USLHT Iris was a steel-hulled, steam-powered ship built in Philadelphia in 1897. She began life as an excursion boat for day trips between Boston and Plymouth, Massachusetts as Plymouth. She was purchased by the Lighthouse Board and became a lighthouse tender in 1899. She was transferred to the United States Navy during World War I and became USS Iris. She returned to her duties with the United States Lighthouse Service in 1919. She was sold in 1939 and became a collier and bulk freighter named Big Chief. In 1942, after the American entry into World War II, the ship was requisitioned into military service with the United States Army Corps of Engineers. She was transferred to the Navy for the second time in 1943 and became USS Big Chief (IX-101). Declared surplus after the war, she was sold back into private hands in 1948 and became a fishing boat for the remainder of her career. Her name was changed yet again after a 1954 refit to B. O. Colonna. She was scrapped in 1973.
Plymouth was built by the Neafie and Levy Ship and Engine Building Company in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. She was commissioned by the Winthrop Steamboat Company, which intended to use her as a seasonal excursion boat to take passengers from Boston to Plymouth, Massachusetts. She was designed to have as many as 900 passengers aboard. She was launched in early 1897, likely in March. [1]
Her hull was built of steel. She was 153 feet (47 m) long overall, [2] 142 feet (43 m) long on her waterline, with a beam of 30 feet (9.1 m), and a depth of hold of 10.4 feet (3.2 m). As a lighthouse tender, she had a fully-loaded draft of 10 feet (3.0 m). [3] Her gross register tonnage was 428 and her net register tonnage was 292. [4]
Plymouth was driven by a single propeller, 8 feet 6 inches (2.59 m) in diameter. Power was provided by a single triple-conversion steam engine that produced 800 horsepower. [4] Its high, medium, and low-pressure cylinders had diameters of 15, 23, and 39 inches with a stroke of 28 inches. Steam was provided by a single coal-fired boiler 12 feet (3.7 m) long and 13 feet 6 inches (4.11 m) in diameter. [1] This power plant made her a fast ship for her day. Her average speed as a lighthouse tender was 12 knots. [5]
As originally built, Plymouth had four decks, lower, main, saloon, and hurricane. On the hurricane deck were the pilot house, staterooms for the captain and first officer, and two passenger staterooms. On the saloon deck were four passenger staterooms, and two saloons. On the main deck were four passenger staterooms, a social hall, a dining room which would seat 50, baggage storage, and washrooms. The lower deck contained the engine and boiler rooms, crew quarters and mess, and the galley. [1]
Plymouth was named for her main destination, Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Plymouth sailed one round-trip per day between the Winthrop Line wharf in Boston and Plymouth. As this was a recreational excursion, she sailed only during the warmer months. For example, her first scheduled sailing in 1898 was on 12 June. [6] She sailed at 10 am and arrived at Plymouth at 12:55 pm. The return trip left Plymouth at 3:30 PM. The round-trip fare was $1. [7] There was a cafe aboard and a band provided live music. [8]
Plymouth was also chartered for private events, as on 11 June 1998 when the Boston Bank Officers' Association had 400 members on board for a Boston Harbor cruise. [9]
In perhaps her most special event, she was chartered to serve as a tender for Sir Thomas Lipton's yacht Shamrock during his challenge for the 1899 America's Cup. [10] Negotiations began on the charter in March 1899, [11] and in June 1899 a 50-day charter contract was signed. Plymouth was delivered to Lipton's team on 5 September 1899 in New York to begin the charter. The ship was used as crew quarters for the 70 men who sailed Shamrock. While Plymouth already had staterooms for her officers and a crew of 30 men, Lipton's staff added berthing for 50 additional men. [12]
In November 1899, J. R. Bacon, the general manager of the Winthrop Line, was in negotiations with the Lighthouse Board to sell Plymouth. He asked $80,000 for the ship. [13]
