- USS Brutus (AC-15)
USS "Brutus", formerly the steamer "Peter Jebsen", was built in
1894 at South Shields-on-Tyne,England , byJohn Readhead & Sons and was acquired by theUnited States Navy early in1898 fromL. F. Chapman & Company . She was renamed "Brutus" and commissioned at theMare Island Navy Yard on27 May 1898, withLieutenant Vincendon L. Cottman, in command.Sometime in June 1898, Brutus departed
San Diego, California , towing themonitor USS|Monterey|BM-6|6 bound forManila Bay in thePhilippines to reinforce AdmiralGeorge Dewey ’sAsiatic Fleet . Following a voyage of over 3,700 miles during which they made several stops, the two ships enteredManila Bay on4 August 1898. She remained at Manila until20 December , at which time she headed back to theUnited States . After repeating stops atGuam andHawaii , "Brutus" arrived inSan Francisco, California , on7 March 1899 .The collier stayed in the San Francisco area until
10 April when she got underway for the South Pacific. "Brutus" arrived inSamoa on29 April and operated among the islands until early July. On the 5th, she shaped a course for Hawaii. After a 10 day stopover atHonolulu between 16 and 26 July, the collier put to sea bound for theMarianas . She enteredApra Harbor on13 August and remained there asstation ship through the end of the year. During her sojourn at Guam, "Brutus" was out of commission between20 October and24 December . On6 January 1900 , the ship got underway forJapan , via Manila in the Philippines. She arrived at Nagasaki, Japan, on17 January and underwent repairs. On1 February , she shaped a course back to Guam, arriving in Apra Harbor on the 9th. She resumed duties as station ship at Guam and, on16 February , was placed out of commission there. The collier underwent adrydock period while at Guam and went back into commission sometime in the fall of 1900.On
23 September , "Brutus" departed Apra Harbor. She stopped atYokohama, Japan , for the first 26 days of October and then headed for Manila. She arrived at her destination on4 November and began loading coal. The ship completed taking on her cargo and departed the Philippines on the 27th. She reentered Apra Harbor on6 December . She operated in theMarianas through the first quarter of 1901. On28 March 1901 , "Brutus" departed Guam bound for the Philippines. She arrived atCavite on4 April and began a month of repairs. On4 May , she put to sea bound for the east coast of the United States. Steaming viaSingapore ,Ceylon , andAden , she arrived atSuez, Egypt , on25 June . The collier transited theSuez Canal on 27 and28 June . Then, after crossing theMediterranean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean, "Brutus" arrived atNew York City on6 August . She was placed out of commission at New York on29 August 1901.1902 - 1921
She remained inactive at New York until recommissioned on
8 March 1902 . On the 25th, she departed New York bound forBaltimore, Maryland , where she arrived two days later. At Baltimore, "Brutus" loaded cargo, stores, and coal for her own bunkers. On16 April , the collier put to sea on the long voyage aroundCape Horn toSamoa , in the South Pacific. She made stops atSan Juan, Puerto Rico , andMontevideo, Uruguay , and arrived inTutuila on11 July . She remained there exactly one month, heading back the way she came on11 August . After repeating her stops at Montevideo and San Juan, she enteredHampton Roads, Virginia , on27 October . Except for one round-trip voyage toCulebra Island near Puerto Rico between 5 and19 December , "Brutus" operated in theChesapeake Bay area until late January1903 . Between24 January and18 April 1903, she cruised in theWest Indies and along the coast ofCentral America returning to Hampton Roads on18 April .Sometime during the middle of 1903, "Brutus" was assigned to the
Asiatic Fleet . Worked by a merchant crew made up of Chinese nationals, she carried coal to various units of the Navy’s squadron in the Orient. Late in1905 , she returned to the east coast of the United States to help perform a monumental task. On28 December 1905, she steamed out of Chesapeake Bay in company with USS|Glacier|AF-4|6 and USS|Caesar|AC-16|6 towing the USS|Dewey|YFD-1|6 drydock to Manila. Steaming across the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, they transited the Suez Canal between27 April and1 May 1906 . They resumed the voyage early in May and arrived atOlongapo, Luzon , on10 July . Thereupon, "Brutus" resumed her former duties as collier to the Asiatic Fleet.In
1907 , the collier returned to the United States and began operations out ofNorfolk, Virginia , in support of the Atlantic Fleet. Except for two periods in reserve at theNorfolk Navy Yard ,13 May 1908 to2 January 1909 and20 May to2 July 1912 , and a resupply voyage to the Mediterranean Sea in1915 , that employment occupied her time until the spring of1916 . In April 1916, "Brutus" transferred to thePacific Fleet and operated from theMare Island Navy Yard . When the United States enteredWorld War I on6 April 1917 , her merchant crew was taken into the service as members of theUnited States Naval Reserve Forces . Soon thereafter on24 April , she ran aground onCerros Island in a heavy fog. She was refloated 10 days later and was towed toSan Diego for temporary repairs. From there, she headed back to theMare Island Navy Yard where she completed permanent repairs.She spent the remainder of the war cruising the
California and Mexican coast. When the worldwide influenza epidemic struck late in1918 , "Brutus" loaded supplies and stores and headed forAlaska as part of aRed Cross relief expedition. She returned south from that mission in January1919 . After the war, she was assigned to thePacific Fleet Train . Early in1920 , the collier voyaged from the west coast toTutuila, Samoa , carrying coal and supplies to the naval station located there. Later that spring she returned via Hawaii to the west coast and resumed her duties with the Pacific Fleet Train. She remained so employed until decommissioned on17 August 1921 . Her name was struck from theNaval Vessel Register on29 July 1922 , and she was sold to theA. Bercovich Company inOakland, California .References
*DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/b10/brutus-i.htm
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