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Naval History and Heritage Command

Naval History and Heritage Command

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  • Ship History
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Sebago
(ScTug: t. 130; l. 99'; b. 21'; s. 12 k.; a. 1 6-pdr.; cpl.- 22)

A lake in southwestern Maine, some 13 miles long and 10 miles wide.

II

The second Sebago, a tug built in 1893 by John H. Dialogue and Son, Camden, N.J., was purchased for service during the Spanish-American War as Hortense from O'Connor and Smoot on 30 April 1898; renamedTacoma; and placed in service in the 7th District of the Auxiliary Naval Force and based at Pensacola, Fla.

Renamed Sebago in January 1900 and designated YT-23 in July 1920, the harbor tug remained in service at various stations including Pensacola, Guantanamo Bay, Port Royal, Charleston, Norfolk, and Philadelphia, until struck from the Navy list on 3 December 1936. She was sold for scrapping on 25 January 1937 to B. J. Maier, Philadelphia, Pa.

Published: Thu Jun 04 14:52:56 EDT 2015