- Constructed in Philadelphia
- World War I service
- Final decommissioning
- See also
- References
{{other ships|USS Concord}}{{Infobox ship imageShip image= USS Concord SP-773.jpg | Ship caption= USS Muscotah (YT-33) off the Washington Navy Yard, District of Columbia, circa 1932-1934. }}{{Infobox ship career | Hide header= | Ship country=United States | 1945}} | Ship name= USS Concord | Ship namesake= A town in Massachusetts | Ship owner= Staples Transportation Company of New York City | Ship operator= | Ship registry= | Ship route= | Ship ordered= | Ship awarded= | Ship builder= Charles Hillman, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Ship original cost= | Ship yard number= | Ship way number= | Ship laid down= date unknown | Ship launched= | Ship sponsor= | Ship christened= | Ship completed= 1898 | Ship acquired= by the Navy 22 September 1917 | Ship commissioned= 20 November 1917 as USS Concord (SP 773) | Ship recommissioned= | Ship decommissioned= circa November 1919 | Ship maiden voyage= | Ship in service= December 1919 at the Washington Navy Yard | Ship out of service= 4 November 1934 | Ship renamed= USS Mendota (YT 33), 20 November 1920; later renamed Muscotah | Ship reclassified= USS Muscotah (YT-33) | Ship refit= | Ship struck= | Ship reinstated= | Ship homeport=*Brest, France | Ship identification= | Ship motto= | Ship nickname= | Ship honours= | Ship honors= | Ship captured= | Ship fate= sold 30 April 1937; fate unknown | Ship status= | Ship notes= | Ship badge= }}{{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header= | Header caption= | Ship class= | Ship type= Tugboat | Ship tonnage= 353 tons | Ship displacement= | Ship tons burthen= | Ship length= 140' | Ship beam= 26' | Ship height= | Ship draught= | Ship draft= 11' | Ship depth= | Ship hold depth= | Ship decks= | Ship deck clearance= | Ship ramps= | Ship ice class= | Ship power= | Ship propulsion= not known | Ship sail plan= | Ship speed= 12 knots | Ship range= | Ship endurance= | Ship test depth= | Ship boats= | Ship capacity= | Ship troops= | Ship complement= 36 officers and enlisted | Ship crew= | Ship time to activate= | Ship sensors= | Ship EW= | Ship armament= One 3-inch gun | Ship armour= | Ship armor= | Ship aircraft= | Ship aircraft facilities= | Ship notes= }} | USS Concord (SP-773), later known as USS Mendota (YT-33) and again later as USS Muscotah (YT-33) was a tugboat acquired by the U.S. Navy during World War I. Concord was initially assigned to North Atlantic towing duties, and later was assigned as harbor tug at the Washington Navy Yard. She was sold in 1937. Constructed in Philadelphia The third ship to be so named by the U.S. Navy, Concord (No. 773) was built in 1898 by Charles Hillman, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; purchased by the Navy 22 September 1917; outfitted by Boston Navy Yard; and commissioned 20 November 1917, Lieutenant (junior grade) E. M. Gracie, USNRF, in command. She was renamed and reclassified Mendota (YT-33) on 20 November 1920, and her name was again changed on 30 January 1932 to Muscotah. World War I service Concord sailed from Philadelphia 15 December 1917 for Bermuda where she joined Galatia and Gypsum Queen to tow three French submarine chasers to Ponta Delgada, Azores. She continued to Brest, France, arriving 22 February 1918 for service as harbor tug until 25 October 1919. She returned to Norfolk, Virginia, 28 November, and the next month reported to Washington Navy Yard where she was placed "in service" and served as a harbor tug. Final decommissioning She was placed out of service 4 November 1934 and sold 30 April 1937. See also References- {{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/c12/concord-iii.htm}}
- USS Concord (SP-773), 1917-1937. Later renamed Mendota and Muscotah (both as YT-33)
{{DEFAULTSORT:Concord}} 5 : World War I auxiliary ships of the United States|Tugs of the United States Navy|Ships built in Philadelphia|United States Navy District of Columbia-related ships|1898 ships |