United States | |
---|---|
Name | Yuba |
Namesake | Yuba River |
Owner | U.S. Engineers Department of the Army |
Builder | A. W. de Young Boat & Shipbuilding Company, Alameda, California |
Laid down | 19 November 1924 |
Launched | 27 February 1925 |
Sponsored by | Catherine Woolsey Dorst [1] |
Completed | March 1925 |
Commissioned | April 1925 |
Fate | unknown |
General characteristics | |
Type | snagboat |
Tonnage | 410 GRT [2] |
Length | 166 ft (51 m) o/a [2] |
Beam | 37 ft 8 in (11.48 m) [2] |
Draught | 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) [2] |
Installed power | 200 IHP [1] |
Propulsion | steam, oil-fueled |
Complement | 30 (26 enlisted and 4 officers) |
Yuba was a wooden-hulled, stern-wheel steamship that served as a snagboat for the United States Army Corps of Engineers.
Yuba was a stern-wheeled, shallow draft steamship ordered by the United States Army Corps of Engineers) to serve as a snagboat on the Sacramento River. Her namesake was the Yuba River, a tributary of the Feather River which was the principal tributary of the Sacramento River. The first snagboat on the Sacramento River, Seizer (240 GRT, 1881), had retired in 1921 [3] and its replacement, Bear (242 GT, 1921), [4] was in need of support. Yuba was laid down on 19 November 1924 [5] at the Alameda, California shipyard of A. W. de Young Boat & Shipbuilding Company [2] who won the contract with a bid price of $78,346. [6] The ship was designed by Captain Thomas B. Foster. [1] The engine from the retired snagboat Seizer was utilized. [7] She was launched on 27 February 1925, [8] completed in March 1925, [5] and commissioned in April 1925. [1] She carried a complement of 4 officers and 26 enlisted men. [2] She worked primarily on the San Joaquin River, the Mokelumne River, and the Sacramento River. [9] Her ultimate fate is unknown.
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A. W. de Young Boat & Shipbuilding Company was a shipbuilder located in Alameda, California active in the 1920s. She was incorporated in 1924 with $150,000 in share capital by ship designer and builder A. W. de Young in partnership with R.J. Connor. De Young had previously operated a ship repair facility on the Oakland side of the estuary but due to high business demand needed to acquire more space. The yard was located at the foot of Chestnut Street. The firm immediately secured contracts to build ten 75-foot patrol boats for the United States Coast Guard at $21,637 apiece which were all completed and in commission by 1925; a pile driver for the San Francisco Harbor Board; a snagboat (Yuba) for the U.S. Engineers Department of the Army for use on the Sacramento River completed in 1924; as well as improvements to the Dollar Steamship Company's dock facilities. She went on to build a variety of ships thereafter mostly focusing on barges, dredges, and freighters for local use including a twin-screw, shallow-draft, bay freighter for the South Shore Port Company.
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