USCGC Seneca (1908)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/USCGC_Seneca_(1908) an entity of type: Thing

USCGC Seneca, or before 1915 USRC Seneca, was a United States Coast Guard cutter built and commissioned as a "derelict destroyer" with the specific mission of locating and then destroying abandoned shipwrecks that were still afloat and were a menace to navigation. She was designed with excellent sea-keeping qualities, a long cruising range, good towing capabilities, and by necessity the capacity to store a large amount of munitions. She was one of five Coast Guard cutters serving with the U.S. Navy in European waters during World War I. rdf:langString
rdf:langString USCGC Seneca (1908)
rdf:langString *USCGC Seneca (1915 and later)
rdf:langString *USRC Seneca (1908 to 1915)
xsd:integer 14604194
xsd:integer 1105764959
xsd:date 1936-03-21
xsd:integer 244500
xsd:double 11.2
rdf:langString Miss Edith E. Hepburn
xsd:date 1908-11-12
rdf:langString ref|Sources don't agree on tonnage and crew size. Larzelere gives displacement at 1445 tons and a peacetime complement of 8 officers, 4 warrant officers and 75 enlisted.|group=Note
xsd:integer 4
rdf:langString Cutter
rdf:langString *9 officers, 65 enlisted *8 officers, 4 warrant officers, 75 enlisted *,
rdf:langString United States
xsd:integer 1259
rdf:langString Scrapped 1950
xsd:date 1908-03-18
rdf:langString *USRC Seneca *USCGC Seneca
rdf:langString A tribe of the Iroquois Indians
rdf:langString Triple-expansion steam engine, , , diameter X stroke; two boilers
rdf:langString USCGC Seneca, or before 1915 USRC Seneca, was a United States Coast Guard cutter built and commissioned as a "derelict destroyer" with the specific mission of locating and then destroying abandoned shipwrecks that were still afloat and were a menace to navigation. She was designed with excellent sea-keeping qualities, a long cruising range, good towing capabilities, and by necessity the capacity to store a large amount of munitions. She was one of five Coast Guard cutters serving with the U.S. Navy in European waters during World War I.
<millimetre> 62179.2
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 35267
xsd:double 62.1792
xsd:double 10.3632
xsd:date 1908-03-18
xsd:string Scrapped 1950
xsd:date 1908-11-12
xsd:date 1936-03-21
xsd:double 5.1816

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