In its annual reports for 1897 and 1898, the Lighthouse Board advised the Secretary of the Treasury that the lighthouse tenders in the 3rd Lighthouse District "are so nearly worn-out that they can only last if used with care until vessels can be built to take their places". [14] Congress responded by appropriating $85,000 for the construction of a new ship on 3 March 1899. Rather than wait to design and build a new ship, the Lighthouse Board decided to purchase an existing ship and convert it into a lighthouse tender. It purchased Plymouth from the Winthrop Steamboat Company on 13 December 1899 for $77,500. On 18 December 1899 she was commissioned as a lighthouse tender and became USLHT Iris. The ship immediately began a conversion project to fit her for her new duties. By the end of January 1900 her conversion was completed at a cost of about $6,500. [5] In her new configuration, she displaced 606 tons, fully loaded, and 519 tons light. [15]
Lighthouse tenders were named for trees and flowering plants. Iris was named after the Iris genus of flowering plants. She was the second lighthouse tender named Iris , the first having been built in 1863 and sold in 1892. [16]
Iris first sailed in the fleet of the U.S. Lighthouse Board, a bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. In this quasi-military organization, each Lighthouse District had a District Inspector, typically a Naval officer, and a District Engineer, typically an officer from the Army Corps of Engineers. While the District Engineer was primarily responsible for the construction and maintenance of lighthouses, piers, and other structures, the District Inspector was primarily responsible for supplying lighthouses and lightships, and maintaining buoys and lightships in their assigned locations. Iris was initially assigned to the District Engineer of the 3rd Lighthouse District. She was based at the general lighthouse depot at Thompkinsville, Staten Island, New York. At that time, the 3rd Lighthouse District encompassed the coasts of Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, and portions of New Jersey. [5] In 1909, Iris had a crew of 5 officers and 17 men. [17]
Iris maintained many of the lighthouses, fog signals, and other facilities of the 3rd Lighthouse District. These included Gull Island Light, [18] Plum Island Light, [18] Race Rock, [18] and Sperry Light. [19]
In 1903, the Lighthouse Board was transferred to the newly created U.S. Department of Commerce and Labor. [20] [21] Since the Lighthouse Board still had operational control, little changed in Iris' operations.
U.S. Senator Chauncey Depew sailed on Iris to New York to attend the launch of Prince Henry of Prussia's yacht, Meteor in 1902. The launch was attended by President Roosevelt, whose daughter, Alice, christened the vessel. [22]
In September 1906, Secretary of the Treasury Lyman J. Gage took a vacation cruise along the New England coast aboard Iris.
In 1910, Congress abolished the Lighthouse Board and replaced it with the all-civilian Lighthouse Bureau of the Department of Commerce and Labor. [23] This change did impact the ship's work in that District Inspectors and Engineers were replaced by a single civilian District Supervisor. All ships did any construction, maintenance, or buoy tending they were assigned. [24] Iris began tending buoys as regular part of her work. The reorganization of the Lighthouse Service allowed the retirement of five under-used tenders to save costs. As these ships left the service, some of the remaining tenders were redistributed. Iris was reassigned to the 4th Lighthouse District, headquartered in Philadelphia, which included the coast of Delaware, and adjoining portions of the New Jersey, and Virginia shores. [25]
Secretary of Commerce William C. Redfield and a Congressional delegation were aboard Iris on 25 July 1914 for an inspection tour of lighthouses in Delaware Bay. A storm arose and the ship was blown ashore at Cape Henlopen, Delaware. Iris was pulled off the rocks in a half-hour by another ship. [26]
On 11 April 1917 President Wilson issued Executive Order 2588 [27] transferring a number of lighthouse tenders to support the American effort in World War I. Iris was transferred to the U.S. Department of War, and she was commissioned into the United States Navy as USS Iris. Among her wartime roles was as a mine planter to defend Delaware Bay, [28] but she remained active tending buoys during her service with the Navy. [29] During the war she was armed with two 3-pounder guns, and two machine guns. [30]
After the war, on 1 July 1919, [31] the components of the Lighthouse Service which had become part of the Navy were returned to the supervision of the Department of Commerce.
