Tag Archives: USS Louisville

Warship Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2018: The Saint and the Terror

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2018: The Saint and the Terror

Catalog #: NH 59924

Here we see the U.S. Mail Steamer Saint Paul of the American Line in her guise as the auxiliary cruiser USS Saint Paul, photographed at the end of the Spanish-American War. The 11,612-ton ocean liner was the fastest thing on the Atlantic merchant trade when put in service, was the first to carry a wireless (and she needed it!) and served in two real-live shooting wars, with mixed results.

Saint Paul, a twin-screw steel passenger liner of the newest sort, along with her sister Saint Louis were ordered by the Philadelphia-based International Navigation Company (led by robber baron Clement Acton Griscom) for use by that firm and their subsidiary American Line and Red Star Line flags. As such, they were something of a keynote in U.S. merchant history. They had 17 watertight compartments (two decades before Titanic), could carry up to 1,540 passengers in a variety of styles (350 1st class, 290 2nd, 900 3rd), and were ultra-modern.

As explained by Kenneth J. Blume, they were the first large liners built in the U.S since 1857 (other large passenger liners were all European in origin) and were ordered to take advantage of subsidies set aside in the Merchant Marine Act of 1891. Further, he says “they were the last such large passenger liners built in the United States until the 1930s.”

Built at William Cramp & Sons Building & Engine Company, Philadelphia (yard # 277 and 278), these ships used quadruple expansion engines fed by double-ended boilers capable of speeding them forward at 20-knots (making International Navigation the first to offer such service across the Atlantic). Further, they had a more “modern” appearance than preceding liners, with two stacks and plumb bows. Built to last, they were completed by the same yard that was at the time working on the cruisers USS Minneapolis (C 13) and Brooklyn (ACR 3) as well as the battleship Iowa (BB 6)

Quadruple expansion engines of SS St. Louis (1894) in the workshop of William Cramp & Sons where they were built. Published in Howell’s Steam Vessels and Marine Engines. p. 11, 1896.

Steamliner SS Saint Paul of the International Navigation Co. 1895. Photo by Johnston, J. S. (John S.) postcard by Detroit Publishing Co.in the collection of the LOC. https://www.loc.gov/item/det1994011748/PP/

Famously, our new ocean liner ran aground off the New Jersey coast in January 1896 and required an extensive $400,000 effort to free her. Meanwhile, the rescue of her passengers and crew was national news for several months.

“THE STRANDING OF THE AMERICAN LINER ST. PAUL ON THE NEW JERSEY COAST, NEAR LONG BRANCH”, published in “Harper’s Weekly” February 1896.

However, she was back in business and in April 1896 she crossed the Atlantic from New York to Southampton in just six days. Over the next two years, she would repeat her crossing 36 times along the same route, which is impressive by any standard.

Her peacetime passenger service came to a halt due to events in Cuba.

At 21:40 on 15 February 1898, the armored cruiser USS Maine suffered a terrible explosion in Havana Harbor while exercising tense gunboat diplomacy with Spain over Cuba, leading to the death of 266 Navy and Marine personnel.

Though the cause of the explosion would not be known anytime soon, the press whipped the event up to the point of conflict.

When war came, the Navy took up dozens of craft from trade including four large passenger liners for conversion to auxiliary cruisers from the American Line/International Navigation Co: the SS New York (which became USS Harvard), SS City of Paris (who became the matching USS Yale) as well as Saint Louis and Saint Paul, the latter pair of which served under their given names.

On 12 March 1898, Saint Paul was taken up for service by the Navy and, sailing to Newport for crew and conversion to an auxiliary cruiser, Capt. Charles Dwight Sigsbee (formerly commander of the stricken Maine) raised the national ensign and took down the American Line house colors. She commissioned on 20 April. The fast liner was given a coat of gray paint, armed with six 5″/40 Mark 4 guns, another six Hotchkiss 6-pounders, and six 3-pounders in a fit-out that lasted just 14 days. Could you imagine a similar thing today?

USS St. Paul (1898) View looking aft on her forecastle, following conversion to an auxiliary cruiser, 1898. Note 5-inch guns, capstans, winch and other deck gear as well as two Marines. The original photograph was taken by C.H. Graves and published on a stereograph card. Courtesy of Commander Donald J. Robinson, USN(MSC, 1979) U.S. Naval Historical Center Photograph. Photo #: NH 89086

Ready for service by the first part of May, the new USS Saint Paul would see the elephant, and soon.

But first, let’s talk about a little Spanish Terror.

In the lead up to the conflict, in 1896 the Spanish Navy ordered a half-dozen Furor-class torpedo destroyers from the shipyards of J & G Thompson of Clydebank in Scotland. These nimble 229-foot 380-ton ships could make 28-knots (when their machinery worked) and carried two 350mm torpedo tubes as well as four Nordenfelt popguns.

