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USS
West Virginia (ARC-10), Cruiser
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The first HUNTINGTON (ACR-5), an armored cruiser, was
launched as WEST VIRGINIA 18 April 1903 by Newport News
Shipbuilding Co., Newport News, Va.; sponsored by Miss
Katherine V. White; and commissioned 23 February 1905,
Captain C. H. Arnold in command.
After shakedown training, WEST VIRGINIA cruised with
the New York Naval Militia as a unit of the Atlantic Fleet
until 30 September 1906 when she sailed for duty with the
Asiatic Squadron. The ship remained with the Asiatic
Squadron on training operations for 2 years, and after
overhaul at Mare Island in 1908 joined the Pacific Fleet for
similar exercises along the West Coast of the United States.
During 1911 and 1912, she made a cruise with the Fleet to
Hawaiian waters and in 1914 steamed on special duty off the
west coast of Mexico for the protection of American
interests. She remained off Mexico during the Vera Cruz
crisis, and returned to Bremerton, Wash., to become a part
of the Pacific Reserve Fleet.
WEST VIRGINIA remained at Bremerton until 20 September
1916 when she again sailed to Mexico for the protection of
American lives and property and to back up U.S. diplomacy.
While on this service, she was renamed HUNTINGTON 11
November to permit the assignment of her old name to a
newly-authorized battleship, BB-48. After, 5 months service
off Mexico, she steamed to Mare Island for the installation
of catapult devices on the quarterdeck and equipment to
accommodate four seaplanes on the boat deck ways.
HUNTINGTON was detached from the Reserve Force and
placed in full commission 5 April 1917. She departed Mare
Island 11 May and steamed to Pensacola, Fla., via the Panama
Canal. Detached from the Pacific Fleet after her arrival in
Florida 28 May, she spent the next 2 months at the Naval
Aeronautic Station, Pensacola, engaging in a series of
important early experiments with balloons and seaplanes
launched from the deck. The cruiser then sailed for Hampton
Roads 1 August and arrived New York 5 days later. There,
HUNTINGTON formed with a convoy of six troopships bound for
France departing 8 September. En route, several balloon
observation flights were made, and on one of these, 17
September, the balloon was forced down by a squall and the
balloonist became entangled in its rigging. Seeing the
emergency, shipfitter Patrick McGunigal jumped overboard to
release the pilot from the balloon basket, by then
overturned and underwater. For his heroic action, McGunigal
was awarded World War I’s first Medal of Honor. The day
after the rescue the convoy was turned over to American
destroyers in European waters; and HUNTINGTON steamed back
to Hampton Roads, arriving 30 September.
After replenishing at Norfolk, HUNTINGTON sailed to New
York 5 October to have her catapult and seaplanes removed.
She got underway 27 October and arrived Halifax 2 days later
to embark a high-level U.S. Commission to confer with the
Allies. Presidential envoy, Colonel House; Adm. W. S.
Benson; Gen. T. H. Bliss; and other dignitaries took passage
in HUNTINGTON, arriving Davenport, England, 7 November 1917,
to be met by British officials. HUNTINGTON departed for New
York, via Hampton Roads, arriving 27 November.
Subsequently, the cruiser returned to the important
duty of escorting convoys of troops and supplies to Europe,
making nine such voyages to Europe and back between 19
February and 13 November 1918. In addition, HUNTINGTON made
three coastal convoy passages from New York to Hampton
Roads. She entered Brooklyn Navy Yard 17 November 1918 for
conversion to a troop transport.
Assigned to Transport Force, Atlantic Fleet, HUNTINGTON
next sailed for France to bring home veterans of the
European fighting. She departed New York 17 December,
arrived Brest 29 December, and brought over 1,700 passengers
to New York 14 January. The ship made five more voyages to
France and return, bringing home nearly 12,000 troops, and
terminated her last voyage at Boston 5 July 1919. Detached
from Transport Force, she was reassigned to Cruiser Force
and became flagship of Flying Squadron 1, 8 July 1919.
HUNTINGTON decommissioned at Portsmouth Navy Yard,
Portsmouth, N.H., 1 September 1920. She was struck from the
Navy List 12 March 1930 and sold in accordance with the
London treaty for the reduction of naval armaments 30 August
1930.
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