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Letter B as a private motorboat, probably at the time of her acquisition by the United States Navy in May 1917.
History
United States
NameUSS Letter B
NamesakePrevious name retained
Builder Electric Launch Company (ELCO), Bayonne, New Jersey
Completed1912
Acquired7 May 1917
Commissioned20 October 1917
FateReturned to owner 29 April 1919
NotesOperated as private motorboat Letter B 1912-1917 and from 1919
General characteristics
Type Patrol vessel
Length40 ft (12 m)
Beam6 ft (1.8 m)
Draft2 ft (0.61 m)
Propulsion Gasoline engine, one shaft
Speed30 knots
Complement3
ArmamentNone
Letter B as a private motorboat, hauled out of the water sometime between 1912 and 1917.

USS Letter B (SP-732) was a United States Navy patrol vessel in commission from 1917 to 1919.

Letter B was built in 1912 as a private " runabout"-type motorboat of the same name by the Electric Launch Company (ELCO) at Bayonne, New Jersey. On 7 May 1917, the U.S. Navy acquired her under a free lease from her owner, C. Chester Eaton of Brockton, Massachusetts, for use as a section patrol vessel during World War I. Enrolled in the Naval Coast Defense Reserve on 10 May 1917, she was commissioned as USS Letter B (SP-732) on 20 October 1917 at Norfolk, Virginia.

Assigned to the 5th Naval District, Letter B served as a harbor and shore patrol boat at Norfolk and Hampton Roads, Virginia, for the rest of World War I . She also served as a duty and emergency boat for seaplanes at Naval Air Station Norfolk.

The Navy returned Letter B to Eaton on 29 April 1919.

References