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The seventh WASHINGTON (Armored Cruiser No. 11) was
laid down on 23 September 1903 at Camden, N.J., by the New
York Shipbuilding Co., launched on 18 March 1905; sponsored
by Miss Helen Stewart Wilson, daughter of United States
Senator John L. Wilson of Washington state; and commissioned
at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 7 August 1906, Capt. James
D. Adams in command.
The
above photos were taken at Rodondo Beach, CA.
WASHINGTON was fitted out there until 1 November when
she got underway for Hampton Roads, Va., whence she departed
a week later as an escort for LOUISIANA (Battleship No. 19)
which was then carrying President Theodore Roosevelt to
Panama for an inspection of progress of work constructing
the Panama Canal. During that voyage, the armored cruiser
touched at Hampton Roads and Piney Point, Va.; Colon,
Panama; Chiriqui lagoon; and Mona Passage before she
returned to Newport News on 26 November. She headed back
toward the Delaware capes on 8 December, arrived at the
Philadelphia Navy Yard on the 11th, and remained there
undergoing repairs into the spring of 1907.
WASHINGTON departed League Island on 11 April and
arrived at Hampton Roads the next day. She remained there
into May participating in festivities of the Jamestown
Tercentenary Exposition which commemorated the founding of
Jamestown in 1607, the first permanent settlement of
Anglo-Saxon people in America. She returned northward soon
thereafter, spending most of May undergoing docking and
tests at the New York Navy Yard. She then shook down off
Tompkinsville, Staten Island, N.Y., from 28 May to 5 June
before she returned to Hampton Roads for further observances
at the Jamestown Exposition.
WASHINGTON departed Hampton Roads on 11 June and
proceeded via Bradford, R.I., to Newport where she joined
TENNESSEE (Armored Cruiser No. 10) before heading across the
Atlantic on the 14th, bound for European waters. The
sisterships visited the French ports of Royan, Ile d’Aix, La
Pallice, and Brest between 23 June and 25 July, before
returning to Tompkinsville in August to run speed trials.
Following those trials and a period of yard work at the
New York Navy Yard, WASHINGTON set sail for the Pacific
Station, again in company with TENNESSEE. The two armored
cruisers subsequently called at Hampton Roads;
Port-of-Spain, Trinidad; British West Indies; Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil; Montevideo, Uruguay; Punta Arenas, Chile;
Callao, Peru; Acapulco, Mexico; and Pichilinque Bay, Mexico;
before they joined the Pacific Fleet in time to fire target
practices with them at Magdalena Bay, Mexico, from late
December 1907 into January 1908. WASHINGTON subsequently
operated both in company with the Fleet and on independent
tactical exercises out of Magdalena Bay into March,
operating also off Santa Barbara, San Francisco, and San
Diego, as well as San Pedro, Calif. Other ports visited by
the armored cruiser into the summer of 1908 included Redondo
Beach, Venice, Monterey, Angel Island, Calif.; and Port
Townsend, Port Angeles, SEATTLE, Tacoma, and Bremerton,
Wash. She was among the units of the Fleet reviewed by the
Secretary of the Navy at San Francisco between 6 and 17 May.
WASHINGTON operated off the west coast into 1909 before
she made preparations to sail in company with the Armored
Cruiser Squadron to "show the flag" in the Far East. She
accordingly got underway from San Francisco on 5 September
1909 and called, in succession, at Honolulu, Hawaii; from 10
to 20 September; and Nares Harbor, Admiralty Islands--where
she coaled ship between 17 and 25 October--before she
arrived at Manila, Philippine Islands, on 30 October.
After visiting Woosung (near Shanghai), China, from 14
to 30 December 1909, WASHINGTON and her sisters called at
Yokohama, Japan, from 3 to 20 January 1910, and Honolulu
from 31 January to 8 February, before returning to the west
coast. WASHINGTON made port back at San Francisco via Port
Discovery and Bremerton, Wash., on 3 March. She then
returned to Bremerton where she commenced a period of
repairs on 21 March.
