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The second PITTSBURGH (Armored Cruiser 4) was laid down
as PENNSYLVANIA 7 August 1901 by William Cramp and Sons,
Philadelphia; launched 22 August 1903; sponsored by Miss
Coral Quay, daughter of Senator Matthew S. Quay; and
commissioned 9 March 1905, Capt. Thomas C. McLean in
command.
PENNSYLVANIA operated on the East Coast and in the
Caribbean until 8 September 1906 when she cleared Newport
for the Asiatic Station, returning to San Francisco 27
September 1907 for west coast duty. She visited Chile and
Peru in 1910. During the winter of 1910-1911, a plane
landed on and took off from a platform constructed on her
afterdeck, opening the era of naval aviation. While in
reserve at Puget Sound between 1 July 1911 and 30 May 1913,
the cruiser trained naval militia.
She was renamed
PITTSBURGH 27 August 1912 to free the name Pennsylvania for
a new battleship.
Recommissioning, PITTSBURGH patrolled the west coast of
Mexico during the troubled times of insurrection which led
to American involvement with the Vera Cruz landing in April
1914. Later, as an impressive symbol of American might and
concern, she served as flagship for Admiral William B.
Caperton, Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet, during
South American patrols and visits during World War I.
Cooperating with the British, she scouted German raiders and
acted as a powerful deterrent against their penetration of
the eastern Pacific.
Returning to the east coast, PITTSBURGH prepared for
duty as flagship for Commander, U.S. Naval Forces in the
eastern Mediterranean, for which she sailed from Portsmouth,
N.H., 19 June 1919. Cruising the Adriatic, Aegean, and
Black Seas, she joined in the massive relief operations and
other humanitarian concerns with which the Navy carried out
its quasi-diplomatic functions in this troubled area. In
June 1920, she sailed north to visit French and British
ports and cruise the Baltic on further relief assignments
before returning to decommission at Philadelphia 15 October
1921.
Recommissioned 2 October 1922, PITTSBURGH returned to
European and Mediterranean waters as flagship of Naval
Forces in Europe, then arrived New York 17 July 1926 to
prepare for flagship duty with the Asiatic Fleet. She
sailed 16 October for Chefoo, arriving 23 December. Early
in January 1927, she landed sailors and Marines to protect
Americans and other foreigners in Shanghai from the turmoil
and fighting of the Chinese power struggle. When Chiang
Kai-shek's Cantonese Army won control of Shanghai in March,
PITTSBURGH resumed operations on patrol and exercises with
the Asiatic Fleet. Closing her long career of service, she
carried the Governor General of the Philippines, Dwight F.
Davis on a courtesy cruise to such ports as Saigon, Bangkok,
Singapore, Belawan Deli, Batavia, Surabaya, Bali, Macassar,
and Sandakan, returning to Manila 15 April 1931. Six days
later, she steamed for Suez enroute Hampton Roads, arriving
26 June 1931. Decommissioning 10 July 1931, she was sold
for scrapping under the terms of the London Treaty to Union
Shipbuilding, Baltimore, Md., 21 December 1931.
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