| History | |
|---|---|
|  United States | |
| Name | USCGC Sycamore | 
| Namesake | American sycamore | 
| Builder | Dubuque Boat & Boiler Works, Dubuque, Iowa | 
| Commissioned | 9 September 1941 | 
| Decommissioned | 30 June 1977 | 
| General characteristics [1] | |
| Class and type | Sycamore-class buoy tender | 
| Displacement | 280 tons | 
| Length | 113 ft 9 in (34.67 m) | 
| Beam | 26 ft (7.9 m) | 
| Draft | 5 ft 6 in (1.68 m) | 
| Propulsion | 
 | 
| Speed | 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) | 
| Complement | 20 | 
| Armament | Small arms | 
USCGC Sycamore (WAGL-268), a 114-foot, 230-ton river buoy tender, was one of three such vessels (her sisters were the USCGC Dogwood (WAGL-259) and USCGC Forsythia (WAGL-63)) built to replace the stern paddlewheel steamers that the Coast Guard decided were too expensive to maintain.
References
- ↑ "Sycamore, 1941". U.S. Coast Guard Cutter History. 2012. Retrieved 6 July 2012.
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