Wyandotte at the Boston Navy Yard during the Spanish–American War
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | USS Wyandotte |
Namesake | Wyandotte Indian Tribe |
Ordered | 15 September 1862 |
Builder | Miles Greenwood |
Laid down | 28 September 1862 |
Launched | 22 December 1864 |
Completed | 15 February 1866 |
Commissioned | 24 January 1876 |
Decommissioned | 20 September 1898 |
Renamed |
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Refit | 1873–74 |
Fate | Sold for scrap, 17 January 1899 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Canonicus-class monitor |
Displacement | 2,100 long tons (2,100 t) |
Tons burthen | 1,034 tons (bm) |
Length | 224 ft 6 in (68.4 m) |
Beam | 43 ft 5 in (13.2 m) |
Draft | 13 ft 3 in (4.0 m) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | |
Speed | 8 knots (15 km/h; 9.2 mph) |
Complement | 100 officers and enlisted men |
Armament | 2 × 15-inch (381 mm) smoothbore Dahlgren guns |
Armor |
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Originally named USS Tippecanoe, after the river in Indiana,[1] USS Wyandotte was a single-turreted Canonicus-class monitor built for the Union Navy during the American Civil War. Completed after the end of the war, Wyandotte was laid up until 1876, although she received her new name in 1869. The ship was commissioned in 1876 and assigned to the North Atlantic Squadron for the next three years. She became a receiving ship in 1879 until she was placed in reserve again in 1885. Wyandotte was on militia duty when the Spanish–American War began and she was recommissioned in 1898 to defend Boston, Massachusetts from any Spanish raiders. The ship was decommissioned after the end of the war and sold for scrap in 1899.