- USS Yosemite (1892)
At the beginning of the
Spanish-American War , "El Sud"—a merchant steamer built in 1892 by theNewport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. —was acquired by the Navy from theSouthern Pacific Co. on 6 April 1898. The ship was renamed USS "Yosemite" and placed in commission on 13 April 1898, Comdr. William H. Emory in command.After fitting out as an auxiliary cruiser at
League Island, Pa. , and atNewport News, Va. , "Yosemite" departedHampton Roads on 30 May for duty with the Eastern Squadron off the coast ofCuba . She stopped atKey West, Fla. , for five days and then headed forHavana on 7 June, arriving there the same day. "Yosemite", however, kept on the move. She left Havana the next day; visited Santiago and Guantanamo Bay on the 10th; and then, after a brief return to Santiago, headed for Kingston,Jamaica , on the 12th. The auxiliary cruiser spent the night of 16 and 17 June at Kingston and returned to Cuban waters on the 19th. On 23 June, she cleared the Guantanamo Bay area forSan Juan, Puerto Rico . She arrived off San Juan on the 25th to participate in the blockade of that port.Soon after her arrival, "Yosemite" intercepted the Spanish steamer SS "Antonio Lopez" when the latter tried to run into San Juan. In spite of heavy covering fire from enemy shore batteries and gunboats "Alfonso HI" and "Isabella II", "Yosemite" attacked the blockade runner and succeeded in pounding her almost to pieces. At the conclusion of that encounter, the auxiliary cruiser pulled back out of range of the gunboats and their protecting shore batteries to resume her blockade station. She concluded that assignment on 15 July and, after a three-day visit to St. Thomas in the
Danish West Indies (Virgin Islands ), headed back toward the Virginia capes on the 18th."Yosemite" arrived at Hampton Roads on 22 July and remained there until 15 August, two days after hostilities ceased. For almost a month, she operated along the Atlantic coast. Then, between 8 and 19 September, the auxiliary made a voyage to
Haiti and then resumed east coast operations briefly before putting in at League Island on 23 September—apparently for repairs because she remained until late in December. "Yosemite" departed League Island on 29 December and arrived in Norfolk on the 30th. The ship remained there until 8 April 1899 at which time she got underway forNew York . Following a month-long stay, the auxiliary cruiser departed New York on 10 May for duty in theMediterranean Sea , theSuez Canal , and theIndian Ocean . She arrived in theMariana Islands —atSan Luis d'Apra onGuam —on 7 August.She spent the next eight months at Guam surveying the harbor and serving as station ship. On 17 April 1900, "Yosemite" departed Guam for a voyage to
Japan where she underwent repairs atYokohama andUraga . Following a brief visit to Nagasaki on 7 and 8 June, the ship headed for thePhilippines on the 9th. She arrived inCavite on the 14th and began additional repairs. On 30 June, "Yosemite" completed repairs and set a course for Guam. She reached the harbor at San Luis d'Apra on 6 July and resumed duty as station ship. Between 2 and 29 August, she made a round-trip voyage back to Cavite to pick up stores for Guam. Upon her return to Guam, "Yosemite" resumed station-ship duties.On 13 November 1900, the former auxiliary cruiser was blown from her anchorage by a particularly violent hurricane—first ashore and then out to sea from Apra harbor. For two days, her crew fought heroically to save their ship, but she shipped water badly and, due to a damaged screw, made only two knots headway even after the storm passed. Finally, after the weather abated completely, her crew was taken off by the Navy collier "Justin", and "Yosemite" was scuttled.
See USS "Yosemite" for other ships of the same name.
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