, known as the topgallant masts, may be housed (lowered) by 13 ft when not under sail in order to sail underneath low bridges.
Eagles fastest point of sail is when her yards are
braced sharp (or pivoted as much as they can be) and the
relative wind (the wind you feel standing on the ship as it moves) is approximately 5–10 degrees aft of the
windward leech of the sail. When fully braced,
Eagle can sail about 75 degrees off of the true wind.
Eagles propeller shaft can also be de-clutched from the engine so the propeller can freewheel, thus lessening drag while under sail. The main helm station, also known as the triple helm, is connected via mechanical shaft linkage to the steering gear located in the "captain's coffin" on the fantail along with the emergency, or "trick" wheel (also referred to as aft steering). Three turns of the main helm station equal one degree of rudder turn. That is why six persons are used to steer during heavy weather and while operating in restricted waterways. The emergency, or "trick" wheel is a single wheel that turns at a rate of one revolution to one degree of rudder turn. It thus requires more force to turn.
Changes from original design The ship has undergone numerous refits since she was acquired by the Coast Guard in 1946. Sometime during the 1950s, Captain Carl Bowman replaced
Eagles split
spanker on the
mizzenmast with a single sail. During the 1980s, under Captain David Wood, the split spanker was returned as it afforded reduced
weather helm and allowed the
helmsman to turn away (or 'fall off') from the wind more easily. On 27 January 1967,
Eagle departed the
Coast Guard Yard maintenance facility at Curtis Bay (near
Baltimore, Maryland). On a foggy afternoon with little visibility, she traveled toward the Chesapeake Bay at . Shortly after 1:30 PM
Eagle collided with the motor vessel
Philippine Jose Abad Santos. Fortunately, nobody on either ship was injured.
Eagle returned to the shipyard and underwent repairs. On 1 July 1972, the ship was returning to her berth at the
Coast Guard Academy in New London at the midpoint of her annual summer cadet training deployment when she was involved in another serious accident. Despite extensive precautions, as the ship passed below the
Gold Star Memorial Bridge and a new twin bridge being built parallel to it, her foremast and mainmast caught on some safety netting slung below the new bridge that had not been fully secured. Both masts were snapped off above the
crosstrees (about seven-eighths of the way up each mast), and the upper parts were left hanging from the remaining upright parts of the masts. As a result, the ship had to undergo emergency repairs. The
Electric Boat facility in
Groton, Connecticut was able to repair the masts in time for
Eagles planned deployment to Europe; she set sail just three and a half weeks later on 24 July. 1976 brought significant changes to
Eagle. The Coast Guard added their "
racing stripe" and the words 'Coast Guard' to her otherwise unadorned white hull. In addition, the eagle
figurehead on the
bowsprit of the ship was replaced. The original eagle figurehead now resides on display in the
U.S. Coast Guard Museum in Waesche Hall at the Coast Guard Academy. Finally, in 1976,
Eagle received Captain Paul Welling, her first permanent Commanding Officer since Captain Barthold Schnibbe of the German Navy. Previous Commanding Officers had been drawn temporarily from officers assigned to the academy. By 1979, the Coast Guard had developed plans for an extensive refit at the
Coast Guard Yard facility. From 1979 to 1983,
Eagle visited the yard all four winters between summer deployments. During these maintenance availability periods her original 1936
Burmeister & Wain diesel engine, known affectionately as 'Elmer,' along with the generators and evaporators, were replaced by modern equipment ('Elmer' was given to the Portuguese vessel , the former
Albert Leo Schlageter, to provide spare parts for her engine). This made the engine room more spacious, less noisy, and far cooler in temperature. The new engine could be controlled directly from the bridge through a pressurized air line and responded instantly, rather than after a 30-second delay common with the original engine. Additional watertight compartmentalization was also added (previously, there had been only seven). This compartmentalization included closing in cadet berthing areas, eliminating separate upper-class (fixed three-tier bunks) and lower-class (hammock) berthing and made the ship better able to accommodate male and female cadets. Crew habitability was greatly improved with the installation of new ventilation and air conditioning systems, fresh water showers, and fresh water clothes
washing machines. An enclosed
pilothouse was built around the exhaust funnel on the
quarterdeck. Electronic equipment (e.g., radar, navigation, and radio equipment) was updated as well, and much of it was moved from the radio room into the new pilothouse. The helm station remained unsheltered and unchanged. Finally, the entire teak deck was replaced, and the steel beneath it was found to be badly corroded and had to be repaired as well. For two summers,
Eagle sailed without parts of her teak deck. It was discovered that the teak deck is one of the keys to 'stiffening' the longitudinal strength of the ship. In 2014,
Eagle began a similar refit. The ship's crew temporarily shifted its administrative homeport to Baltimore and began an extensive four-year service life extension project. Each year,
Eagle spent six months in the yard and six months sailing with trainees. The goal of this maintenance overhaul was for the ship to remain safe and viable as the Coast Guard's premier training vessel well into the 21st century. After the refit was completed,
Eagle returned to her traditional homeport of New London, Connecticut.
Figurehead Eagle has had 5 figureheads over the course of her career. ''Horst Wessel's
original figurehead was an eagle clutching a wreath containing a Nazi swastika. The swastika was removed when CDR McGowan took possession of Eagle
, and a Bremerhaven shipyard donated a US Coast Guard shield carved in teak to replace it. McGowan later wrote that it was a "rare coincidence that the future Eagle
should have such a figurehead." Eagle's
predecessor, the 150 foot long Salmon P Chase
also had an eagle as a figurehead which was on display at Mystic Seaport. The Coast Guard traded their figurehead for Salmon P Chase's
5 foot long figurehead in 1953, which was affectionately called the "pigeon" on the much larger Eagle
. The Salmon P Chase's'' figurehead was starting to show her age and was replaced with a fiberglass replica in 1971. The fiberglass version only lasted a couple years, it was quickly destroyed in a storm only a couple years following its installation. An appropriately sized, 13 foot long, 3/4 ton mahogany eagle was unveiled for the bicentennial celebrations in 1976. The 1976 figurehead was discovered to have some cracks during her 2014 refit, and a replacement recommended. The current figurehead, installed in 2021, is 15 feet long, weighs 2,000 pounds, and was designed by California artist Shane Kinman. File:USCGC Eagle helm.jpg|Helm station on USCGC
Eagle File:EAGLE Bowsprit.jpg|Cadets furl
Eagles jibs File:EAGLE Old San Juan 2014.jpg|
Eagle arrives in Puerto Rico == Eagle commanding officers ==