Harman Patil (Editor)

USS Humming Bird (AMc 26)

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Ordered
  
as Whaling City

Acquired
  
30 October 1940

Out of service
  
18 February 1945

Construction started
  
1936

Length
  
28 m

Draft
  
2.7 m

Laid down
  
1936

In service
  
12 June 1941

Struck
  
c. 1945

Launched
  
1936

Weight
  
182.9 tons

USS Humming Bird (AMc-26) was a unique coastal minesweeper acquired by the U.S. Navy for the dangerous task of removing mines from minefields laid in the water to prevent ships from passing.

The first ship to be named Humming Bird by the Navy was a wooden dragger, built as Whaling City in 1936 by Morse Shipyard, Thomaston, Maine; acquired by purchase 30 October 1940 from her owner, William Hayes of New Bedford, Massachusetts; converted to Navy use at Geo. Lawley & Son, Neponset, Massachusetts, and placed in service 12 June 1941.

Humming Bird operated throughout the war as a minesweeper and minesweeping training vessel, largely in the vicinity of Mine Warfare Training School, Yorktown, Virginia.

She was reclassified Small Boat C-13548, 12 June 1944 and placed out of service at New York 18 February 1945. Delivered to the Maritime Commission, the craft was eventually sold.

References

USS Humming Bird (AMc-26) Wikipedia