USS Dubuque (PG-17)

For other ships with the same name, see USS Dubuque.
History
Name: USS Dubuque
Builder: Gas Engine and Power Co. and Charles L. Seabury Co., Morris Heights, N.Y.
Laid down: 22 September 1903
Launched: 15 August 1904
Commissioned: 3 June 1905 (Gunboat No. 17)
Decommissioned: 22 July 1911
Recommissioned: 4 August 1914
Decommissioned: 27 May 1919
Recommissioned: 25 May 1922
Decommissioned: 7 September 1945
Reclassified:
  • AG-6 (Miscellaneous Auxiliary), 1919
  • IX-9 (Unclassified Miscellaneous Unit), 24 April 1922
  • PG-17 (Patrol Gunboat), 4 November 1940
Fate: Transferred to Maritime Commission for disposal, 19 December 1946
General characteristics
Class and type: Dubuque-class gunboat
Displacement: 1,237 long tons (1,257 t)
Length: 200 ft (61 m)
Beam: 35 ft (11 m)
Draft: 12 ft (3.7 m)
Propulsion:
  • 2 × 500ihp Gas Engine Power Co. vertical triple-expansion engines
  • 2 × 596.5ihp vertical triple-expansion engines (1921)
Speed:
  • 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph)
  • 12.9 knots (23.9 km/h; 14.8 mph) (1921)
Complement: 162
Armament:

USS Dubuque (PG-17) was a United States Navy patrol combatant ship that served in both World War I and World War II. She was named for Dubuque, Iowa.

She was launched 15 August 1904 by Gas Engine and Power Co. and Charles L. Seabury and Co., Morris Heights, Bronx, where she was sponsored by Miss M. Tredway. She was commissioned on 3 June 1905, commanded by Lieutenant Commander Augustus F. Fechteler. She was reclassified AG-6 in 1919; IX-9, 24 April 1922; and PG-17, 4 November 1940.

Service history

19051911

Dubuque cruised from her home port of Portsmouth, New Hampshire in Atlantic coastal waters and in the Caribbean protecting American interests and citizens, a group of whom she saved from depredations by Cuban bandits on the night of 18–19 May 1907. She arrived at Chicago, Illinois on 29 June 1911, and was decommissioned 22 July for use as a training ship by the Illinois Naval Militia.

19141919

Recommissioned on 4 August 1914, Dubuque sailed three days later for Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where she was placed in commission in reserve 3 October. She was fitted out as a mine-training ship and on 30 July 1915 she returned to a fully commissioned status and was assigned to Mining and Minesweeping Division, Atlantic Fleet. She participated in training along the Atlantic coast and after American entry into World War I in April 1917, she installed and tended submarine nets in Hampton Roads and at New London, Connecticut. She also trained reserve officers at the Naval Academy.

Assigned to temporary duty with the Cruiser and Transport Force, Dubuque made three voyages between New York and Halifax, Nova Scotia, as a convoy escort between 6 June and 14 July 1917. She arrived at St. Thomas, Virgin Islands on 3 August for duty with the French division of the Caribbean Patrol, investigating isolated harbors and inlets in the Caribbean and on the coasts of Venezuela and Colombia to prevent their use by German submarines. On 8 December 1918, she reported to the American Patrol Detachment, Atlantic Fleet, with whom she served along the East Coast until returning to Portsmouth 6 May 1919. She again went out of commission 27 May 1919.

19221945

Dubuque was recommissioned 25 May 1922 and sailed from Portsmouth 8 June for Detroit, Michigan, where she arrived 24 June. Attached to the 9th Naval District, she took Naval Reservists on cruises from her home port of Detroit into Lakes Superior and Michigan every summer. She was placed in reduced commission 1 November 1940 and on the 14th sailed for Boston, where she was assigned to the 1st Naval District and was modernized and refitted. She returned to full commission 1 July 1941 and patrolled on the New England coast until 14 October. Two days later she arrived at Little Creek, Virginia to serve as gunnery practice ship for the Armed Guard School there. Throughout her second war, Dubuque trained merchant ship armed guard crews in Chesapeake Bay. She was decommissioned 7 September 1945 and transferred to the Maritime Commission for disposal 19 December 1946.

Awards

References


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