The wooden-hulled, twin-screw, steam yacht Akela—built in 1899 at Morris Heights, N.Y., by the Gas Engine and Power Co. and the Charles L. Seabury Co.—was acquired by the Navy from Bridgeport, Connecticut businessman Henry Alfred Bishop and delivered on 24 December 1917. Redesignated USS Akela (SP-1793) was commissioned at the New York Navy Yard on 16 April 1918.

Underway prior to World War I.
History
United States
NameUSS Akela (SP-1793)
BuilderGas Engine and Power Co. and the Charles L. Seabury Co., Morris Heights, N.Y.
Launched1899
Acquired24 December 1917
Commissioned16 April 1918
Stricken15 May 1919
FateScrapped in 1935
General characteristics
Displacement72 t
Length117 ft 6 in (35.81 m)
Beam14 ft 6 in (4.42 m)
Draft4 ft 8 in (1.42 m)
Propulsiontwo triple-expansion engines, two shafts
Speed12 knots (22 km/h)
Complement15
Armamentnone

Assigned to the Armed Guard Inspection Board of the 3d Naval District, Akela took inspection parties to various merchant ships with embarked armed guard detachments over the next several months. Entering the Seabury yard at Morris Heights on 6 November, Akela was still there, undergoing repairs, when the armistice was signed on 11 November 1918. She remained there, inactive and "awaiting orders", into the spring of 1919. The last formal entry in the ship's log, dated 15 April, does not report a formal decommissioning. In any case, the ship was returned to her owner on that day and stricken from the Navy list exactly one month later.

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