USS Wemootah (SP-201)

USS Wemootah (SP-201) was a United States Navy patrol vessel and net tender in commission from 1917 to 1919.

Wemootah as a civilian motorboat sometime in 1916 or 1917, prior to her U.S. Navy service.

USS Wemootah in an [icy port with several other section patrol craft sometime between 1917 and 1919, probably in the New York Harbor area.
History
United States
Name: USS Wemootah
Namesake: Previous name retained
Builder: Gas Engine and Power Company and Charles L. Seabury Company, Morris Heights, the Bronx, New York
Completed: 1916
Acquired: 16 June 1917
Commissioned: 7 July 1917
Stricken: 13 June 1919
Fate: Sold 10 October 1919
Notes: Operated as civilian motorboat Wemootah 1916-1917
General characteristics
Type: Patrol vessel and net tender
Displacement: 20.58 tons
Length: 70 ft (21 m)
Beam: 13 ft (4.0 m)
Draft: 4 ft 3 in (1.30 m) aft
Speed: 13 miles per hour[1]
Complement: 13
Armament:

Wemootah was built as a civilian motorboat of the same name in 1913 by the Gas Engine and Power Company and the Charles L. Seabury Company at Morris Heights in the Bronx, New York. The U.S. Navy purchased her from her owner, A. Gardner Cooper of New York City, on 16 June 1917 for World War I service as a patrol vessel. She was commissioned as USS Wemootah (SP-201) on 7 July 1917.

Operating from the Rosebank Section Base on Staten Island, New York, Wemootah served in New York Harbor as a patrol craft and net tender through the end of World War I.

Wemootah was disarmed in January 1919 and put up for sale. Her name was stricken from the Navy List on 13 June 1919, and she was sold to Mr. W. O. Graves of New York City on 10 October 1919.

Notes

  1. Both the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (at www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/w/wemootah.html) and NavSource Online (at http://www.navsource.org/archives/12/170201.htm) give Wemootah's speed in "miles per hour", implying statute miles per hour, which is very unusual for a watercraft. It may be that both sources mean her speed was 13 knots; if they really do mean that her speed was 13 statute miles per hour, the equivalent in knots would be 11.3.

References

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