Williams-Whittlesey Co.

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USS Althea (SP-218).jpg
Althea, likely before 1917
History
United States
NameUSS Althea
OwnerJames H. Moore / U.S. Navy / G. F. Colton
BuilderWilliams-Whittlesey Co., New York
Completed1907
Acquired15 June 1917
Commissioned12 May 1917
Decommissioned2 August 1919
Stricken2 August 1919
HomeportDetroit, Michigan
FateSank, 18 March 1920; sold for salvage, 12 May 1920; abandoned, 1926
General characteristics
Displacement25 long tons (25 t)
Length60 ft (18 m)
Beam12 ft (3.7 m)
Draft4 ft (1.2 m)
Speed9.5 mph
Complement9
Crew3
Armament1 × 3-pounder, 2 × machine guns

Williams-Whittlesey Motor Boat and Shipbuilding Co., often referred to as Williams-Whittlesey Co., was an American boatbuilding company[1] in Queens, New York, that operated at least from 1891[2] to 1910.[3] Headquartered in Long Island City[4] with a boatyard in the adjacent Astoria neighborhood, the company produced tugboats, river vessels, scows, and yachts.[2] Among its products were two private motorboats that were later commissioned by the United States Navy for service during World War I: Osprey II, which served as USS Osprey II (SP-928) from 1917 to 1918; and Althea, which served as USS Althea (SP-218) from 1917 to 1919.

Among its naval architects was H. Newton Whittelsey,[5] whose yacht designs were noted for introducing "the modern type of large raised deck cruiser," according to Motor Boating magazine.[6] Another employee was Daniel I. Whittlesey,[7] a 1901 graduate of Yale University's Sheffield Scientific School. By 1916, Whittelsey and Whittlesey had formed their own shipbuilding company headquartered at 11 Broadway in Manhattan.[8]

External links[]

References[]

  1. ^ Blue Book of American Shipping ...: Marine and Naval Directory of the United States ... Marine Review Publishing Company. 1907.
  2. ^ a b Hendricks' Commercial Register of the United States. S. E. Hendricks Company. 1891.
  3. ^ Blue Book of American Shipping: Marine and Naval Directory of the United States; Statistics of Shipping and Shipbuilding in America. Marine Review Publishing Company. 1910.
  4. ^ Yale Sheffield Monthly. 1906.
  5. ^ H. Newton Whittelsey spelled his last name -el-; his exact relationship to the owners is unknown.
  6. ^ "H. Newton Whittlesey". www.lesliefield.com. Retrieved 2021-12-13.
  7. ^ Daniel I. Whittlesey spelled his last name -le-; his exact relationship to the owners is unknown.
  8. ^ Engineers (U.S.), Society of Naval Architects and Marine (1916). Year Book.
  9. ^ "Motor Boating archives". onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2021-12-13.

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