- USS New Orleans (CL-22)
The first USS "New Orleans" (later designated PG-34 then CL-22) was a
United States Navy protected cruiser .She was laid down in 1895 as "Amazonas" for the
Brazilian Navy byArmstrong, Mitchell and Company ,Newcastle-on-Tyne ,England , launched on 4 December 1896, purchased by the Navy while building on 16 March 1898; and commissioned 18 March 1898 at Gravesend,England , withLieutenant Commander Arthur P. Nazro in command."New Orleans" sailed on 27 March 1898 to fit out at
New York, New York , for service in theSpanish-American War . She leftNorfolk, Virginia , on 17 May and joined theFlying Squadron offSantiago de Cuba on 30 May. The next afternoon, with "Massachusetts" (BB-2) and "Iowa" (BB-4), she reconnoitered the harbor, exchanging fire with Spanish ships and shore batteries. After joining in the bombardment of the batteries at the entrance to the harbor 6 June and 16 June, "New Orleans" sailed to coal atKey West , and was thus absent during theBattle of Santiago de Cuba on 3 July.Through the summer, "New Orleans" cruised on
blockade betweenSan Juan, Puerto Rico , and Guantanamo Bay,Cuba , capturing the Frenchblockade runner "Olinde Rodrigues" on 17 July. She arrived atPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania , on 20 October for thePeace Jubilee , then prepared at New York to launch her peacetime service with a visit toNew Orleans, Louisiana , from 16 May through 29 May 1899. After summer exercises off the Atlantic seaboard, she sailed from New York on 21 October to join theAsiatic Fleet . She called at theAzores andPort Said , passed through theSuez Canal , and reachedManila on 21 December. For the next 5 years, asflagship of theCruiser Squadron, U.S. Asiatic Fleet , she cruised thePhilippines and theChina coast. Relieved by "Baltimore" (C-3), she departedCavite on 27 December 1904 forMare Island Navy Yard , arriving there on 27 January 1905 to decommission on 6 February 1905.Recommissioning on 15 November 1909, "New Orleans" returned to Asiatic duty at
Yokohama on 25 April 1910. She cruised theOrient until returning toBremerton, Washington , on 14 February 1912 and going into reserve. Again in full commission on 31 December 1913, "New Orleans" patrolled the west coast ofMexico during the tense spring of 1914, then trained theWashington State Naval Militia through the summer, returning to Mexican waters in the fall. Upon American entry intoWorld War I , she was overhauled atPuget Sound , and sailed for thePanama Canal and the East Coast, arriving atHampton Roads on 27 August 1917."New Orleans" escorted
convoy s from New York City to ocean rendezvous withdestroyer escorts off theBritish Isles and the French coast until 16 January 1918, when she cleared New York for the Asiatic Station. She reached Yokohama fromHonolulu andPanama on 13 March, cruised to China, and the Philippines, and from 17 July to 20 December 1919 was station ship atVladivostok ,Russia , supporting the Allied force inSiberia .After repairs at Cavite, "New Orleans" returned to Vladivostok to resume her service for the
Allied Expeditionary Force from 20 May to 27 September 1920. During further cruising with the Asiatic Fleet she was redesignated CL-22 on 8 August 1921, then completed her service at Vladivostok 14 February to 17 August 1922. She returned to Mare Island on 23 September, decommissioned there on 16 November 1922, and was struck from theNaval Vessel Register on 13 November 1929. On 1 April 1925 the 4.7-inch gun No. 5 was presented to Kane County, Illinois by the U.S. government and is currently on display at the Kane County courthouse in Geneva Illinois. She was sold for scrapping on 11 February 1930.External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-n/cl22.htm Navy photographs of "New Orleans" (CL-22)]
* [http://www.harvard-diggins.org/Burbank/Julsen_Scrap_Books/Book_2/print_Mare_Island.htm "Mare Island Navy Yard"] - 1928.Elbridge Ayer Burbank pencil sketch.See USS "New Orleans" for other Navy ships of the same name.
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