|
|
USS
California (ARC-6), Cruiser
|
|





|
The second CALIFORNIA (Armored Cruiser 6) was launched 28 April 1904 by
Union Iron Works, San Francisco, Calif.; sponsored by Miss F. Pardee;
and commissioned 1 August 1907, Captain V. L. Cottman in command.
Joining the 2d Division, Pacific Fleet, CALIFORNIA took part in the
naval review at San Francisco in May 1908 for the Secretary of the Navy.
Aside from a cruise to Hawaii and Samoa in the fall of 1908, the cruiser
operated along the west coast, sharpening her readiness through training
exercises and drills, until December 1911, when she sailed for Honolulu,
and in March 1912 continued westward for duty on the Asiatic Station.
After this service representing American power and prestige in the Far
East, she returned home in August 1912, and was ordered to Corinto,
Nicaragua, then embroiled in internal political disturbance. Here she
protected American lives and property, then resumed her operations along
the west coast; she cruised off California, and kept a watchful eye on
Mexico, at that time also suffering political disturbance.
California was renamed SAN DIEGO on 1 September 1914, and served as
flagship for Commander-in-Chief, Pacific Fleet, intermittently until a
boiler explosion put her in Mare Island Navy Yard in reduced commission
through the summer of 1915. SAN DIEGO returned to duty as flagship
through 12 February 1917, when she went into reserve status until the
opening of World War I. Placed in full commission 7 April, the cruiser
operated as flagship for Commander, Patrol Force Pacific Fleet, until 18
July, when she was ordered to the Atlantic Fleet. Reaching Hampton
Roads, Va., 4 August, she joined Cruiser Division 2, and later broke the
flag of Commander, Cruiser Force, Atlantic, which she flew until 19
September.
SAN DIEGO's essential mission was the escort of convoys through the
first dangerous leg of their passages to Europe. Based on Tompkinsville,
N.Y., and Halifax, N.S., she operated in the weather-torn, submarine-
infested North Atlantic safely convoying all of her charges to the ocean
escort. On 19 July 1918, bound from Portsmouth, N.H., to New York, SAN
DIEGO was torpedoed by the German submarine U-156 southeast of Fire
Island. The cruiser sank in 28 minutes with the loss of 6 lives, the
only major warship lost by the United States in World War I.
|

Copyright(c) 2002 My Company. All rights reserved. Bill@GreatWhiteFleet.info
|