USS Voyager (SP-361)

USS Voyager (SP-361) was a wooden-hulled motorboat of the United States Navy. She was built at Bay City, Michigan, by the Defoe Boat and Motor Works company, was acquired by the Navy from H. J. Defoe in July 1917.

History
United States
Name: USS Voyager
Builder: Defoe Boat and Motor Works, Bay City, Michigan
Acquired: July 1917
Commissioned: 25 July 1917
Decommissioned: 13 May 1919
Stricken: 13 May 1919
Fate: Transferred to United States Coast Guard, 15 September 1919
Name: USCGC Voyager
Acquired: 15 September 1919
Commissioned: 13 April 1921
Decommissioned: circa 1936
Renamed: AB-18, 6 November 1923
Fate: Unknown
General characteristics
Type: Patrol boat
Tonnage: 35 long tons (36 t) gross
Length: 52 ft (16 m)
Beam: 10 ft 6 in (3.20 m)
Draft: 4 ft (1.2 m)
Speed: 9.5 knots (17.6 km/h; 10.9 mph)
Complement: 9

Although listed in the 1918 edition of Ship's Data: U.S. Naval Vessels as being delivered and commissioned on 25 July 1917, Voyager's extant logs do not begin until on 1 September 1917. Nevertheless, they indicate that the first men actually reported on board for duty as early as on 13 July 1917, 12 days before the delivery/commissioning date given in the Ship's Data: U.S. Naval Vessels for 1918.

Service history

U.S. Navy service

Attached to the 9th, 10th, and 11th Naval District local patrol forces and based at Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan, for the duration of World War I, Voyager operated actively on the Great Lakes until winter ice stopped navigation. Her first recorded duty in September appears to have been standing off a navigable channel off Pipe Island, guarding the wreck of the U.S. Steel Corporation boat Mitchell, which was apparently blocking part of the channel.

Voyager operated out of Sault Ste. Marie into mid-November 1917 before she shifted to Detroit, Michigan, in company with the old gunboat Isla de Luzon. She was subsequently placed out of service between 18 and 21 November, and was decommissioned "for the season" on the 23rd. She remained inactive until on 8 May 1918, when she was ordered to return to Sault Ste. Marie. Departing on that day, Voyager set out in company with Isla de Luzon, Avis, Mikawe, Dicky, and Raboco.

Rough weather during the first night of the voyage forced Voyager to drag anchor and run aground, but she was pulled off soon thereafter. Her motor broke down on 11 May, however, necessitating the SP boat's being towed back to her home port of Sault Ste. Marie. Voyager operated out of that Michigan port through the armistice of World War I on 11 November 1918, and was decommissioned on 13 May 1919. Simultaneously struck from the Navy List, Voyager was turned over to the Treasury Department for use by the United States Coast Guard at Chicago, Illinois, on 15 September 1919.

U.S. Coast Guard service

Voyager operated out of Chicago until late in 1922, when she was shifted back to her former home port, Sault Ste. Marie. On 6 November 1923, the erstwhile patrol craft lost her name and became simply AB-18. Classified as a harbor patrol cutter, she served in that capacity into the late 1930s. After 1936, her name disappeared from Coast Guard ship registers.

Was purchased privately in 1936, and operated as the fishing vessel Marley Grace on Lake Superior until 1944, when she was scrapped by her owner.

gollark: Yes. They used to have 2 cores.
gollark: If you look at the mobile lineup for 7th gen vs 8th gen, you see that 8th gen has a lot more cores and also worse clocks.
gollark: Er, not their laptops, their mobile CPUs.
gollark: Intel decided to add tons of cores to their laptops without (allegedly) increasing the TDP, so clocks are bad.
gollark: Well, the most powerful one is the last one, since it appears to have a decent processor and GTX 1660, but obviously other stuff matters.

References

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