USS Shearwater (1887)

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History
United States
Name: Shearwater
Namesake: Any of numerous oceanic birds related to the petrels and albatrosses that usually skim close to the waves in flight
Owner: H. R. Wolcott
Builder: Hawthorne and Company at Leith, Scotland
Completed: in 1887
Acquired: by the United States Navy on 9 May 1889
In service: 31 December 1898 (as a training ship)
Out of service: 24 April 1908
Struck: 24 April 1908
Fate: sold in 1908
General characteristics
Type: Schooner
Propulsion: Schooner sail

USS Shearwater (1887) was a schooner acquired by the United States Navy in 1889. She served the Navy until 1898, when she was loaned to Pennsylvania as a training ship. She remained in service in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, until struck and sold in 1908.

Construction

The first ship so named by the Navy, Shearwater, a steel schooner-rigged yacht, was built in 1887 by Hawthorne and Company at Leith, Scotland, and purchased by the Navy on 9 May 1889 from H. R. Wolcott.

Service history

Training ship

Loaned to the Pennsylvania Naval Militia on 31 December 1898, she served as a training ship at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Fate

Shearwater was struck from the Navy list on 24 April 1908. She was sold in the Fall of 1908 to Mr. Samuel B. Wilson and delivered to him at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.

References