USS
McDougal was
commissioned into the United States Navy on 16 June 1914 at
Boston under the temporary command of
Lieutenant, junior grade,
John H. Hoover. After a
shakedown cruise,
McDougal began duty with the Torpedo Flotilla,
Atlantic Fleet. Prior to America's entry into
World War I, she operated out of
New York and
Newport, Rhode Island, and carried out maneuvers and tactical exercises along the east coast. In early April 1915,
McDougal and destroyer were temporarily assigned to patrol near the New York Quarantine Station. There were concerns by
Dudley Field Malone, the local port collector, that some of the interned German steamships at New York might try to slip out during a heavy snowstorm. While on board
McDougal during one of these patrols, Malone discovered what
The New York Times termed a "widespread conspiracy" intended to supply British warships outside U.S. territorial waters, in violation of the American neutrality in World War I. She cruised to the
Caribbean and took part in fleet war games between January and May 1916, and in addition served intermittently with the
Neutrality patrol. In May, she was declared the "champion smokeless vessel" of the U.S. Navy by
The Christian Science Monitor after she was able to steam at for four hours without betraying her position by smoke. In June,
The Washington Post reported that she was damaged during maneuvers off
Cape Ann, and had to put into the
Boston Navy Yard for leak repairs. At 05:30 on Sunday, 8 October 1916,
wireless reports came in of a German submarine stopping ships near the
Lightship Nantucket, off the eastern end of
Long Island. After an
SOS from the British steamer was received at about 12:30, Rear Admiral
Albert Gleaves ordered
McDougal and other destroyers at Newport to attend to survivors. According to a firsthand account of the events by Nathan Levy, a
quartermaster on
McDougal, published on 22 October in
The New York Times, the destroyer steamed the distance to the lightship in three-and-a-half hours, arriving after German submarine had stopped the
Holland America Line cargo ship and the British passenger ship . As
Hans Rose - the captain of U-53 - had done with three other ships
U-53 had sunk earlier in the day, he gave passengers and crew aboard
Blommersdijk and
Stephano adequate time to abandon the ships. After sinking
Blommersdijk with two torpedoes, Six American destroyers witnessed
U-53 sink the liner with her
deck gun. In total, 226 survivors from
U-53s five victims were rescued by the destroyer flotilla;
McDougal rescued 6 of
Blommersdijks men.
McDougal returned to the Caribbean for exercises during the first three months of 1917, and then returned to New York and Newport to prepare for distant service. == World War I ==