Harman Patil (Editor)

USS Goldsborough (TB 20)

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Name
  
Goldsborough

Sponsored by
  
Miss Gertrude Ballin

Construction started
  
14 July 1898

Length
  
60 m

Laid down
  
14 July 1898

Commissioned
  
9 April 1908

Launched
  
29 July 1899

USS Goldsborough (TB-20) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Namesake
  
Rear Admiral Louis M. Goldsborough

Ordered
  
3 March 1897 (authorised)

Builder
  
Wolff & Zwicker Iron Works

The first USS Goldsborough (Torpedo Boat No. 20/TB-20/Coast Torpedo Boat No. 7) was a torpedo boat in the United States Navy during World War I. She was named for Louis M. Goldsborough.

Goldsborough was launched 29 July 1899 by the Wolff & Zwicker Iron Works, Portland, Oregon; sponsored by Miss Gertrude Ballin; commissioned in the Puget Sound Navy Yard 9 April 1908, Lieutenant Daniel T. Ghent in command.

Goldsborough based at San Diego, California, as a unit of the Pacific Torpedo Fleet, cruising for 6 years along the coast of California and the Pacific Coast of Mexico in a schedule of torpedo practice, and joint fleet exercises and maneuvers. She was placed in ordinary at the Mare Island Navy Yard 26 March 1914 ; served the Oregon State Naval Militia at Portland (December 1914-April 1917) ; and again fully commissioned 7 April 1917 for Pacific coast patrol throughout World War I.

She was designated Coast Torpedo Boat No. 7 on 1 August 1918, her name being assigned to a new destroyer under construction. The torpedo boat decommissioned in the Puget Sound Navy Yard, Bremerton, Washington, 12 March 1919 and sold for scrapping on 8 September 1919.

References

USS Goldsborough (TB-20) Wikipedia