USS Narcissus (WAGL-238)

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USCGC Narcissus -WAGL-238; WLI-238-.jpg
History
Ensign of the United States Coast Guard.svg
Name: USCG Narcissus
Builder: Marine Iron and Shipbuilding Corporation
Laid down: 1939
In service: 1939
Out of service: Transferred to the Navy, 1 November 1941
In service: 1 January 1946
Out of service: 1971
Homeport: Portsmouth, Virginia
Fate: Transferred to Guyana, 1971
US flag 48 stars.svg
Name: USS Narcissus
Acquired: Transferred from the Coast Guard, 1 November 1941
Fate: Returned to the Coast Guard, 1 January 1946
General characteristics
Type: Buoy tender
Displacement: 342 long tons (347 t)
Length: 122 ft (37 m)
Beam: 28 ft (8.5 m)
Draft: 8 ft (2.4 m)
Propulsion:
  • 2 × Superior diesel engines
  • 2 screws
Speed: 10.3 knots (19.1 km/h; 11.9 mph)
Complement: 17

USS Narcissus (WAGL-238) was built for the United States Coast Guard by Marine Iron and Shipbuilding Corporation, Duluth, Minnesota, in 1939. Designed as a navigational aid tender, she was assigned to Wilmington, North Carolina. In 1940 she transferred to Portsmouth, Virginia.

Executive Order 8929 of 1 November 1941 transferred the Coast Guard to the US Navy. Through the war years Narcissus continued to serve as a large inland buoy tender, operating out of Portsmouth. When the Coast Guard returned to the Treasury Department on 1 January 1946, the tender remained in an active status. Through 1970 she has continued her buoytending duties from her permanent station at Portsmouth.

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