USS Tingey (TB-34)

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Name: USS Tingey
Namesake: Commodore Thomas Tingey
Builder: Columbian Iron Works, Baltimore, Maryland
Laid down: 29 March 1899
Launched: 26 March 1901
Sponsored by: Miss Anna T. Craven
Commissioned: 7 January 1904
Decommissioned: 30 January 1919
Renamed: Coast Torpedo Boat No. 17, September 1918
Struck: 28 October 1919
Fate: Sold, 10 March 1920
General characteristics
Class and type: Blakely-class torpedo boat
Displacement: 166 long tons (169 t)
Length: 176 ft (54 m) w/l
Beam: 17 ft 6 in (5.33 m)
Draft: 4 ft 8 in (1.42 m)
Speed: 24.94 knots (46.19 km/h; 28.70 mph) in trials
Complement: 28
Armament: • 3 × 1-pounder rifles
• 3 × 18 in (457 mm) torpedo tubes

USS Tingey (TB-34), was a Blakely-class torpedo boat of the United States Navy. She was the first of three ships to be named for named after Commodore Thomas Tingey.

The first Tingey (Torpedo Boat No. 34) was laid down on 29 March 1899 at Baltimore, Maryland, by the Columbian Iron Works, launched on 25 March 1901, sponsored by Miss Anna T. Craven, the great-great-granddaughter of Commodore Tingey, and commissioned at Norfolk, Virginia, on 7 January 1904, Lt. John Francis Marshall in command.

Service history

1904–1917

Tingey then joined the Reserve Torpedo Flotilla at its base at the Norfolk Navy Yard and remained there for the first third of her Navy career. For the most part, she lay tied up at pierside; but, periodically she got underway to insure her material readiness should a need for her services ever arise. By 1908, she was reassigned to the 3rd Torpedo Flotilla, but she remained relatively inactive at Norfolk. In 1909, she was listed as a unit of the Atlantic Torpedo Fleet. However, all three organizations to which she was assigned appear simply to have been different names for the same duty — lying at pierside in reserve.

Sometime late in 1909, Tingey moved south from Norfolk to Charleston, South Carolina, where she was promptly placed in reserve again on 22 December 1909. The torpedo boat remained at Charleston, in various conditions of reserve, but apparently always still in commission. Infrequently, she got underway to test her machinery. In 1917, Tingey moved north to the Philadelphia Navy Yard where she was placed out of commission on 8 March 1917.

1917–1919

A month later on 7 April 1917, she was recommissioned and moved further north to patrol the coastal waters of the 1st Naval District during the period the United States participated in World War I.

In September 1918, the torpedo boat's name was canceled so that it could be given to Destroyer No. 272, one of the new Clemson-class destroyers. The older vessel then became Coast Torpedo Boat No. 17. Two months later, Germany sued for the armistice which ended hostilities.

Decommissioning and sale

Coast Torpedo Boat No. 17 was placed out of commission at Philadelphia on 30 January 1919, and she was struck from the Navy List on 28 October 1919. On 10 March 1920, she was sold to the Independent Pier Co., of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

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