WASHINGTON next operated off the west coast into the
autumn of 1910, holding target practices off Santa Cruz,
Calif., before returning to San Francisco. She coaled ship
at Tiburon, Calif., on 7 and 8 August before shifting to San
Francisco to prepare for her next deployment. On 14 August,
she departed San Francisco, bound for South America on the
first leg of her voyage to the east coast to join the
Atlantic Fleet. With the ships of the 1st Division of the
Pacific Fleet, WASHINGTON visited Valparaiso, Chile, and
took part in the observances of the Chilean Centennial
Celebration from 10 to 23 September. She then resumed her
voyage around South America, touching at Talcahauano and
Punta Arenas, Chile; Rio de Janeiro; Carlisle Bay, Barbados;
and St. Thomas, Danish West Indies; before she arrived at
Culebra, Puerto Rico, on 2 November to prepare for target
practice with the Fleet.
WASHINGTON's next area of operations was the Tidewater
area of Virginia--especially Hampton Roads and Lynnhaven
Bay--before the armored cruiser underwent repairs at the
Norfolk Navy Yard from 20 December 1910 to 2 January 1911.
The armored cruiser subsequently underwent another period of
repairs at the Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard before heading
south with stores and material for delivery to the 5th
Division of the Fleet in Cuban waters. She arrived at
Guantanamo Bay on 20 March and remained there into the
summer, conducting trials and exercises with the 5th
Division. She then returned northward and stopped at
Hampton Roads from 21 to 24 June before pushing on to New
York, where she arrived on the 25th.
The armored cruiser operated off the northeastern
seaboard through the summer, holding exercises and maneuvers
in areas ranging from Cape Cod Bay to Hampton Roads. During
that time, she cruised briefly with the Naval Militia from
19 to 21 July 1911; acted as a reference ship for torpedo
practice off Sandwich Island, Mass., on 2 August; witnessed
the DELAWARE (Battleship No. 28) as that man-of-war fired at
the target hulk SAN MARCOS (former Second Class Battleship
TEXAS) on 27 and 28 August, and then conducted battle
practice with the Fleet off the southern drill grounds. In
early November, WASHINGTON was among the ships of the Fleet
reviewed by President William H. Taft.
The cruiser then participated in a search problem out
of Newport, R.I., from 9 to 18 November before she sailed
for the West Indies in company with NORTH CAROLINA (Armored
Cruiser No. 12), arriving at Santo Domingo, Dominican
Republic, on 26 November. WASHINGTON subsequently returned
home to Hampton Roads in company with her sistership and
went into drydock at the Norfolk Navy Yard three days before
Christmas of 1911.
After returning to the Fleet and participating in
maneuvers in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in late January and early
February 1912, WASHINGTON steamed back to the Norfolk Navy
Yard where, between 13 and 19 February, she underwent
special preparations to embark the Secretary of State and
his party. The armored cruiser then shifted to Key West
where she embarked the Secretary on 23 February. In the
ensuing weeks, WASHINGTON carried the honorable Philander C.
Knox and his guests to such ports as Colon, Panama; Port
Limon, Costa Rica; Puerto Barrios, Guatemala; La Guaira,
Venezuela; Santo Domingo; St. Thomas; Puerto Cabalo,
Venezuela; San Juan; Port-au-Prince; Guantanamo Bay;
Kingston, Jamaica; and Havana, before disembarking her
distinguished guests at Piney Point, Md., on 16 April.
The high point of the spring of 1912 for WASHINGTON was
her service as temporary flagship for the Commander in
Chief, Atlantic Fleet, while she was at the Philadelphia
Navy Yard between 19 April and 3 May. The warship
subsequently paused at New York from 9 to 12 May and at the
Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard for an inspection by the Board
of Inspection and Survey for ships before she conducted
maneuvers out of Provincetown and Newport and then received
Rear Admiral Hugo Osterhaus--the Commander in Chief,
Atlantic Fleet--on board on 26 May. After shifting to
Hampton Roads, WASHINGTON embarked a detachment of
additional marines on 27 May, took on stores; and set out
that day for Key West. There, she awaited further orders
between 30 May and 10 June, while President Taft
concentrated a strong naval force there to prepare for
possible action which might be required by internal problems
in Cuba.
