Patrol vessel of the United States Navy
History
United States
Name Olympic
Owner Frank Wright (1917)
Builder E. W. Heath , Seattle , Washington
Completed 1913
Fate Acquired by U.S. Navy 15 May 1917
Notes Civilian yacht
History
United States
Name USS Olympic
Namesake Previous name retained
Operator United States Navy
Acquired 15 May 1917
Commissioned 9 June 1917
Fate Transferred to U.S. Public Health Service 13 September 1919
United States
Name USPHS Bailhache
Namesake Preston H. Bailhache (1835–1919), U.S. Marine Hospital Service physician
Operator U.S. Public Health Service
Acquired 13 September 1919
Fate Sold 10 February 1934
United States
Name Moby Dick
Namesake A fictional white whale in the 1851 Herman Melville novel Moby-Dick
Owner
H. W. McCurdy (1934)
S. Catherine McCurdy (1941)
Acquired 10 February 1934
Fate Acquired by U.S. Army December 1941
United States
Name USAS Q-108
Operator United States Army
Acquired December 1941
Out of service 1945
Fate Returned to owner 1946
United States
Name Moby Dick
Namesake A fictional white whale in the 1851 Herman Melville novel Moby-Dick
Owner
S. Catherine McCurdy (1946)
Michael R. Uttecht (1949)
Subsequently various owners
Acquired 1946
Fate
Sank 24 May 1989
Refloated, stored, and scrapped
General characteristics (as U.S. Navy patrol vessel)
Type Patrol vessel
Tonnage 40 gross tons
Displacement 28.4 tons
Length 64 ft (20 m)
Beam 13 ft 6 in (4.11 m)
Draft 4 ft 3 in (1.30 m) mean
Propulsion One 55 hp (41 kW) 3-cylinder Standard gasoline engine , one shaft
Speed 9.4 knots
Complement 18
Armament
General characteristics (as USPHS vessel, private yacht, cargo vessel, and passenger vessel)
Tonnage
Length
64.9 ft (19.8 m) (1920)
61.7 ft (18.8 m) (1948)
Beam
13 ft (4 m) (1920)
13.8 ft (4.2 m) (1948)
Draft
5.6 ft (1.7 m) (1920)
6.4 ft (2 m) (1920)
Crew
USS Olympic (SP-260) was a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919. After her U.S. Navy career ended, she served in the United States Public Health Service as the boarding vessel USPHS Bailhache from 1919 to 1934. She then operated as the yacht , cargo vessel , and passenger vessel Moby Dick until 1989, except for a period of World War II United States Army service as USAS Q-108 from 1941 to 1946.
The Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships erroneously claims that the vessel served in the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey from 1919 to 1934 as a survey vessel named USC&GS Dailhache .
Construction, acquisition, and commissioning
Olympic was built as a civilian yacht of the same name in 1913 by E. W. Heath at Seattle , Washington . The U.S. Navy acquired her from her owner, Frank Wright of Seattle, on 15 May 1917 for World War I service as a patrol vessel. She was commissioned on 9 June 1917 as USS Olympic (SP-260).
Service history
U.S. Navy
Operating on section patrol duties in the 13th Naval District (headquartered at Port Townsend , Washington) during World War I, Olympic patrolled in and around Puget Sound .
U.S. Public Health Service
Olympic was transferred to the United States Public Health Service on 13 September 1919, and on 12 November 1919 was renamed USPHS Bailhache [1] in honor of Preston H. Bailhache (1835–1919), a prominent physician of the United States Marine Hospital Service who had once served as a doctor for the family of Abraham Lincoln .[2] [3] Bailhache served with the Public Health Service at Seattle as a boarding vessel until sold to H. W. McCurdy on 10 February 1934.[1]
Later career
After her sale, the vessel returned to service as a private yacht with the name Moby Dick . S. Catherine McCurdy of Port Townsend acquired Moby Dick in 1941.[1]
The United States Army acquired Moby Dick for World War II service in December 1941 and renamed her USAS Q-108 . She remained in U.S. Army service until the end of the war in 1945, and the Army returned her to her previous owner, S. Catherine McCurdy, in 1946. The vessel again was named Moby Dick .[1]
In 1949, Michael R. Uttecht of King Cove , Territory of Alaska , acquired Moby Dick and placed her in service as a cargo vessel . Moby Dick subsequently had a number of owners in the Pacific Northwest and eventually was converted into a passenger vessel .[1]
Moby Dick sank at her moorings on 24 May 1989. She was refloated and placed in storage at Everett , Washington. She eventually was scrapped.[1]
References
External links
Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 1989
Shipwrecks Other incidents