- USS Windom (1896)
USS "Windom" was a
revenue cutter , which served in theUnited States Navy and was later named "Comanche". She was named forWilliam Windom ."Windom" was completed in 1896 at the
Iowa Iron Works inDubuque, Iowa and was accepted by the Treasury Department on11 May 1896 . Partially incomplete, she was moved from Dubuque—viaCairo, Illinois , andNew Orleans, Louisiana —toBaltimore, Maryland , where she was completed and placed in commission on30 June 1896 .For the next 17 months, she operated out of Baltimore making an annual winter cruise of the fishing grounds between the
Virginia Capes andCape Hatteras . In March 1898, with war against Spain looming just over the horizon, PresidentWilliam McKinley began the process of preparing for the fight. On the 24th, he issued the executive order instructing theRevenue Cutter Service to cooperate with the Navy for the duration of the crisis. Two days later, she received orders to report atNorfolk, Virginia , and there she found herself on25 April when Congress passed the resolution recognizing that a state of war existed between the United States andSpain .Five days later, "Windom" departed
Hampton Roads on her way to the blockade offCuba . She stopped atKey West, Florida , for four days and arrived off the Cuban coast on8 May . She patrolled the southern coast of Cuba nearCienfuegos until the 13th. During that time, she cut the Cienfuegos cable, the Spanish colonial government's only link with the outside world; and, on12 May , she helped to cover the withdrawal of a Navy boat expedition. At a critical point in that action, the cutter closed the enemy shore and silenced the Spanish battery and briefly dispersed their infantry allowing the harassed boats to reach safety. The following day, she withdrew from the area to return to Key West—probably for fuel and provisions. She again got underway for the combat zone on27 May and took up station offHavana on the 28th. For the remainder of the Spanish-American War, "Windom" participated in the blockade of Havana, returning to Key West on two occasions—once during the last two weeks of June and again during the first week in August.Hostilities ended on
13 August ; "Windom" reverted to Treasury Department control on the 17th; and she returned to Norfolk on the 22nd. She remained there until3 October at which time she headed forNew York where she transferred most of her armament to "Gresham" before resuming duty at Baltimore with the Revenue Cutter Service on the 13th. From the fall of 1898 to the summer of 1906, "Windom" operated out of Baltimore, cruising the waters of theChesapeake Bay and occasionally venturing out into the Atlantic in the vicinity of the Virginia Capes. On13 July 1906 , the cutter departedArundel Cove, Maryland , to sail—via Key West, andMobile, Alabama —to her new base of operations,Galveston, Texas . She arrived there on6 August and began duty patrolling the gulf coast of the United States. That assignment lasted for five years.On
1 August 1911 , she left Galveston to return toArundel Cove . She arrived at the station on the shores of the Chesapeake on1 September and was placed out of commission on the 12th. Her retirement, however, was only a brief one, for she returned to full commission on1 November . She served atWashington, D.C. , from mid-November 1911 until early May 1912. On7 May , she headed back to theGulf of Mexico . Initially, she assisted in flood relief at New Orleans; but, in June, she resumed her coastal patrols out of Galveston. She cruised the entire gulf coast from Texas to Key West over the next 18 months. After war broke out in Europe in August 1914, the cutter took on the added responsibility of enforcing America's neutrality laws.In November 1914, "Windom" headed back to Arundel Cove to be decommissioned again. She arrived at the depot on
3 December but made a short voyage to Washington before going out of service. She returned to Arundel Cove on13 January 1915 ; and, on the 15th, she was placed out of commission. On13 December 1915 , near the end of a year of inactivity, "Windom" was renamed "Comanche". Less than a month later, on8 January 1916 , the cutter went back into service under her new name. On19 January , she departed the Chesapeake Bay area to return to her old patrol area in the Gulf of Mexico. She arrived at Galveston on2 February and resumed her old routine.The United States' declaration of war on the
Central Powers once again brought the cutter under Navy Department control on6 April 1917 . "Comanche" continued to patrol the gulf coast even in naval service. Her second period of service with the Navy lasted over two years until28 August 1919 at which time she was returned to the jurisdiction of the Treasury Department. She continued her patrols of the gulf for another seven months and then headed for Key West where she was decommissioned on17 April 1920 for repairs. Recommissioned in July, the ship relieved Tallapoosa at Mobile and rejoined the Gulf Division. Serving successively at Mobile, Key West, and Galveston, she patrolled coastal waters constantly until June 1930. During that period, she left the Gulf of Mexico only once, in 1923, for repairs at Baltimore and Norfolk. On2 June 1930 , she was detached from the Gulf Division and was ordered back to Arundel Cove.She arrived at her destination on
1 July and was placed out of commission on31 July 1930 . She was sold toWeiss Motor Lines , of Baltimore, on13 November 1930 .As of 2006, no other ship in the United States Navy has been named "Windom" or "Comanche".
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