Encyclopedia > USS Georgia (BB-15)

  Article Content

USS Georgia (BB-15)

(insert image and caption here)
Career
Ordered:??
Laid down:31 August 1901
Launched: 11 October 1904
Commissioned:24 September 1906
Fate:sold for scrap
Decommissioned:15 July 1920
General Characteristics
Displacement:14,948 tons full
Length:441.3 ft overall
Beam:76.3 ft
Draft:23.8 ft
Speed:19 knots
Complement:40 officers, 772 men
Armament:4 x 12-inch guns, 8 x 8-inch guns, 12 x 6-inch guns

The first USS Georgia (BB-15) was a United States Navy Virginia-class[?] battleship.

She was launched by the Bath Iron Works of Bath, Maine, 11 October 1904, sponsored by Miss Stella Tate[?], and commissioned at Boston Navy Yard 24 September 1906, Captain R. G. Davenport[?] in command.

After Georgia was fitted out and completed a short shakedown cruise, she joined the Atlantic Fleet as flagship of Division 2[?], Squadron 1. Georgia departed Hampton Roads 26 March 1907 for Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where she participated in gunnery practice with the fleet. After returning briefly to Boston Navy Yard for repairs, Georgia joined with other ships of the Atlantic Fleet in ceremonies opening the Jamestown Exposition. President Theodore Roosevelt and dignitaries present reviewed the fleet 10 June 1907, and 11 June was proclaimed "Georgia Day" at the exposition in special ceremonies aboard Georgia.

Georgia next sailed with the fleet for target practice in Cape Cod Bay[?], arriving 15 June. During these drills, 15 July, a powder charge ignited prematurely in her aft 8-inch turret, killing 10 officers and men and injuring 11. Condolences for the loss from this tragic accident were received from all over the world.

The powerful battleship then participated in the tercentenary of the landing of the first English Colonists 16 to 21 August 1907, after which she rejoined the fleet for battle maneuvers before mooring at League Island[?], New York, 24 September, for overhaul.

Arriving in Hampton Roads 7 December 1907, Georgia gathered with 15 other battleships, a torpedo boat squadron, and transports for the great naval review preceding the cruise of the Atlantic Fleet to the West Coast. On 16 December President Roosevelt reviewed the assembled "Great White Fleet" and sent it on the first leg of an around-the-world voyage of training, and building of American prestige and good will. Visiting many South American countries an their highly successful cruise, the fleet met with ships of the Pacific Fleet in another review in San Francisco Bay for the Secretary of the Navy 8 May 1908. Then Georgia, in company with other battleships and supply vessels, departed San Francisco 7 July 1908 for the second leg of the cruise, showing the flag and bringing the message of American sea power to many parts of the world, including the Philippines, Australia, Japan, and Mediterranean ports. The fleet returned to Hampton Roads 22 February 1909.

At this point she was overhauled, and received cage masts[?] that were the hallmark of so many US battleships of this era. Georgia continued to serve with the Atlantic Fleet in exercises and battle maneuvers, with periods of overhaul interspersed, until 2 November 1910 when President William Howard Taft reviewed the fleet prior to its departure for France. In an elaborate battle and scouting problem, Georgia and the other battleships continued their training, visiting Weymouth[?], England, and returning to Guantanamo Bay on 13 March 1911.

From 1911 to 1913, Georgia continued to train and serve as a ceremonial ship, and 5 June 1913 participated in a 2-month practice cruise for United States Naval Academy midshipmen. After a long overhaul period in Boston Navy Yard, Georgia arrived off the coast of Mexico 14 January 1914 with other fleet units to protect American interests in the troubled Veracruz-Tampico area. The battleship returned briefly to Norfolk, Virginia, in March, but was soon back cruising Mexican waters, and from August to October 1914 cruised off Haiti for the protection of American civilians in that country.

After another period of overhaul, Georgia joined the fleet off Cuba 25 February 1915 for winter maneuvers, and spent the rest of the year in training and ceremonial duties with the Atlantic Fleet Battleship Force. She arrived at Boston Navy Yard for overhaul 20 December 1915 and decommissioned 27 January 1916.

Assigned as a receiving ship[?] at Boston, Georgia was called to duty at the outbreak of World War I, and commissioned again 6 April 1917. For the next 18 months, she operated with the 3rd Division[?], Battleship Force[?], in fleet tactical exercises and merchant crew gunnery training, based in the York River[?], Virginia. She joined with Cruiser Force Atlantic[?] briefly in September 1918 to escort convoys to meet their eastern escorts, and beginning 10 December 1918 was fitted out as a transport and attached to the Cruiser and Transport Force for the purpose of returning troops of the A.E.F.[?] to the United States. Georgia made five voyages to France from December 1918 to June 1919 and brought home nearly 6,000 soldiers.

Georgia was next transferred to the Pacific Fleet as flagship of Division 2, Squadron 1. She left Boston for San Diego, via the Panama Canal, 16 July 1919, and after participating in ceremonial operations for two months, entered Mare Island Navy Yard for repairs 20 September 1919. Here Georgia staged until decommissioning 15 July 1920. She was eventually sold for scrap 1 November 1923 in accordance with the Washington Naval Treaty for the limitation of naval armaments, and her name was struck from the Naval Vessel Register 10 November 1923.

Reference

External Links

See USS Georgia for other Navy ships of the same name.



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
Great River, New York

... makeup of the town is 98.12% White, 0.00% African American, 0.06% Native American, 0.58% Asian, 0.00% Pacific Islander, 0.26% from other races, and 0.97% from tw ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 30.2 ms