USRC McLane (1845)

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NameUSRC McLane
NamesakeLouis McLane
OperatorU.S. Revenue Marine
Awarded1 April 1843[1]
History
United States
NameUSRC McLane
NamesakeLouis McLane
OperatorU.S. Revenue Marine
Awarded1 April 1843[1]
BuilderCyrus Alger, Boston, Massachusetts[2]
Yard numberSteamer #1[1]
Launched1845
Completed1845
Commissioned1845
DecommissionedDecember 1847
FateSold 3 December 1847[2]
NotesConverted to a light vessel at Merrill Shell Bank[2]
General characteristics [2]
Class & typeSchooner
Tonnage368 tons
Length160 ft (49 m)[3]
Beam24 ft (7.3 m)[3]
Draft9.3 ft (2.8 m)[3]
Installed power2 high-pressure horizontal 24" diameter X 36" stroke steam engines
Propulsionsail, Hunter horizontal wheel later converted to side wheel
Armament4 × 32-pounders[4]

The United States Revenue Cutter McLane was one of 4 cutters out of 8 total cutters of the Legere–class iron steamers based on a design by U.S. Navy Lieutenant William Hunter. Hunter sought to eliminate the cumbersome and highly exposed side paddle wheels used on many of the steamers on the period by using wheels that were placed horizontally under the ship. Because of inefficiencies, the design used more coal and was subject to more mechanical failures than other designs.[2][3] Before McLane was launched the Hunter wheel design was converted to side wheel configuration.[1][5][6]

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