DUE TO A LAPSE IN FEDERAL FUNDING, THIS WEBSITE WILL NOT BE ACTIVELY MANAGED.

USCG LOGO

For more information, please visit our CURRENT STATUS page.

 

Scally, 1920 (ex-Eagle 20)

Oct. 30, 2020
PRINT | E-MAIL

Scally, 1920

ex-Eagle 20


Builder: Ford Motor Co., Detroit, MI

Commissioned:

USN: 28 July 1919

USCG: 20 January 1920

Decommissioned: 13 September 1920

Disposition: Sold 16 November 1922

Hull:

Displacement (tons)- 615 tons

Length- 200' 9" oa

Beam- 33' 1"

Draft- 8' 6"

Machinery

Main Engines- Geared turbine

SHP- 2,500

Armament- 2-4"/50, 1-3"/50 (USN)

Complement- 5 officers, 56 men (USN)


Design & Service:

These mass-produced anti-submarine vessels were designed for quick construction.  The first of 100 ordered was begun in May 1918. Only 80 were completed, with many assuming minor roles after the Armistice.  Because they were of flat steel plate hull construction, their seakeeping characteristics were not optimal.  When transferred to the USCG these vessels were named for men lost on USCGC Tampa in World War I.

Taken over at New London, CT, she was later sent to Baltimore, MD.


Sources:

Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.  Washington, DC: USGPO.

Donald Canney.  U.S. Coast Guard and Revenue Cutters, 1790-1935.  Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1995.

U.S. Coast Guard.  Record of Movements: Vessels of the United States Coast Guard: 1790 - December 31, 1933.  Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1934; 1989 (reprint).