In 1919, Iris returned to her duties in the 4th Lighthouse District. She continued her buoy tending, [32] and maintaining lighthouses, lightships, [33] and their staffs. [34] Sometime during her post-war service, her steam engine was replaced by a Fairbanks-Morse 5-cylinder Diesel engine that produced 450 horsepower. [35] [36] On 25 June 1930 Iris was leaving the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal when a burning yacht was sighted. Iris saved the eight people that were in the water or clinging to the wreckage. Captain C. W. Atkins received a letter of commendation from the Secretary of Commerce for this action. [37]
Iris was decommissioned and laid up in 1934. She was replaced by USLHT Lilac. [38] Sealed bids for the purchase of Iris were solicited by the Superintendent of Lighthouses of the 4th District on 19 June 1934. [2] It is not clear if there were any bids or if the bids were inadequate, but in any case the Lighthouse Service kept Iris, albeit laid up and with no crew. Even though she was not in commission or even Federally documented, Iris was occasionally put to use, as in August 1937 when she installed a light on the Delaware River. [39] Iris was finally sold in February 1939. [36]
In February 1939 Iris was acquired from the Lighthouse Service by S. Norman Holland. [40] At the time of sale, the ship was redocumented under her original name, Plymouth. [36] The ship was sent to the Moon Shipyard and Repair Corporation at Norfolk, Virginia to be refit for her new service. [41] She was homeported at Crisfield, Maryland and was used in the operations of the Pocahontas Coal Company which was headed by Holland. On 27 March 1939 she was redocumeted as Big Chief, [42] presumaby to fit the theme of the Pocahontas Coal Company fleet. Big Chief was the largest ship, the other two vessels being Pocahontas, and Papoose. [43] During her time with Holland, she carried coal for Pocahontas Coal Company, and a variety of cargoes for other clients. [44] She participated in salvage operations on the liner Manhattan which went aground off West Palm Beach, Florida in January 1941. [45]
United States Navigation Company of New York acquired Big Chief at the end of 1941 with the intention of running her as a coastal freighter between New York and Boston. [46] [47]
Big Chief was requisitioned by the U.S. Maritime Commission from the U.S. Navigation Company on 4 April 1942. The ship was turned over to the War Department in New York that same day. She was assigned to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. [48] The Army used her as a salvage vessel. Records of her Army service are sparse, but she sailed at least as far south as Key West in September 1942. [49] Big Chief arrived at Naval Section Base Moorehead City, North Carolina on 11 April 1943, and left the next day bound for Norfolk. [50]
A week later, on 18 April 1943, the War Department transferred Big Chief to the War Shipping Administration, which in turn transferred her to the U. S. Navy on 5 May 1943. [48] Big Chief was assigned to the Naval Mine Depot in Yorktown, Virginia, a unit of the 5th Naval District. She was designated "IX-101", an uncategorized vessel. [51] The mine depot distributed explosives and related materials to naval installations in the tidewater Virginia area, and Big Chief was busy on these supply runs. For example, during August 1943 she made seven trips from the mine depot to distribute warheads, explosives, naval mines, batteries, ordnance instruments, and other supplies. [52]
On 4 June 1945 USS Roy O. Hale was proceeding to a berth in Yorktown when she hit Big Chief's cargo loading booms. The booms and mast on Big Chief collapsed, and the destroyer escort lost her searchlight. [53]
After the war ended, the flow of munitions reversed as ships in the Navy were decommissioned. For example, in December 1945 Big Chief transported a load of bombs and fuses from Naval Operating Base Norfolk to the mine depot. [54] There was no need for much of this material, and the ship was used to dispose of excess material. During January 1946, Big Chief made two trips with "reject material", likely explosives, for dumping in deep water. [55]
The ship was placed out of service on 28 May 1946, [56] was returned to the War Shipping Administration on 14 June 1946, and entered the National Defense Reserve Fleet. She was moored at Lee Hall, Virginia. Big Chief was struck from the Navy List on 3 July 1946. She was declared surplus and sold to William S. Sanders on 26 February 1948. [48]
William S. Sanders of Norfolk, Virginia purchased Big Chief in February 1948. [57] He converted the ship into a menhaden fishing boat [58] at the Norfolk Shipbuilding and Drydock Company. [59]
Sanders died in March 1954. [60] His estate was sued for unpaid debts and his three vessels, including Big Chief, were seized by the U.S. Marshalls Service and scheduled for auction. [61] [62]
The Norfolk Ship Salvage Company, Inc. purchased Big Chief at auction on 7 September 1954 for $23,000. [63] She was substantially rebuilt by Colonna's Shipyard, Inc. in Norfolk, Virginia. Her superstructure was stripped off and new crew quarters were built. The ship was renamed B. O. Colonna, [64] after Captain Benjamin O. Colonna, Sr., the father of the president of both the salvage company and shipyard. [65] She was refit as a menhaden fishing boat, and had some success. She returned to port with a catch of 300,000 menhaden after only a few hours of fishing in July 1955. [66] Her full capacity after her refit was about 700,000 menhaden. [35]
In the 1960s, new hydraulic power block technology for hauling back purse seine nets promised large productivity gains on fishing boats, but required significant new investment. The company chose to exit the business rather than make the additional investment. B. O. Colonna and the two other ships in her company's fishing fleet were sold to Haynie Products, Inc. of Reedville, Virginia in 1969 for $500,000. [35]
Haynie Products was a large fishing and fish processing business. In 1972 it had 19 vessels, including B. O. Colonna, which fished Chesapeake Bay and nearby coastal waters. [67] In 1973, the fish populations the company depended on, particularly river herring, declined substantially due to overfishing. [68] The ship disappears from Federal documentation at this time and was likely scrapped in 1973.
