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Friday, November 5, 2021

President Nixon’s Hydrofoil-Wolfhound (1972)

 

President Nixon’s Hydrofoil
Wolfhound a gift from Russia’s General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev


Type of Activity

Presidential Transport

Location

Location

Miami FL

Date of Activity

Aug 1972-Nov 1972

Coordinates

25°41′25″N 80°9′54″W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W / 25°41′25″N 80°9′54″W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W / 25°41′25″N 80°9′54″W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W / 25°41′25″N 80°9′54″W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W / 25°41′25″N 80°9′54″W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W / 25.69028°N 80.165°W 25.69028; -80.165

In May 1972, President Richard Nixon paid a head of state visit to the Soviet Union, during which he presented a modified Cadillac sedan to General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev, on behalf of the United States. Some three months later, in August, a reciprocal gift from General Secretary Brezhnev arrived on board a Russian merchant vessel at the port of Baltimore. The gift was a high-speed, soft-and salt-water traveling hydrofoil boat, Soviet Model 70.

I was at Key Biscayne when the Hydrofoil arrived in Miami and sent to the Coast Guard Station in Miami, Florida, which then provided water security and water transportation for the presidential retreat at Key Biscayne. Although the President did take several cruises during his visits to Key Biscayne the President preferred Bebe Robozo's houseboat the Coco Lobo. The unofficial codename for the Volga 70 Hydrofoil was Wolfhound and would be used whenever the Coast Guard or Secret Service needed to communicate with the Command Post at the Presidential compound. Baker/Charlie P-33's or HT-220's would be used to communicate while on a cruise with the President or on a maintenance trip. After several months of inactivity the Hydrofoil was deemed impactable for the presidents use. 

In November 1972, the White House staff decided that this boat could best be used in the general service of the federal government and transfer to the Coast Guard at Miami was authorized by H.R. Haldeman on October 16, 1972. The boat was subsequently put into service on November 8, 1972, and it remained in the Miami area until February 1977, when the Coast Guard reported it to the General Services Administration (GSA) as being excess to their needs.

The restored Volga 70 Hydrofoil

GSA’s Property Utilization and Donation Branch then authorized the transfer of the boat to the Fish and Wildlife Service, with initial utilization in Louisiana, but the service location was changed in June 1977 and the boat was brought to the Washington, D.C. area for use in security and surveillance work by an unspecified federal security agency. The hydrofoil remained in the Washington area until February 3,1982, when GSA authorized the Fish and Wildlife Service to dispose of it by donation to the Nebraska Agency for Surplus Property, with further and specific donation to the City of Ogallala, where it was used on Lake McConaughy, a “25 mile long, 4-mile-wide oasis on the Nebraska plain. “In April 1987, the City of Ogallala donated the hydrofoil to the Ogallala Chamber of Commerce which used it under the name of “Viktoria,” the name of Brezhnev’s wife, as a promotional vehicle on the lake. 

In 2005, the USS Aries Hydrofoil museum acquired President Nixon’s Volga and began restoring the craft. She has been returned to the original Paint scheme and undergone engine work. Currently she operational and flies very well.


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