- USS Tennessee (ACR-10)
The second USS "Tennessee" (ACR-10), also referred to "Armored Cruiser No. 10", and later renamed "Memphis" and renumbered CA-10, was a
United States Navy armored cruiser , thelead ship of her class. The ship was laid down by theCramp Shipbuilding Company ,Philadelphia, Pennsylvania , on20 June 1903 , launched on3 December 1904 , sponsored by MissAnnie K. Frazier (daughter of GovernorJames B. Frazier ofTennessee and later the foundress of theSociety of Sponsors of the United States Navy ), and commissioned at thePhiladelphia Navy Yard on17 July 1906 , CaptainAlbert Gleaves Berry in command.Service history
Pre-war
The new armored cruiser departed
Hampton Roads on8 November 1906 as escort for "Louisiana" (Battleship No. 19) in which PresidentTheodore Roosevelt had embarked for a cruise toPanama to check on the progress of work constructing thePanama Canal . After a brief visit toPuerto Rico on the return voyage, the warships arrived back at Hampton Roads on26 November . "Tennessee" was present for theJamestown Exposition held in 1907 to commemorate the tricentennial of the founding of the first English settlement in America.On
14 June , "Tennessee" sailed for Europe and reachedRoyan ,France , on the 23rd for duty with theSpecial Service Squadron . She returned home in August but departed Hampton Roads on12 October for thePacific ."Tennessee" then patrolled off the
California coast until24 August 1908 when she sailed forSamoa , arriving atPago Pago on23 September to resume service with the Pacific Fleet. On15 May 1910 , she arrived atBahia Blanca to represent the United States at the centenary celebration of the independence ofArgentina . On8 November , the armored cruiser departedPortsmouth, New Hampshire , and proceeded toCharleston, South Carolina , to embark PresidentWilliam Howard Taft for a round trip voyage to Panama to inspect further progress on the canal. She returned to Hampton Roads on22 November and then engaged in battle practice off the Virginia coast into February 1911. Following a Mardi Gras visit to New Orleans and a visit toNew York early in March, the ship steamed toCuba n waters for two months of operations out of Guantanamo Bay.Placed in reserve at the
Portsmouth Navy Yard on15 June 1911 , she remained on the east coast for a year and one-half before departing Philadelphia on12 November 1912 for theMediterranean . Arriving off Smyrna (nowİzmir ),Turkey , on1 December , she remained there protecting American citizens and property during theFirst Balkan War until3 May 1913 when she headed home. After reaching Hampton Roads on the 23rd, "Tennessee" operated on the East Coast until entering theAtlantic Reserve Fleet at Philadelphia on23 October . On2 May 1914 , she becamereceiving ship at theNew York Navy Yard .On
6 August , "Tennessee" sailed from New York for duty in Europe through the first half of 1915 supporting theAmerican Relief Expedition . In August, she transported the1st Regiment, Marine Expeditionary Force , and theMarine Artillery Battalion toHaiti . From28 January to24 February 1916 , the cruiser served asflagship of a cruiser squadron offPort-au-Prince , Haiti. In March, she embarked a group of dignitaries at Hampton Roads for a two-month, round trip cruise toMontevideo ,Uruguay .On
25 May , "Tennessee" was renamed "Memphis", honoring a city of Tennessee, so that the name "Tennessee" could be reassigned to a new warship, Battleship No. 43.Loss
In July, under the command of Captain
Edward L. Beach, Sr. , the ship got underway forthe Caribbean arriving atSanto Domingo on23 July for peace-keeping patrol off the rebellion-tornDominican Republic . On the afternoon of29 August , while at anchor in the harbor of Santo Domingo, "Memphis" was driven ashore by an unexpectedtsunami and totally wrecked. The casualties, including a boatload of "Memphis" sailors returning fromshore leave , numbered some 40 men dead or missing and 204 badly injured. Due to this incident,Chief Machinist's Mate George William Rud ,Lieutenant Claud Ashton Jones andMachinist Charles H. Willey were awarded the U.S.Medal of Honor ."Memphis" was struck from the
Navy List on17 December 1917 and sold toA. H. Radetsky Iron and Metal Company ,Denver, Colorado , on17 January 1922 for scrapping.References
* Alden, John D. "American Steel Navy: A Photographic History of the U.S. Navy from the Introduction of the Steel Hull in 1883 to the Cruise of the Great White Fleet." Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1989. ISBN 0870212486
* Beach, Edward L. "The Wreck of the Memphis". New York, New York: Holt, Rinear, and Wiston, 1966. Naval Institute Press Classics of Naval Literature 1998 re-print ISBN 1-55750-070-3
* Friedman, Norman. "U.S. Cruisers: An Illustrated Design History." Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1984. ISBN 0870217186
* Musicant, Ivan. "U.S. Armored Cruisers: A Design and Operational History." Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1985. ISBN 0870217143External links
* [http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-usn/usnsh-t/acr10.htm USS Tennessee (Armored Cruiser # 10), 1906-1916. Renamed Memphis in May 1916]
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