USS Limpkin (AMc-48)

For other ships with the same name, see USS Limpkin.
History
United States
Builder: Greenport Basin and Construction Company
Laid down: 24 February 1941
Launched: 5 April 1941
Commissioned: 8 August 1941
Decommissioned: 15 April 1946
Struck: 1 May 1946
Fate: sold in 1947
General characteristics
Displacement: 185 tons
Length: 97 ft 1 in (29.59 m)
Beam: 22 ft (6.7 m)
Draft: 9 ft (2.7 m)
Propulsion: one 400bhp Cooper Bessemer G.N.-DR-6 diesel engine, one shaft
Speed: 10 kts
Complement: 17
Armament: two .50 cal. machine guns

USS Limpkin (AMc-48) was an Accentor-class coastal minesweeper acquired by the U.S. Navy for clearing coastal minefields.

The first ship to be named Limpkin by the Navy, AMc-48 was laid down 24 February 1941 by Greenport Basin and Construction Company, Long Island, New York; launched 5 April 1941; sponsored by Miss Elsie Thornhill; and placed in service 8 August 1941.

World War II service

Following shakedown off Yorktown, Virginia, the new coastal minesweeper reported to the 3rd Naval District, New York City, 9 August. After the United States entered World War II. Limpkin and her sister-minesweepers assumed responsibility for keeping crucial New York Harbor clear. For 2 years the ship swept shipping channels that extended fingerlike from Manhattan to open water, permitting unprecedented amounts of war material to be shipped to the European theater to support the Allied war effort.

Transferred to the 5th Naval District

Transferred to the 5th Naval District 18 December 1943, Limpkin shifted homeport to Norfolk, Virginia. For the rest of the war, she operated at the mouth of Chesapeake Bay, protecting the approaches to that vital center of Allied naval power.

Post-war decommissioning

Limpkin was placed out of service 15 April 1946 and struck from the Navy list 1 May 1946. She transferred to the Maritime Commission 13 January 1947. Late in the year she was sold to W. E. Lewis, Inc., of Fleeton, Virginia; renamed Hiawatha; and placed in service as a commercial trawler. She was subsequently renamed Blue Waters.

References

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