USS Ripple
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USS Ripple

United States Navy trawler which served as a minesweeper


Country of Registry
United States
Manufacturer
Fore River Shipyard
Operator
United States Navy
Vessel Type
ship
Decommissioning Date
February 11, 1919
Aliases
USS Ripple (ID-2439)

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The USS Ripple (ID-2439) was a United States Navy minesweeper with a notable service history during the closing months of World War I. Originally constructed as a civilian steel-hulled fishing trawler, Ripple was built by the Fore River Shipbuilding Company in Quincy, Massachusetts, and launched on November 20, 1910. She was initially owned by the Bay State Fishing Company of Boston. In 1917, the Russian Empire purchased Ripple along with two other trawlers, Foam and Spray, intending to incorporate them into the Imperial Russian Navy during World War I. The Russians renamed her T44, but the outbreak of the Russian Revolution prevented her from leaving the United States. Subsequently, on May 29, 1918, the U.S. Navy chartered all three ships from the Russian government for wartime service. She was assigned the Identification Number (Id. No.) 2491, and on August 6, 1918, she was commissioned at Tebo's Yacht Basin in New York City as USS Ripple (ID-2491). Configured as a minesweeper, Ripple was assigned to the 3rd Naval District, with her base at Base No. 8 on Staten Island. Her operational duties included patrols and minesweeping activities off the Ambrose Light Vessel and Fire Island Light Vessel into early 1919. Notably, on January 1, 1919, Ripple participated in salvage operations alongside the tug USS Resolute and submarine chasers USS SC-55 and USS SC-293 to assist the troop transport USS Northern Pacific, which had run aground off Fire Island. The ship contributed to the refloating efforts, which successfully completed on January 18, 1919, with salvage concluding on January 21. Decommissioned on February 11, 1919, Ripple was returned to her original Russian owners, though by then the Russian government was in exile following the revolution. She was sold locally and continued commercial service as a fishing trawler out of Boston until she was scrapped in 1949. Her service exemplifies the multifaceted roles of civilian vessels adapted for wartime needs and their subsequent return to commercial duties.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

2 ship citations (1 free) in 2 resources

Ripple (SP 2439) Subscribe to view
Ripple, whaleback bow trawler
Journal American Neptune (1941-1990; Vols. 1-50)
Published Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.,
ISSN 0003-0155
Pages (1910), XLIV, 119