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USS Conestoga (AT 54)

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Name
  
USS Conestoga

Commissioned
  
10 November 1917

Length
  
52 m

Laid down
  
1904

Reclassified
  
AT-54, 17 July 1920

Construction started
  
1904

USS Conestoga (AT-54) Conestoga AT54 Class Photographs

Acquired
  
by purchase, 14 September 1917

Fate
  
Declared lost with all her crew, 30 June 1921 [wreck found 2016]

Builder
  
Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard

The second USS Conestoga (SP-1128/AT-54) was an ocean-going tug in the United States Navy. Commissioned in 1917, it disappeared in the Pacific Ocean in 1921. The fate of the vessel was a mystery until its wreck was positively identified in 2016.

Contents

USS Conestoga (AT-54) USN ShipsUSS Conestoga SP1128 later AT54

Construction

USS Conestoga (AT-54) Fleet Tug AT

The tug was built for the Philadelphia and Reading Railway as the Conestoga in 1904 by Maryland Steel Company, Sparrows Point, Maryland. She was purchased on 14 September 1917 for the World War I duty and designated SP-1128. She was commissioned on 10 November 1917, Lieutenant (junior grade) C. Olsen, USNRF, in command.

Service history

USS Conestoga (AT-54) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Assigned to the Submarine Force, Conestoga carried out towing duties along the Atlantic coast, transported supplies and guns, escorted convoys to Bermuda and the Azores, and cruised with the American Patrol Detachment in the vicinity of the Azores. At the end of the war she was attached to Naval Base No. 13, Azores, from which she towed disabled ships and escorted convoys until her arrival at New York on 26 September 1919. She was then assigned to harbor tug duty in the 5th Naval District at Norfolk, Virginia.

USS Conestoga (AT-54) USS Conestoga AT 54 photos and video Office of National Marine

Conestoga (which had received the hull number AT-54 in July 1920) went to the Pacific in late 1920. She was at San Diego, California and Mare Island, California, during the first three months of 1921. On 25 March of that year the tug steamed out of Mare Island, with a barge of coal sailing via Pearl Harbor to take up an assignment as station ship at Tutuila, American Samoa.

USS Conestoga (AT-54) USS Conestoga AT 54 photos and video Office of National Marine

Commanded by Lt. Ernest Larkin Jones, Conestoga was not heard from again. Despite an extensive search, the only trace found of her at the time of her loss was a lifeboat bearing the initial letter of her name found near Manzanillo, Mexico.

Rediscovery

USS Conestoga (AT-54) NOAA solves disappearance mystery of USS Conestoga HeritageDaily

Her wreck was discovered in 2009, as an unidentified shipwreck in the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary, a few miles from Southeast Farallon Island, just off the San Francisco, California coast. In October 2015, a joint NOAA and Navy mission confirmed the wreck was the Conestoga and on 23 March 2016, 95 years after the ship was lost, a formal announcement was made. The shipwreck was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2016.

USS Conestoga (AT-54) USS Conestoga At54 by Lambert M Surhone Mariam T Tennoe Susan

References

USS Conestoga (AT-54) Wikipedia