USS Lomado (SP-636)

History
United States
Name: USS Lomado
Namesake: Previous name retained
Builder: F. S. Nook, East Greenwich, Rhode Island
Completed: 1916
Acquired:
  • Purchased 18 May 1917
  • Delivered 29 May 1917
Commissioned: 1 June 1917
Fate: Sold 30 June 1919
Notes: Operated as private motor yacht Lomado 1916-1917
General characteristics
Type: Patrol vessel
Tonnage: 63 gross register tons
Length: 69 ft (21 m)
Beam: 15 ft 10 in (4.83 m)
Draft: 3 ft 10 in (1.17 m)
Speed: 9.5 knots
Complement: 10
Armament: 1 × .30-caliber (7.62-mm) machine gun

USS Lomado (SP-636) was a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919.

Lomado was built as a private motor yacht of the same name by F. S. Nook at East Greenwich, Rhode Island, in 1916. On 18 May 1917, the U.S. Navy purchased her from Frederick T. Rogers of Providence, Rhode Island, for use as a section patrol boat during World War I. Rogers delivered her to the Navy on 29 May 1917, and she was commissioned as USS Lomado (SP-636) on 1 June 1917 with Boatswain's Mate E. S. Angell, USNRF, in command. Lomado was enrolled in the Naval Coast Defense Reserve on 5 June 1917.

Assigned to the 2nd Naval District in southern New England, Lomado served as a section and shore patrol boat based at New Bedford, Massachusetts, for the rest of World War I. She patrolled the coast from Buzzards Bay in Massachusetts to Narragansett Bay in Rhode Island. She also trained men for duty in section patrol boats.

Lomado was sold to John J. Hanson of Jersey City, New Jersey, on 30 June 1919.

References

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