Patrol vessel of the United States Navy
|
History |
United States |
Name |
- USS Estelle (1917โ1918)
- USS SP-747 (1918โ1933)
|
Acquired | 1917 |
Renamed | SP-747 in 1918 |
Fate | Stricken 1933 |
Notes | On loan to Culver Naval School 1919โ1933 |
General characteristics |
Type | Patrol vessel |
USS Estelle (SP-747), later USS SP-747, was a United States Navy patrol vessel commissioned in 1917 and stricken in 1933.
Estelle was built as a private motorboat of the same name. The U.S. Navy acquired her in 1917[1] for use as a section patrol vessel in World War I. She apparently was commissioned that year as USS Estelle (SP-747).
Little information is available regarding Estelle's naval career. Apparently she saw service as a section patrol boat somewhere along the coast of the United States for the rest of World War I. She was renamed USS SP-747 sometime in 1918.[2]
On 23 June 1919, a dispatch directed the Commandant, 3rd Naval District, to ship SP-747 and the patrol boat USS Ahdeek (SP-2589) to the Culver Naval School in Culver, Indiana.[3] Like Ahdeek, she presumably operated there on loan from the Navy for many years,[4] because she was not stricken from the Navy Directory until sometime in 1933,[5] the same year Ahdeek was stricken.[6]
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