History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Commissioned | 16 May 1898 |
Decommissioned | 27 February 1920 |
Fate |
|
General characteristics | |
Displacement | 975 tons |
Length | 185 ft (56 m) |
Beam | 27.6 ft (8.4 m) |
Draft | 13.1 ft (4.0 m) |
Speed | 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) |
Complement | 78 officers and enlisted |
Armament |
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USS Yankton (previously named La Cleopatre, Saphire III, Penelope) [1] [2] was a steel-hulled schooner built in 1893 at Leith, Scotland, by Ramage & Ferguson. She was acquired by the US Navy in May 1898; renamed Yankton; and commissioned on 16 May 1898 at Norfolk, Virginia.
According to Charles Armstrong, who was the medical officer of Yankton in 1918, Penelope had been the extravagant yacht of Sarah Bernhardt, [1] a well-known French actress. [3] That Bernhardt connection is noted in the United States Coast Guard history on rum runners as being "erroneous" but notes that the vessel had become an American yacht sold to the Navy at the beginning of the Spanish–American War. [4] She was converted to a gunboat by the US Navy and partook in the Spanish–American War serving as a gunboat, admiral's yacht and fleet tender. [4] On 27 November 1903 she sank the steamship Hustler in a collision at Norfolk, Virginia. Her Captain at the time was Lt. Castleman. [5]
Yankton accompanied the Navy's Great White Fleet on the "round the world cruise" as a fleet tender in 1907–1908 and was at Veracruz during the 1914 crisis there. [4] In World War I she headed for Gibraltar to join the Patrol Forces protecting Allied shipping from German U-boats, and she came under hostile fire during combat. Yankton was sold in 1921. [4]
The vessel was libeled and sold by the British Admiralty Court in Nassau, Bahamas then seized and sold again within weeks. [4] A crew of mixed nationality, described as "motley" and "buccaneers" was recruited in Havana where 8,000 cases of grain alcohol valued at $500,000 and Cuban tobacco was placed aboard, ostensibly destined for St. Pierre with actual destination being "Rum Row" with sales along the coast on the way. [4] The vessel was at times termed "The Queen of Rum Row" but fell on very hard times and being swindled of much of her cargo. [4] Eventually, out of fuel and money, steam was raised by chopping up interior woodwork and on 23 May 1923 the master surrendered to customs agents at the quarantine anchorage in New York. [4] [6] Free again the ship ran aground on Nixes Mate in Boston harbor during a January snowstorm. [4] The ship was broken up at Boston during the summer of 1930.
Charles Butler McVay Jr. was an admiral in the United States Navy after World War I. In 1907–1909, after the cruise of the Great White Fleet, he commanded the tender USS Yankton. He then held various assignments of increasing importance throughout and after World War I. In the early 1930s, he served as commander-in-chief of the Asiatic Fleet.
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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.