USS Sardonyx (PYc-12)

Career (USA)
Name: USS Sardonyx (PYc-12)
Namesake: Sardonynx, a variant of Onyx
Builder: Germania Werft
Launched: 1928 as Queen Anne
Acquired: 19 June 1941
Commissioned: 16 August 1941
Decommissioned: 3 January 1944
Out of service: 17 July 1946
Struck: 29 October 1946
Fate: Transferred to Maritime Commission and sold 10 July 1947
General characteristics
Displacement:640 tons
Length:186 ft (57 m)
Beam:27 ft (8.2 m)
Draft:10 ft 6 in (3.20 m)
Propulsion:2 diesel engines
Speed:12.5 knots
Complement:65
Armament:Four 30 caliber machine guns. Two depth charge tracks.

USS Sardonyx (PYc-12), formerly the yacht named Queen Anne (1928), was a patrol boat in the United States Navy during World War II.

Pre-War civilian service as a yacht

The Sardonyx was originally a steel-hulled yacht with diesel engines, built in 1928 as the Queen Anne for Mr. Alexander Dallas Thayer at the Germania-Werft shipyards in Kiel, Germany. According to United States Government publications from 1941, the USS Sardonyx was the sister ship to the USS Opal (PYc-8), formerly Irving T. Bush's and Marian Spore Bush's motor yacht Coronet; both yachts were built at the same yard in 1928.

Sardonyx during the war years

The vessel was purchased by the Navy from the original owner at New York on 19 June 1941. Immediately after acquiring the yacht, the Navy started converting the vessel for use as a coastal patrol boat. On 18 July 1941, the vessel was renamed Sardonyx, and on 15 August 1941, it was commissioned. Conversion was completed by mid-October 1941, and Sardonyx proceeded for duty to New London, under the National Defense Research Committee (NDRC). Sardonyx served in support of experiments on the varied applications of electronics and underwater sound to naval warfare.

In January 1942, Sardonyx shifted back to New York; but, after a brief yard period, she returned to New London and resumed her work for the NDRC and the Navy's Underwater Sound Laboratory. Decommissioned and placed in service on 3 January 1944, she remained based at New London, conducting operations for the Underwater Sound Laboratory and escorting submarines in the area, through the end of World War II and into 1946.

After World War II

In the spring of 1946, Sardonyx was ordered inactivated; and, with the summer, she moved to New York, where she was placed out of service on 17 July 1946. Her name was struck from the Navy list on 29 October 1946; and on 10 July 1947, she was transferred to the Maritime Commission and sold.

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