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erves, and operated along the Atlantic coast under the direction of officers commanding the following districts: First Naval District, Boston; Second Naval District, Newport, R.I.; Third Naval District, New York City; Fourth Naval District, Philadelphia; Fifth Naval District, Norfolk, Va. Hundreds of sailors, fishermen, seafaring men generally, and yachtsmen joined the Naval Coast Defense Reserve, which proved to be an extremely popular branch of the service with college men. Most of the reserves of this class--there were nearly 40,000 of them--were required for the coast-patrol fleet, and they had enlisted for service in home waters. But when the need for oversea service arose the reserves made no objection at all to manning transports and doing duty on patrol, mine-laying, mine-sweeping, and other craft engaged in duty in the war zone. In the course of taking over yachts by the Navy Department, Franklin D. Roosevelt, who has been so efficient and untiring in his capacity as Assistant Secretary of the Navy, charged that yachtsmen were not helping the government, and were holding their craft for high prices. Probably this was the case in enough instances to make Mr. Roosevelt impatient, but it would seem that the large body of yacht-owners did their best, not only donating their yachts to the government or selling them at a fair price, but by themselves enlisting in the service. There were yachtsmen who, in addition to giving their boats, defrayed the cost of maintenance. Great craft such as G. W. C. Drexel's _Alcedo_ (already noted as sunk by a torpedo), A. Curtiss James's _Aloha_, J. C. and A. N. Brady's _Atlantic_, A. C. Burrage's _Aztec_, I. T. Bush's _Christabel_, H. A. Loughlin's _Corona_, J. P. Morgan's _Corsair_, Robert T. Graves's _Emeline_, E. P. and J. W. Alker's _Florence_, Edgar Palmer's _Guinevere_, George F. Baker, Jr.'s _Wacouta_, W. L. Harkness's _Cythera_, Robert Goelet's _Nahma_, J. G. Bennett's _Lysistrata_, John Borden's _Kanawha_, Henry Walter's _Narada_, Howard Gould's _Niagara_, Horace G. Dodge's _Nokomis_, Vincent Astor's _Noma_, Mrs. E. H. Harriman's _Sultana_, Morton F. Plant's _Vanadis_, P. W. Rouss's _Winchester, Aphrodite_, the O. H. Payne estate; F. G. Bourne's _Alberta_, and Edward Harkness's _Wakiva_--these great yachts among other steam-driven palaces, passed into the hands of the Navy Department in one way or another, and have performed valiant service. Some of them, indeed, have
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