- USS Tacoma (CL-20)
USS "Tacoma" (C-18/PG-32/CL-20) was a "Denver"-class
protected cruiser in theUnited States Navy duringWorld War I . She was the second Navy ship named for the city ofTacoma, Washington ."Tacoma" was laid down on
27 September 1900 atMare Island , California, by theUnion Iron Works ; launched on2 June 1903 ; sponsored by Miss Julia M. Harris; and commissioned on30 January 1904 , Comdr. R. F. Nicholson in command.Following a post-commissioning visit to her namesake city,
Tacoma , Wash., the protected cruiser voyaged toHawaii in April and May. She returned toSan Francisco on2 June and, a month later, sailed forCape Horn . During the voyage, she participated in the search for merchant ship SS "Conemaugh", which had departed fromValparaíso ,Chile , and vanished. After rounding the Horn and steaming up the Atlantic coast of South and North America, "Tacoma" enteredNew York harbor on5 November and remained there until joining the North Atlantic Fleet onNew Year's Day 1905.Following the completion of maneuvers off
Culebra Island on25 January , "Tacoma" sailed forHispaniola where she performed special duty protecting American interests during one of the many periods of turmoil that have troubled that island. Following that assignment, "Tacoma" conducted target practice off theFlorida coast between27 March and25 April . She returned toNew York on19 May to prepare for a voyage toEurope .On
18 June , she sailed forFrance and arrived atCherbourg on30 June . She remained there while a battalion of sailors went to Paris to participate in ceremonies honoring the remains ofJohn Paul Jones which were being returned to theUnited States . On8 July , "Tacoma" departed Cherbourg to escort the remains to their final resting place atAnnapolis , Md. After the ceremony at theUnited States Naval Academy on24 July , the warship proceeded to Tompkinsville, New York. On5 August , she embarked Japanese diplomats at New York and transported them toSagamore Hill , PresidentTheodore Roosevelt 's summer home at Oyster Bay, New York. There, they first met the Russian commissioners for the peace negotiations which were later held atPortsmouth, New Hampshire , and resulted in the termination of theRusso-Japanese War . "Tacoma" returned toPhiladelphia on the 8th and conducted training for thePennsylvania andMassachusetts naval militias before rejoining the North Atlantic Fleet for operations in the'Caribbean Sea .Deployed to the
Mediterranean for the first five months of 1906, the ship visitedTangier ,Algiers ,Ville-Franche ,Naples , andGenoa . After a trip toGrand Canary Island , she returned to the Mediterranean and visitedAlexandria andPort Said before returning to the United States in June.For the next ten years, except for an eight-month period in reserve at Philadelphia in 1911 and 1912, "Tacoma" alternated service along the east coast with cruises to the Caribbean and
West Indies protecting American citizens and interests there during this turbulent period. In late 1906 and early 1907,Cuba was the major trouble spot; and the cruiser operated along her coasts from late September until mid-November and again from late December until June, visitingHavana ,Tunas ,Manzanilla ,Santiago de Cuba ,Cienfuegos , and Guantanamo Bay. She returned to the West Indies again in the spring of 1908 for stops at St. Thomas,St. Christopher ,Martinique ,Margarita Island ,Port Mochima ,Cunama ,La Guaira , andCuraçao . During the second half of 1908 and the first half of 1909, she observed political conditions inHaiti andHonduras . From July to September 1909, the cruiser operated ofNicaragua . Later, her itinerary included a visit toCosta Rica and a return to Honduras, all in an effort to bring the steadying influence of American military power to the volatile Latin American republics.Between January and March 1910, "Tacoma" cruised off the coast of Nicaragua and visited the Canal Zone and Costa Rica. After a spring voyage to the east coast of the United States, the ship headed back to Central America to protect United States interests there. During the following nine months, she visited
Panama , Honduras, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, andGuatemala . In January 1911, pursuant to the orders of the senior naval officer present embarked in "Marietta", "Tacoma" prevented the converted yacht "Hornet" from participating in the Honduran revolution. Later that month, she landed a force of bluejackets atPuerto Cortés , Honduras, to protect American citizens. In February, her deck was the scene of a peace conference conducted by special commissioner T. C. Dawson. The negotiations brought the revolution to a close and established a new provisional government in Honduras. That summer, "Tacoma" steamed—viaPuerto Mexico andGalveston —to New York. She remained at theNew York Navy Yard until mid-November when she went into reserve at Philadelphia.In July 1912, "Tacoma" came out of reserve and was soon on her way back to the troubled waters of the
Gulf of Mexico . Late that month, a revolution broke out in Nicaragua and lasted until November. The cruiser patrolled almost incessantly off the Nicaraguan coast atBluefields and atGreat Corn Island from3 August to25 October . In November, she headed—viaTampico , Mexico, and Galveston, Tex.—for the navy yard atBoston where she remained through mid-February 1913, By the 22d, she was back patrolling and observing, this time along the coasts of Honduras and Guatemala. The ship returned to New York in July; then operated off the Mexican coast. She cruised off Tampico and Vera Cruz until January 1914 when she returned to the east coast of the United States for repairs."Tacoma" resumed operations in Mexican waters early in May in the wake of the
Tampico Incident and the resultant seizure of the customs house at Vera Cruz. The warship cruised the Mexican coast through September during the latter stages of the Huerta-Carranza struggle and while the new Carranza government consolidated its power against former allies, notablyPancho Villa andEmiliano Zapata .Late in September 1914, "Tacoma" departed the Mexican coast; steamed, via
Jamaica and Cuba, toHaiti , and patrolled offCape Haitien until early December. After a visit to the Canal Zone, the cruiser returned to Haiti in February; then moved toSanto Domingo in March. On the 21st, she entered the Portsmouth (N.H.) Navy Yard for repairs.While at Portsmouth, "Tacoma" was placed in reserve. On
19 May 1916 , she shifted to Boston, Mass., where she served as receiving ship. On1 December , she again was placed in full commission. She made another voyage to Mexican waters for patrol duty from January to April 1917. Upon the entry of the United States intoWorld War I , "Tacoma" returned to the Atlantic seaboard to prepare for convoy duty. During the war, she made five round trips to Europe protecting troop and supply convoys. While returning to the United States from her third voyage to Europe, she stopped at Halifax, Nova Scotia, just when an ammunition explosion in the Belgian relief ship "Mont Blanc" severely damaged the town. "Tacoma" assisted in relief work; and, for three days, the cruiser's officers and men worked diligently to help the devastated port community.At the end of the war, the cruiser joined the Pacific Squadron and served with it until 1920. Early that year, she returned to her old duty of encouraging stability in the perennially volatile Caribbean. As a unit of the Special Service Squadron, which was ordered to observe events in Latin America and the Caribbean and to protect American interests in those areas, "Tacoma" patrolled the isthmian coast until January 1924. During that time, she was redesignated a light cruiser, CL-20.
During a heavy storm on
16 January , the warship ran aground onBlanquilla Reef near Vera Cruz. For almost a week, her crew tried without success to free her, her captain and three crewmen drowning in those attempts. After a board of inquiry, the Navy struck her name from the Navy list on7 February 1924 . She was sold to R. Sebastian of the American Consulate at Vera Cruz on5 September 1924 .See also
See USS "Tacoma" for other ships of the same name.
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