In the late spring and early summer, a rebellion on
that Caribbean island occasioned a show of force by the
United States. WASHINGTON accordingly departed Key West on
10 June and arrived at Havana later that day. She remained
there on "duty in connection with the Cuban rebellion" until
1 July when she shifted to Guantanamo. The rebellion on the
island was put down by the Cuban Government, resulting in
the withdrawal of the American naval and marine
representation there. Accordingly, WASHINGTON sailed to
Hampton Roads, where she discharged her marines and
equipment and went into "first reserve" at the Portsmouth
(N.H.) Navy Yard on 9 July.
She remained inactive until 8 October when she sailed
for New York to participate in the naval review held there
between 10 and 15 October and then resumed her reserve
status at Portsmouth on 17 October. Shifted subsequently
from Portsmouth to the New York Navy Yard--via President
Roads, Mass., and Tompkinsville, Staten Island--WASHINGTON
was assigned duty as receiving ship at the navy yard on 20
July.
The armored cruiser was placed in commission again on
23 April 1914, Capt. Edward W. Eberle in command. Later
that spring, the armored cruiser took on board drafts of men
from Norfolk and Port Royal, S.C., on 30 April and 2 May;
touched at Key West, Fla.; an proceeded to Santo Domingo.
Once again there was unrest in the Dominican Republic.
A revolution in the northern province of Santiago, against
the rule of Provisional President Jose Bordes Valdes, had
been quelled; but one in the province of Puerto Plata--near
the capital of Santo Domingo itself--continued unchecked and
was marked by severe fighting--fighting so severe that
"marked apprehension" existed in WASHINGTON.
On 1 May, the PETREL (Gunboat No. 2) had been ordered
to Dominican waters, but a further show of force seemed to
be in order. Accordingly, WASHINGTON was chosen to "show
the flag" in those troubled waters. She departed Key West
on 4 May and arrived at the beleaguered city of Puerto Plata
on 6 May to protect American interests, joining the gunboat
PETREL. Six days later, Capt. Eberle invited
representatives of both warring parties--the insurgents and
the government--out to his ship, in an attempt to persuade
both sides to come to an amicable settlement.
Unfortunately, the attempt failed, and the fighting
continued. The insurgents were aided by a recent large
consignment of guns and ammunition smuggled across the
Haitian border that had given them new blood. The
revolutionaries soon recaptured the key city of Le Vega and
were successfully holding Puerto Plata. Government forces,
laying siege to that port and shelling the insurgents,
clearly endangered the lives of the neutral citizens still
living in the city. Capt. Eberle objected to the
bombardment and warned President Valdes repeatedly.
WASHINGTON departed Puerto Plata on 6 June with the
conflict between the insurgents and the government of
President Valdes still unresolved. Her place had been taken
by MACHIAS (Gunboat No. 5). WASHINGTON coaled ship and took
on stores at Guantanamo Bay from 7 to 10 June before she
sailed for Veracruz, Mexico. She then remained in Mexican
waters between 14 and 24 June before she shifted to Cape
Haitien, Haiti, to protect American interests there during
an outbreak of violence that summer.
WASHINGTON remained at Cape Haitien into July. In the
meantime, the situation in the Dominican Republic had
worsened when government shellings of rebel positions in
Puerto Plata resulted in an inevitable "incident." On 26
June, a stray shell killed an English woman in Puerto Plata
causing the gunboat MACHIAS to shift to a berth in the inner
harbor and shell one of President Valdes’ batteries,
silencing it with a few well placed shots. During early
July, MACHIAS again fired her guns in anger when stray shots
hit the ship.
In view of those developments, WASHINGTON returned to
Puerto Plata on 9 July and remained there into the autumn,
keeping a vigil to protect American lives and property and
standing by to land her landing force if the situation
required it. That August, Capt. Eberle's attempts to bring
about a conference finally bore fruit. The United States
government sent a commission--consisting of J. F. Fort, the
former governor of New Jersey, James M. Sullivan, the
American Minister to Santo Domingo; and Charles Smith, a New
Hampshire lawyer--to mediate a peace in the Dominican
Republic.
