USS Pequot (ID-2998)
History | |
---|---|
Name: | USS Pequot |
Builder: | Joh. C. Tecklenborg, Geestemünde, Germany |
Launched: | 1910 |
Acquired: | 28 October 1918 |
Commissioned: | 28 October 1918 |
Struck: | 11 July 1919 |
Fate: | Returned to US Shipping Board, 11 July 1919 |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Cargo ship |
Displacement: | 12,500 long tons (12,701 t) |
Length: | 426 ft 9 in (130.07 m) |
Beam: | 55 ft 2 in (16.81 m) |
Draft: | 27 ft (8.2 m) |
Speed: | 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph) |
Complement: | 70 |
Armament: |
|
The second USS Pequot (ID–2998) was a cargo ship of the United States Navy during World War I.
The ship was built in 1910 by Joh. C. Tecklenborg in Geestemünde, Germany, and was operated as Ockenfels by the Deutsche Dampfschiffahrts-Gesellschaft Hansa (German Steamship Company Hansa, DDG „Hansa“), until interned at New York at the outbreak of World War I.
Service history
Seized when the United States entered the war in April 1917, she was taken over by the US Navy, on bare boat basis, from the Shipping Board. Since her German crew had intentionally made the machine unworkable, it took some time to repair, and it was only on 28 October 1918 that she was commissioned as Pequot. Armed with a 5-inch- and a 3-inch-gun and with Lt. Comdr. John Decry, USNRF, in command, she served in the Naval Overseas Transportation Service (NOTS) as a general cargo carrier on both the Army and Shipping Board accounts. She was struck from the Navy List and returned to the Shipping Board on 11 July 1919.
The ship was purchased in 1923 by the California Steamship Co. in Panama and almost immediately chartered to her former owners DDG „Hansa“, who then re-purchased her on 28 June 1923 and put her into service under the new name Argenfels. She was sold for scrapping in 1932.
References
- This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. The entry can be found here.
External links
- Photo gallery at navsource.org