Last Updated: 11/23/2016 14:00
ATTU POST-WWII SCRAPBOOK
Kevin Mackey, 1994-1995
I was stationed on Attu island from March, 1994 through March of 1995 as the Engineering
Petty Officer. Surviving the island for one year was one of the hardest things I have ever
accomplished. Winds over 200 mph, 17 feet of snow in 24 hours, several earthquakes and
tsunami warnings. We had a few civilian visitors on the island that had stopped in Massacre
Bay on the way back over from Japan on their boats. We would supply them with fuel, water
and what food we could spare.
Prior to my assignment on Attu I became the Engineering Petty Officer at the Coast Guard
Station located at Chatham, MA. I had never traveled to Alaska before but found it to be unlike
anything I had ever seen on the East Coast. I arrived at Kodiak Air Station in March of 1994
where I spent about a week waiting for the bi-weekly Logistic flight to Attu. I recall having met
an officer's wife at the commissary one day with whom I had a brief conversation about where I
was going and when I was leaving. A few days later a flight crew member handed me a basket
as I boarded the C-130 flight heading for Attu. There were several home made baked products
and a card in the basket. Some of the goods I had never eaten before, namely scones.
The five hour flight to Attu was cold...there was little heat to be found inside the C-130. I was
seated in the back of the cargo bay with large food bins and miscellaneous gear destined for
the LORAN Station (LORSTA) at Attu. Upon arrival on Attu in my service dress uniform, I was
met by the LORAN Station Commanding Officer, CWO Skip Baldwin. I was directed to head for
the main building. The crew was in the midst of digging out from a recent storm and repairing
broken snow removal equipment.
Some memorable events; three fires at the station...one was a clothes dryer fire, another a
large electrical transformer, and the last an underground cable fire caused by a rat gnawing
through it. This last one caused the transmitter to fall off line (not much left of the rat but fur).
Norwegian wharf rats were always a force to deal with. They would crawl up the sewer pipes
and come out of our toilets and into our rooms. They could be found in our dry store area, in
our tool boxes...nearly everywhere it seemed. We looked forward to the bi-weekly flights the
same way a child looks forward to Christmas. Receiving mail packages from home, fresh food
and newspapers were the mainstay for us. We had only one television channel to watch,
Ratnet, rural Alaskan television.
We did receive some visitors. The birders arrived in a private plane and stayed in the Old
LORAN-A station building. They kept mostly to themselves. The building did not have heat,
and electricity was provided by small portable generators. The birders seemed to be happy in
their makeshift accommodations.
We even had a kayaker who was brought down the island chain from Dutch harbor by a
crabber who dropped him off at the island. He subsisted on mussels and other wild foods.
Eventually he was taken back to the mainland by one of the recreational sailboats that would
stop by to replenish badly needed main staples. I still recall the kayaker. Every time a Log flight
would come in he would peddle his bicycle down the runway as fast as he could to see if he
could hop a ride on the plane, only to be turned away due to red tape.
Exploring the sites in the spring and summer were fun. We were trained on the use of all-
terrain vehicles and ventured out to Chichagof harbor to see the Aleut village remnants and the
WWII coke bottle dump.
While fishing for salmon kept us busy, I definitely got tired of eating salmon. We smoked them,
baked them, fried them and so forth. Now it is 14 years later and I will still not touch salmon.
Another memorable event was on Thanksgiving day when a crew member snow tubed down a
mountain and became airborne when he hit a small hill. He separated his shoulder upon
landing. News got back to the station...we had to transport him back in the Ski Dozer to the
infirmary where HS1 Ladyman opened up a medical technical manual and administered an IV
with morphine. He and I then reset the shoulder utilizing a bed sheet in a manner similar to a
tourniquet. We requested a MEDEVAC but was refused.
Shemya was in the process of downsizing, getting ready to cease operations as a United
States Air Force air station. I worked with Air Force Tsgt. Heim to coordinate the procurement
of some of the nice furnishings the Air Force had to offer. It made our stay on the island a little
bit easier.
Leaving Attu was bittersweet. While leaving behind those who had not completed their time
was sad, thinking about seeing the family again overcame that sadness. I was assigned to my
hometown of Gloucester Massachusetts, my first choice pick, as the Engineering Petty Officer
of a new 110' Patrol Boat. Three years later I was promoted to Chief Warrant officer and was
subsequently assigned to the USCGC Spencer.
My last tour of duty was at the Naval Engineering Support Unit in Boston. I retired from the
Coast Guard in May of 2001 and became a police officer in Gloucester Mass.
#1. A photo taken during my tour on Attu Island 1994-1995.
The photo was taken as we (crew of the Lorsta) scaled the
side of Mount Terrible during the summer months. (Kevin
Mackey)
Originally Posted: 01/23/2007
#2. Picture taken in front of the Attu LORAN station main
building looking down the road that leads to the
warehouse. Notice the yellow pipe, it is the refueling pipe
that leads to the beach from the fuel farm. (Kevin Mackey)
#3. Another picture of the Attu warehouse road with the
refueling pipe alongside the road. On the water side is an
old navy pier on Massacre Bay. (Kevin Mackey)
#5. Attu: A C-130 Logistics Flight from Coast Guard Air
Station Kodiak taxiing down the runway preparing for take
off. These flights replenished Attu’s supplies every two
weeks. (Kevin Mackey)
#6. The bi-weekly C-130 Logistics Flight taking off from the
LORAN station’s 6,000' runway heading back to it home base
at Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak.
#7. Possible plane wreckage lying on an Attu beach.
#8. Photo taken while standing in front of the LORSTA after a
snow storm. The road leads towards the runway.
#9. The aftermath of an Attu snow storm, showing the main
building. (Kevin Mackey)
#10. Inside the transmitter building on Attu showing the
newly installed transmitters. Completed in 1993. (Kevin
Mackey)
#11. Springtime on Attu, showing the route to the old
LORAN-A Station Building. [LORAN-C was the current
installation as of this photo.] (Kevin Mackey)
#12. Attu’s LORAN-C 625’ tall tower. (Kevin Mackey)
[YouTube Link: Attu’s Tower demolished]
#4. Kevin Mackey wearing a crash suit as he readies a
Coast Guard Air Station Kodiak C-130 Logistics Flight for
landing on Attu’s runway. These were normal operations.
(Kevin Mackey)