Both sides ultimately accepted the American suggestions
which provided for the establishment of a constitutional
government and the institution of elections under United
States "observation."
WASHINGTON left Santo Domingo on 20 November; but,
later that month, continued high feelings over the closely
contested election resulted in further unrest--unrest met by
the dispatch of additional marines to Santo Domingo. For
WASHINGTON, however, her part in the Dominican intervention
of 1914 was over. She sailed for home and arrived at
Philadelphia on 24 November and became flagship of the
Cruiser Squadron.
Following an overhaul at the Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy
Yard from 12 December 1914 to 11 January 1915, WASHINGTON
sailed--via President Roads, Mass. (where she took on
ammunition on 11 January)--for Hampton Roads, arriving there
on 14 January. After a five-day visit, during which she
took on stores and provisions and an expeditionary force of
marines, WASHINGTON sailed for the Caribbean once more.
Two revolutions had rocked Haiti in 1914; a third, in
January 1915, led by General Vilbrun Guillaume Sam, had
resulted only in further unrest for that troubled nation.
WASHINGTON arrived at Cape Haitien on 23 January, a week
after General Sam’s troops had invested it. The armored
cruiser, flying the flag of Rear Admiral Caperton and
commanded by Capt. Edward L. Beach--the father of the future
naval officer who would win fame as a famous submariner and
author--stayed in port there until the 26th investigating
"political conditions" before she shifted to the Haitian
capital, Port-au-Prince, on 27 January. There, she again
observed local political conditions in the wake of General
Sam’s takeover of the government before sailing, via
Guantanamo, for Mexican waters.
WASHINGTON conducted sub-caliber practices, observed
political conditions, and conducted torpedo practices off
the ports of Tampico, Tuxpan, Progreso, and Veracruz into
the summer. Receiving provisions and stores from the supply
ship CELTIC off Progreso on 26 and 27 June, the armored
cruiser sailed for Guantanamo where she coaled and took on
water on 30 June. She sailed the same day for Cape Haitien,
as all reports from the American minister there indicated
that yet another crisis was brewing.
While WASHINGTON awaited further developments at Cape
Haitien, events in Port-au-Prince deteriorated, moving
American Charge d'Affaire Davis to send a telegram on 27
July to the Secretary of State, Robert Lansing, reporting
the troubled conditions. He reported that President Sam and
some of his men had been surrounded in the presidential
palace and that the presence of American war vessels was
desirable.
In accordance with that message, the Navy dispatched
WASHINGTON to that port. Meanwhile, Sam took refuge in the
French legation where he hoped that diplomatic immunity
would prevail. The mobs of angry Haitians, however, were
not concerned with such international niceties: they
invaded the legation at 1030 on 28 July 1915, forcibly
removed former President Sam, killed and dismembered him,
and paraded portions of his body on poles around the city.
WASHINGTON arrived at Port-au-Prince that day. Upon
reviewing the situation, Admiral Caperton acted quickly. He
ordered marines and a landing force ashore from his flagship
to protect not only American interests but those of other
foreign nations as well. WASHINGTON remained at
Port-au-Prince into the winter. During that time, the
United States effectively ran Haiti. On 12 August, Philippe
Sudra Dartinguenave was elected president; and his
government was recognized by the United States on 17
September 1915.
Ending that lengthy in-port period, WASHINGTON departed
Port-au-Prince on 31 January 1916 and arrived at Guantanamo
the following day. There, she transferred passengers and
stores to other ships of the Fleet and later transferred a
company of marines to Norfolk soon after her arrival in
Hampton Roads on 5 February. The armored cruiser steamed
north, via New York and Boston; reached Portsmouth, N.H., on
29 February; and began an overhaul in the navy yard there
which lasted until the end of March. Then, on 31 March, she
was placed in reserve.
On 9 November 1916, WASHINGTON was renamed SEATTLE
(retaining her classification as Armored Cruiser No. 11).
She was simultaneously taken out of reserve and
recommissioned for duty as flagship of the Destroyer Force.
SEATTLE's peacetime duties as flagship for the
Destroyer Force were short. On 6 April 1917, the United
States, after attempting patiently but futilely to remain
neutral, despite repeated incidents on the high seas,
finally entered World War I.