USS Plymouth was a sloop-of-war constructed and commissioned just prior to the Mexican–American War. She was heavily gunned, and traveled to Japan as part of Commodore Matthew C. Perry's effort to force Japan to open her ports to international trade. She also served in European and Caribbean waters and, later in her career, she was used to train midshipmen.
The second USS Amphitrite—the lead ship in her class of iron-hulled, twin-screw monitors—was laid down, on June 23, 1874, by order of President Ulysses S. Grant's Secretary of Navy George M. Robeson at Wilmington, Delaware, by the Harlan and Hollingsworth yard; launched on 7 June 1883; sponsored by Miss Nellie Benson, the daughter of a Harlan and Hollingsworth official; and commissioned at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Virginia, on 23 April 1895, Captain William C. Wise in command.
The United States Lighthouse Tender Warrington was a lighthouse tender which served on the Great Lakes. She was built in 1868, and began life as the freighter Henry Warrington. Rechristened Warrington, she began government service in 1870. She participated in the construction and maintenance of a number of significant lighthouses and other aids to navigation over a 40-year career with the U.S. Lighthouse Service. At the end of her government service, she was sold to a commercial shipping company and wrecked in 1911.
The second USS Suwannee and third USS Mayflower was a United States Lighthouse Board, and later United States Lighthouse Service, lighthouse tender transferred to the United States Navy in 1898 for service as an auxiliary cruiser during the Spanish–American War and from 1917 to 1919 for service as a patrol vessel during World War I. She also served the Lighthouse Board and in the Lighthouse Service as USLHT Mayflower from 1897 to 1898, from 1898 to 1917, and from 1919 to 1939, and in the United States Coast Guard as the first USCGC Mayflower (WAGL-236) in 1939 and from 1940 to 1943 and as USCGC Hydrangea (WAGL-236) from 1943 to 1945.
USLHT Azalea was built as a lighthouse tender and performed in that role on the Massachusetts coast from 1891 to 1917 and again from 1919 to 1933. During World War I, she served in the United States Navy as USS Azalea. Between the wars she was a commercial freighter in Chesapeake Bay, and later between Florida and The Bahamas. During World War II, she was reacquired by the U.S. Navy and served as USS Christiana, a seaplane tender which supported advanced bases in The Bahamas. Declared surplus in 1946, she was sold to Banana Supply Company, and spent a decade transporting bananas from the Caribbean to Miami. After 1956 her history is uncertain until she became a half-sunk derelict and was scrapped in Miami in 1965.
USS James (SP-429) — also known as USS W. T. James (SP-429) — was a steam trawler acquired by the United States Navy during World War I. She was converted into an armed minesweeper and assigned to the European Theater, where she performed varied tasks, including minesweeping, patrolling, and escorting of larger ships in convoy. In 1919, while returning to the United States, she was severely damaged in a storm off the French coast, and sank. Her crew were rescued.
USS Lydonia (SP-700) was United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919 that saw service during World War I. Prior to her U.S. Navy service, she had been William A. Lydon's private yacht, Lydonia II, from 1912 to 1917. She spent most of the war based at Gibraltar, escorting and protecting Allied ships in the Mediterranean and along the Atlantic Ocean coast of Europe. After her U.S. Navy service ended, she served from 1919 to 1947 in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey as the coastal survey ship USCGS Lydonia (CS-302).
The second USS Uncas was a United States Navy tug in commission from 1898 to 1922.
