- USS Rodgers (TB-4)
The second USS "Rodgers" (Torpedo Boat No. 4/TB-4/Coast Torpedo Boat No. 2) was an
United States Navy torpedo boat , laid down by theColumbian Iron Works & Dry Dock Co. ,Baltimore, Maryland ,6 May 1896 ; launched10 November 1896 ; and commissioned2 April 1898 , Lt. J. L. Jayne in command.Fitted out at
Norfolk, Virginia , "Rodgers" began training inChesapeake Bay in mid-April. On April 24, theUnited States Congress declared war onSpain and five days later thetorpedo boat got underway for theCaribbean . Arriving atKey West 9 May , she joined the blockading vessels offHavana on the 21st; remained with them through the 23d; then sailed to join the fleet cruising off the north coast ofCuba to prevent the Spanish fleet from reaching the blockaded city from the east. Employed primarily as adispatch boat , she returned toKey West in early June, only to depart again on the 15th to carry mail to the fleet convoying Major General Shafter's army to Santiago. Making rendezvous on the 16th, she remained with the force until the 21st when she moved along the coast to Guantanamo Bay to deliver dispatches. On the 22d she returned to Santiago for picket duty at the harbor entrance, but returned to Guantanamo Bay for repairs 23 June-22 July. A short dispatch run preceded another repair period, 24 July-14 August, by which time "Rodgers" had received orders back to theUnited States . AtHampton Roads by the 26th, she continued on toNew York , arriving on the 31st for a yard overhaul.The torpedo boat remained in port for much of the next 8 years, occasionally commissioning for short periods of active duty with the 3d Torpedo Flotilla and the East Coast Squadron. In the spring of 1906 she was transferred to the Reserve Torpedo Flotilla and on 1 November she was decommissioned at Norfolk.
Shifted to
Charleston in 1908, "Rodgers" was assigned to theMassachusetts Naval Militia 14 May 1910 . From 8 June, when she was delivered to that organization, until 1916, she conducted training cruises out ofBoston along the southernNew England coast. Between 1916 and 1918, she extended her range of operations and performed coastal patrol duties as far north as theMaritime Provinces .Renamed "Coast Torpedo Boat No. 2",
1 August 1918 , she was decommissioned for the last time12 March 1919 ; struck from the Navy list28 October 1919 ; and sold to theU.S. Rail & Salvage Corp. ,Newburgh, New York , in 1920.References
*DANFS
*"Technical data from" cite book
last = Gardiner
first = Robert
coauthors =
title = Conway's All The World's Fighting Ships 1860-1905
publisher = Conway Maritime Press
date = 1979
pages = p. 160
month =
isbn = 0 85177 133 5
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