ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. – More than 300 Coast Guardsmen participated in the 30th anniversary memorial service of the Coast Guard Cutter Blackthorn collision Thursday, at Blackthorn Memorial Park, in St. Petersburg.
The ceremony consisted of remarks by Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen, a cutterman's salute by Rear Adm. Steve Branham, commander of the Seventh Coast Guard District, an aerial salute by Coast Guard aircraft, posting of the colors and reading of the lost crewmembers' names.
The Blackthorn sank after colliding with the tanker Capricorn near the Sunshine Skyway Bridge on Jan 28, 1980. Twenty-three of the Blackthorn's 50 crewmembers lost their lives during the Coast Guard's worst peacetime disaster. A memorial inscribed with the names of the crewmembers that perished now stands two miles north of the accident site.
The Blackthorn tragedy provided the impetus for the establishment of the Command and Operations School at the Coast Guard Academy in New London, Conn. The school offers courses to prepare command-level officers and senior enlisted members for command duty afloat. Commanding officers are now required to formally assess risks such as transiting an unfamiliar port at night and are given full discretion and encouraged to say no if they feel the risks involved are unnecessary.
Additionally, the Coast Guard developed new training requirements, spent more money on safety equipment and made changes to the navigational aids in and around Tampa Bay.
U.S. Coast Guard video by Petty Officer 3rd Class Rob Simpson.