Launched date unknown Tonnage 20,870 kg | Laid down date unknown Length 18 m | |
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Namesake Idaho, the 43d State of the Union, admitted in 1890 Owner W. W. Vensel of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Builder Stearns & McKay, Marblehead, Massachusetts |
USS Idaho (SP-545) was an existing 60-foot-long motorboat purchased by the U.S. Navy during World War I. She was outfitted as an armed patrol craft and assigned to the Fourth Naval District based at League Island Navy Yard, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her patrol duties stretched from Philadelphia on the Delaware River to Cape May, New Jersey, on the Delaware Bay. Post-war she was returned to her owner.
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Commissioned at Cape May, N.J.
The third ship to be so named by the U.S. Navy, Idaho (SP-545), a motor boat, was built in 1907 by Stearns & McKay, Marblehead, Massachusetts; acquired from her owner, W. W. Vensel of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in June 1917; and commissioned at Cape May, New Jersey, 12 July 1917, Chief Quartermaster W. H. Naylor, USNRF, in command.
World War I service
Idaho was attached to the 4th Naval District which was headquartered at League Island Navy Yard on the Delaware River near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
She was assigned to patrol and general duties, serving on harbor entrance patrol, and submarine net patrol in the Cape May and Philadelphia areas.
Post-war disposition
She was out of commission during the winter of 1917-18, and finally returned to her owner 30 November 1918.