SEATTLE arrived at New York on 3 June 1917 to be fitted
out at the New York Navy Yard for war service. She sailed
on 14 June as an escort for the first American convoy to
European waters and as flagship for Rear Admiral Albert
Gleaves. At 2215 on 22 June, she encountered her first
enemy submarines in latitude 48-00 N, longitude 25-50 W.
Shortly before the convoy was attacked, SEATTLE's helm
jammed; and she sheered out of formation sharply, sounding
her whistle to warn the other vessels. A few minutes later,
the ship was brought back on course. Soon lookouts noted a
white streak in the water 50 yards ahead of the vessel,
crossing from starboard to port at right angles to SEATTLE's
course. Admiral Gleaves, asleep in the charthouse at the
time, awoke and was on the bridge in time to see the armored
cruiser's gun crews manning their weapons and the transport
DE KALB opening fire on the U-boat.
Subsequently, the destroyer WILKES (Destroyer No. 67)
attacked an enemy submersible but failed to sink the German
submarine. Later information indicated that the enemy,
probably aware of the approach of the first American
expeditionary forces, had dispatched a pair of submarines to
lie in wait for it. The attack, conducted under "ideal"
conditions, was, fortunately for the Americans,
unsuccessful. Admiral Gleaves, in his report to the
Commander in Chief, Atlantic Fleet, on 12 July 1917,
reported unequivocally: "their [the enemy's] failure to
score hits was probably due to the attack being precipitated
by the fortuitous circumstances of the SEATTLE's helm
jamming and the sounding of her whistle, leading the enemy
to suppose he had been discovered."
SEATTLE operated on comparatively uneventful escort
duties for the remainder of World War I, completing her
ninth round-trip voyage at New York on 27 October 1918.
After the armistice of 11 November 1918, SEATTLE--like many
other ships--was fitted with extra accommodations to enable
her to function as a transport, and she brought back
doughboys from France until 5 July 1919. Later, after all
of her special troop fittings had been removed, SEATTLE
sailed for the west coast to join the Pacific Fleet.
Reviewed by President Woodrow Wilson on 12 September at
her namesake city--SEATTLE--the armored cruiser shifted to
the Puget Sound Navy Yard where she was placed in "reduced
commission." While in that inactive status, SEATTLE was
reclassified a heavy cruiser, CA-11, on 17 July 1920.
Placed in full commission again on 1 March 1923 Capt.
George L. P. Stone in command, SEATTLE became the flagship
for the Commander in Chief, United States Fleet. In that
role, over the next four years, she wore the four-starred
flags of a succession of officers: Admiral Hilary P. Jones,
Admiral Robert E. Koontz, Admiral Samuel S. Robison (who was
embarked in the ship at the time of the Australian cruise of
1925), and Admiral Charles F. Hughes. During that time, the
armored cruiser operated from Seattle to Hawaii and from
Panama to Australia.
Subsequently returning to the Atlantic in June of 1927,
SEATTLE passed in review before President Calvin Coolidge on
3 June 1927. After a cruise along the east coast, the ship
arrived at New York on 29 August to assume duties as the
receiving ship at that port. On 1 July 1931, the ship's
designation was changed to "unclassified."
As receiving ship, SEATTLE served as a floating
barracks--a "clearance house for personnel"--at New York
into the 1940s. Ships and stations transferred men to her
for attending various schools in the 3d Naval District; she
provided men for tugs and other district craft, as well as
naval escorts for patriotic functions (parades and funerals,
etc.) and, on board her, crews for ships preparing to go
into commission were assembled. Among those ships was the
light cruiser HONOLULU (CL-48).
On 17 February 1941, the erstwhile armored cruiser was
reclassified as IX-39. She was ultimately placed out of
commission at New York on 28 June 1946 and was struck from
the Navy list on 19 July of the same year. Sold on 3
December 1946 to Hugo Neu, of New York City, the former
flagship of the United States Fleet and receiving ship at
New York was subsequently scrapped.
Transcribed by Michael Hansen
mhansen2@home.com
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