USS Maple, was a lighthouse tender that served in the United States Navy from 1893 to 1899, seeing service as an auxiliary ship during the Spanish–American War in 1898, and from 1917 to 1919, operating as a patrol vessel during World War I. She also served as USLHT Maple in the United States Lighthouse Board fleet from 1899 to 1910 and in the United States Lighthouse Service from 1910 to 1933.
USCGC Lilac (WAGL/WLM-227) is a former Coast Guard buoy tender which is now a museum ship located in New York City. Lilac is America's only surviving steam-powered buoy tender, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
USS Iris was a ship of the United States Navy which served in the Pacific in a variety of roles from 1899 until 1916. Originally fitted out as a distilling ship, she served as a general utility ship, then as a collier, before being refitted as a torpedo boat tender.
United States Navy Auxiliary ship Sterling was an iron, schooner-rigged collier in service with the United States Navy from 1898 to 1919. Originally purchased to transport coal for United States Navy ships during the Spanish–American War, she served in that role until sold in 1919. While serving as the Chilean flagged steamer, Llai Llai, she was rammed by a Chilean warship on 11 March 1920 and sank near Iquique, Chile.
USLHT Armeria was a lighthouse tender in commission with the United States Lighthouse Board from December 1890 to March 1898. After Spanish–American War service in the United States Navy as USS Armeria from May to August 1898, she resumed her lighthouse tender duties, first with the Lighthouse Board from 1898 to 1910 and then with its successor organization, the United States Lighthouse Service, from 1910 until she was wrecked in 1912. She was the first lighthouse tender assigned to permanent duty in the Territory of Alaska.
USLHT Mangrove was a lighthouse tender in commission in the fleet of the United States Lighthouse Board from December 1897 to April 1898 and from August 1898 to 1910, in the United States Lighthouse Service from 1910 to 1917 and from 1919 to 1939, and in the United States Coast Guard from 1939 to 1941 and in 1946. She also saw commissioned service in the United States Navy as USS Mangrove on three occasions, operating as an armed supply ship from April to August 1898 during the Spanish–American War, during which she fought the last battle of that war; as a patrol vessel from 1917 to 1919 during and in the aftermath of World War I; and as a buoy tender from 1941 to 1946 during and in the aftermath of World War II.
USLHT Jessamine was a steam-powered sidewheel lighthouse tender built in 1881 for the United States Lighthouse Board. She spent forty years in government service, homeported in Baltimore, Maryland as part of the 5th Lighthouse District. Her primary mission was to build and maintain lighthouses in Chesapeake Bay and nearby waterways in Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. Some of the lighthouses she built still stand.
USLHT Zizania was a steel-hulled steamship built as a lighthouse tender in 1888. Over four decades of government service she sailed for the U.S. Lighthouse Service, and the U.S. Navy. She was homeported first in Wilmington, Delaware, and then in Portland, Maine during her Lighthouse Service Years. She served the U.S. Navy in both World War I and World War II. She was renamed during her World War II service, becoming USS Adario, a net tender based at Naval Operating Base Norfolk.
USLHT Arbutus was built as a lighthouse tender for the Massachusetts coast. She served in that role from her launch in 1933 until World War II. In 1939, the Lighthouse Service was merged into the United States Coast Guard and the ship became USCGC Arbutus. During the war she was under United States Navy control. She served as an anti-submarine net-tender at Newport, Rhode Island. After the war she was posted to New York and resumed her buoy tender responsibilities. She was decommissioned in 1967 and sold in 1969.
USLHT Arbutus was a wooden-hulled, steam-powered lighthouse tender built for the United States Lighthouse Board in 1879. She served on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts in this role until 1925. During World War I, she was transferred to the United States Navy and was commissioned as USS Arbutus, but her duties largely remained those of a lighthouse tender.
USLHT Lilac was a steel-hulled steamship built as a lighthouse tender in 1892. During her career in the United States Lighthouse Service her longest assignments were at Portland, Maine, and San Juan, Puerto Rico. During World War I she was transferred to the United States Navy and became USS Lilac.
USLHT Columbine was a steel-hulled steamship built as a lighthouse tender in 1892. During her career in the United States Lighthouse Service she was based in Portland, Oregon, Ketchikan, Alaska, Honolulu, Hawaii, San Juan Puerto Rico, and Baltimore, Maryland. During World War I she was transferred to the United States Navy and became USS Columbine. She returned to the Lighthouse Service in 1919. The ship was decommissioned and sold by the in 1927.
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