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USS Felicia (SP 642)

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Name
  
USS Felicia

Laid down
  
date unknown

Launched
  
1898

Namesake
  
Former name retained

Christened
  
as Felicia

Length
  
55 m

USS Felicia (SP-642)

Owner
  
Jesse H. Metcalf of Providence, Rhode Island

Builder
  
J. N. Robbins Company, of Brooklyn, New York

USS Felicia (SP-642) was a yacht acquired by the U.S. Navy during World War I. She was outfitted and armed by the Navy as a patrol craft, and was assigned to patrol the New England waters. Her task of protecting ships from German submarines was interrupted by her collision with a submarine. Post-war she was reconfigured to her civilian condition, and was sold in 1919.

Contents

Built as a yacht in Brooklyn

The first ship to be so named by the Navy, Felicia (No. 642) was built in 1898 by J. N. Robins Company, Brooklyn, New York; purchased by the Navy 2 June 1917; and commissioned 29 June 1917, Lieutenant H. Langworthy, USNRF, in command. (The other USS Felicia, PYc-35, was built in 1931, and served in World War II.)

World War I service

Based out of Newport, Rhode Island, Felicia patrolled the New England coast, on duty with the 2d Naval District, until August 39, 1918, when she collided with a submarine in heavy fog off Montauk Point.

Decommissioning and sale

Felicia was in repair or laid up at various yards until decommissioned at Brooklyn, New York, 25 August 1919. Felicia was stricken from the list of Naval vessels in September 1919 and sold 25 March 1920.

References

USS Felicia (SP-642) Wikipedia


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