USS Yarrow (SP-1010)

USS Yarrow (SP-1010) underway on Lake Michigan during World War I.
History
United States
Name: USS Yarrow
Namesake: Previous name retained
Builder: Kargard, Chicago, Illinois
Completed: 1913
Acquired:
  • ca. July 1917
  • Formally leased 27 August 1917
Commissioned: 27 July 1917
Struck: 7 March 1919
Fate: Returned to owner 7 March 1919
Notes: Operated as private motorboat Yarrow 1913-1917 and from 1919
General characteristics
Type: Patrol vessel
Tonnage: 29 gross tons
Length: 65 ft (20 m)
Beam: 13 ft (4.0 m)
Draft: 5 ft (1.5 m) forward
Speed: 13 miles per hour[1]
Complement: 8
Armament:

USS Yarrow (SP-1010) was a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919.

Yarrow was built in 1913 as a private wooden-hulled motorboat of the same name by Kargard at Chicago, Illinois. In 1917, the U.S. Navy acquired Yarrow from her owner, K. D. Clark, for use as a section patrol boat during World War I. She was commissioned on 27 July 1917 as USS Yarrow (SP-1010) and the Navy formally acquired her from Clark under a free lease on 27 August 1917.

Assigned to the 9th Naval District, Yarrow patrolled the waters of Lake Michigan for the rest of the 1917 Great Lakes shipping season. After being laid up for the winter of 1917-1918 while the lakes were frozen over, she resumed her patrol duties in the spring of 1918 and continued them through the end of the 1918 shipping season late in the year.

The Navy returned Yarrow to Clark on 7 March 1919 and she was stricken from the Navy List the same day.

Notes

  1. The Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships at and NavSource Online at give Yarrow's speed as 13 miles per hour, implying statute miles per hour, an unusual unit of measure for the speed of a watercraft. It is possible that her speed actually was 13 knots (24 km/h). If 13 statute miles per hour is accurate, the equivalent in knots is 11.3.

References

Yarrow as a private motorboat, underway on the Great Lakes sometime between 1913 and 1917.
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