USS Canandaigua (ID-1694)

History
United States
NameUSS Canandaigua[1]
BuilderNewport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Newport News, Virginia[1]
LaunchedMay 1901[1]
Commissioned2 March 1918[1]
NotesOperated as commercial passenger-cargo ship El Siglo c. 1901-1917[1]
General characteristics
TypeMinelayer (in 1918)[1]
Displacement7,000 tons[1]
Length405 ft (123 m)[1]
Beam48 ft (15 m)[1]
Draft20 ft (6.1 m)[1]
Speed15 knots[1]
Capacity830 mines (900 max)[1]
Crew21 officers and 400 men[1]
Armament

The second USS Canandaigua was the Southern Pacific freighter El Siglo temporarily converted for planting the World War I North Sea Mine Barrage. Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company launched El Siglo at Newport News, Virginia in May 1901 for service between New York City and Gulf of Mexico seaports of New Orleans and Galveston, Texas. The United States Shipping Board took control of the ship from Southern Pacific Steamship Company in 1917.

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Belknap, Reginald Rowan The Yankee mining squadron; or, Laying the North Sea mining barrage (1920) United States Naval Institute pp. 46–47, 74 & 110