DeKalb was decommissioned 22 September 1919 and returned to the
United States Shipping Board for disposal the following day. She returned to civilian control, initially as
DeKalb and, after 1920, as
Mount Clay. The ship was acquired by
W. Averell Harriman and included with ten previous ships acquired from the
Kerr Navigation Company in a name change so that all were prefixed with an American mountain and thus renamed
Mount Clay. The ship was specially modified by
Morse Dry Dock and Repair Company to be a third class only (described as "first class steerage") immigrant ship for the
United American Line of New York. The ship was gutted by fire, which began early 15 December 1919, while on the
Hudson River at
Spuyten Duyvil. Lt. Cmdr. William A. Willetts and his crew were rescued by a
tugboat, and it took
fireboats several hours to quell the blaze. During the rebuilding extensive tearing out of damaged decking, plating, and dismantling and rebuilding of deck structures was undertaken. Due to a capacity of 1,452 passengers and crew of 211, special attention had to be focused on life boats. Fourteen sets of
Welin davits were fitted to each side with a variety of lifeboats and some rafts with a capacity for 1,663 persons, 1,613 in boats. On 9 February 1921
Mount Clay stood by and rescued the crew and ship's cat from the sinking freighter
Bombardier about four hundred miles southeast of
Halifax. The sinking ship's radio operator, Edward Herno, had worked hours to make repairs and get the SOS out as the wireless had been severely damaged in the storm and wreck. All but two of
Bombardiers lifeboats had been destroyed so one of the
Mount Clay boats launched to assist.
Mount Clay made the initial voyage as an immigrant ship on Christmas Day 1920 (Marine Review) or 26 December (DANFS). The ship's last westbound voyage was from Hamburg
via Queenstown, Ireland to New York on 15 October 1925. She was then laid up until 1934 when she was scrapped. File:SS Mount Clay Exterior.JPG|SS
Mount Clay under way circa 1921 File:SS Mount Clay Refit.JPG|SS
Mount Clay during refitting from changeover from USS
DeKalb File:SS Mount Clay Deck.JPG|The deck of SS
Mount Clay during refitting from changeover from USS
DeKalb ==Citations==