USS Cheyenne (1898) explained
USS Cheyenne, a converted tug, was launched in 1885 by Sam Paegnall,
Charleston, South Carolina; acquired by the
United States Navy on 8 July 1898 as SS
Bristol and renamed
Cheyenne. Outfitted at
Charleston Navy Yard, she was commissioned on 30 July 1898 and reported to the Auxiliary Naval Force.
Cheyenne sailed from the Charleston Navy Yard on 30 July 1898 and proceeded to Key West, for duty off the Florida coast blockade until 18 August, when she cleared for Port Royal, South Carolina, arriving on 21 August. The tug was decommissioned there on 29 August 1898, and sold on 14 November 1900. Renamed "Jacob Kuper" and put in commercial service in 1901. She was sunk on 13 August 1902 when her boiler exploded off Tompkinsville, New York, Staten Island. Three of her crew and one crewman of the barge she was pulling were killed.[1] [2]
Notes and References
- Web site: Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general Steamboat-inspection Service, Year ending June 30, 1903 . 29 . Washington . Government Printing Office . 1903. Haithi Trust . 2 May 2020.
- Book: The New Navy . 13 May 2013 . Routledge . 9781135865429 . Googlebooks . 2 May 2020.