In 1919, a National Geographic expedition to Katmai on the Alaska Peninsula photographed Red Wing at Kalsin Bay on Kodiak Island in the Territory of Alaska while she was operating under the control of the United States Department of Agriculture.[1] At the time, she was a motor schooner used by the Department of Agriculture Kodiak station at Kalsin Bay for transportation to and from Kodiak.[1]
The U.S. Bureau of Fisheries (BOF) acquired Red Wing from the Department of Agriculture in 1926.[2] She remained out of commission at the BOF fish hatchery at Afognak Lake (also known as Litnik Lake) on Afognak Island in the Kodiak Archipelago while awaiting the installation of a new engine[2] to replace her original 40hp engine.[1] She was outfitted with berths for a crew of five[2] and, after the new engine – a three-cylinder Standard gasoline engine[2] – and new fuel tanks were installed, she was commissioned in 1928.[2]
The BOF assigned Red Wing fishery patrol duties in the Kodiak Archipelago.[2] She also provided transportation for BOF personnel to and from the Afognak Lake salmon hatchery.[2] In 1935 she began fishery patrols along the Alaska Peninsula.[2]
While she was hauled out of the water for the 1938–1939 offseason, Red Wing suffered damage during an earthquake in the spring of 1939.[2] As a result, she performed poorly on patrol during the 1939 fishing season, and the BOF cut her service short that year.[2] The Bureau of Marine Inspection and Navigation assessed that her condition was so poor that she was not worth repairing.[2] The BOF therefore condemned and dismantled Red Wing in August 1939.[2]