MV White Holly

The MV White Holly is a 421-ton vessel owned and operated by the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society since September 2018.[2][3][1]

History
United States
Name: YF-341
Operator: US Navy
Builder: Basalt Ship Building[1]
Laid down: 3 August 1943
Launched: 8 April 1944
Fate: Transferred to the US Coast Guard in 1946
History
US
Name: White Holly
Operator: US Coast Guard
Fate: Retired in 1988
History
US
Name: MV White Holly
Owner: Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
Operator: Sea Shepherd Conservation Society
Port of registry: US
Acquired: September 2018
In service: November 2019
Identification:
Status: Being retrofitted
General characteristics
Tonnage: 421 t
Length: 40.5 m (133 ft)
Beam: 9.14 m (30.0 ft)
Draught: 3 m (9.8 ft)

The vessel was retrofitted in Fernandina Beach, Florida, to be used in direct action Sea Shepherd Conservation Society operations against illegal fisheries activities. Its first operation is at the Guadalupe Island on the southern Sea of Cortez, Mexico. Its first operation is called Operation Divina Guadalupe VI and study the Cuvier's beaked whale.[4]

History

The ship was built in 1944 for the US Navy and served in World War II in Pearl Harbor delivering ammunition to naval vessels.[3] She was acquired by the US Coast Guard in 1946 serving on the Alaskan coastline until the 1970s.[3] The vessel was later relocated to Mississippi as a buoy tender until her retirement from the Coast Guard in 1998.[3] The vessel was purchased by Benoit Vulliet for oceanographic research,[5] and years later, he donated it to Sea Shepherd Conservation Society.[3][6]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.