A Spanish Terror Class Destroyer in British Waters in about 1897. An unidentified example of the ship class, photographed in about 1897-1898 in British waters and very likely in builders’ hands. Six sisters were built in 1896-1897 by Thompson on the Clyde: AUDAZ (1897-1927), OSADO (1897-1927), PROSERPINA (1897-1931), TERROR (1896-1927), FUROR (1896-1898), PLUTON (1896-1898). NH 88619

NH 111967 Spanish Torpedo Boat Destroyer TERROR

On 28 April 1898, the Spanish Navy’s 1st Squadron, of four cruisers (Infanta Maria Teresa, Vizcaya, Almirante Oquendo, and Cristóbal Colón) and three sister-ship destroyers (Pluton, Terror, and Furor) set out from the Cape Verde Islands for the Caribbean, bound for San Juan, Puerto Rico, then a Spanish colony. RADM Pascual Cervera y Topete’s mission was to rendezvous with other Spanish ships, engage the American squadron blockading Cuba, and ultimately to attack the United States.

Spain’s torpedo-boat flotilla en route from the Canaries to Puerto Rico. William Sontag. NYPL collection 1898. Terror shown in front

The loose Spanish ships sowed panic on the Eastern seaboard as every coastal town just knew they would wake up to Spanish bombardment at any time. However, Cervera’s fleet was in bad shape, with fouled bottoms, dangerously defective (or in some cases even uninstalled) guns, untrained crews, and poor engineering plants. Terror, carrying the flag of Capt. Fernando Villaamil Fernandez-Cueto (destroyer flotilla commander), and commanded by Lt. Francisco de la Bocha y Pérez, was nursing boiler problems.

Saint Paul sortied out from Philadelphia to look for Cervera on 5 May.

The Flying Squadron, under the command of Commodore Winfield S. Schley, joined the search for the Spanish fleet while the fleet four detailed ships, Saint Paul, her American Line companion auxiliary cruiser USS Yale, the similar USS Harvard, and USS Minneapolis, patrolled the waters off Santiago just in case Cervera made it to the Cuban hub.

In the meantime, the Spanish squadron popped up at the French colony of Martinique on 10 May 1898 and, with Terror‘s engines fully immobilized, the little destroyer that couldn’t was left behind while Cervera beat feet to Santiago, Cuba. Alone, the intrepid Lt. Bocha managed to cobble together Terror‘s condemned piping and nurse her solo to San Juan a week later.

Meanwhile, our hero liner-cruiser Saint Paul found the British steam collier Restormel, which was chartered to bring 2,400-tons of badly needed fresh Cardiff coal to Cervera and captured the same just outside of Santiago on 25 May after firing two blanks and one war shot from her 5-inch battery. She later arranged for the steamer to go to Key West as a prize. The British captain reportedly told his American captors he was glad the U.S. wound up with his valuable cargo since the Spaniards did not lift a finger to prevent his capture even though he was under the heavy guns of Castle Morro and a promised battleship escort into Santiago never materialized.

“I am glad you Yankees have the coal since those duffers inside didn’t have the nerve to come out and back me up with their guns when we were right within range,” he reportedly said as the prize crew of bluejackets and leathernecks from Saint Paul came aboard.

Saint Paul next appeared off Fort Caimanera near Guantánamo, where her 5-inch gunners helped plaster the Spanish shore batteries there from just 1,000 yards off the beach. By early June she was off San Juan along with USS Yosemite and the new cruiser USS New Orleans.

The trio effectively blockaded that Spanish Puerto Rican port, which held the aforementioned Terror as well as the ineffective 1,200-ton Velasco-class unprotected cruiser Isabel II (4×4.7-inch guns), and the two 500-ton 3rd class gunboats General Concha (3×4.7inch) and Ponce de Leon. On the morning of 22 June, while a German tramp steamer made for open ocean, the three Spanish warships made a move to test the harbor blockade and Saint Paul was there. A short and ineffective artillery duel resulted in the two larger Spaniards turning back while Terror made a David vs. Goliath torpedo run on our liner.

The auxiliary cruiser St. Paul repulsing the Spanish torpedo-boat destroyer Terror off San Juan de Puerto Rico, June 22, 1898, by Henry Reuterdahl, NYPL Collection

The run ended badly for the unsupported Terror, who never got closer than 5,400 yards to the big American before two 5-inch shells perforated her, one in the engine room. Listing, immobile and taking on water, the stricken torpedo destroyer had to be beached by towing as Saint Paul watched. For Terror, her war was over.

The damaged Spanish destroyer Terror at San Juan. She was allowed to return to Spain when the war ended.

Isabel II, General Concha, and Ponce de Leon again tried to force the American cordon on 28 June to make a hole for an incoming blockade runner, but after an ineffective artillery duel at long range from Saint Paul, the effort was called off. It was the last naval action at San Juan and the Spanish ships finished the war at anchor, eventually sailing home when peace was concluded.

For Saint Paul, she was recalled to New York in July and, reverting to her original design, brought first the 4th and later the 8th Ohio Volunteer regiments to the theater, carrying over 1,300 troops each trip.

This image shows the ST. PAUL embarking troops for Puerto Rico. Her superimposed gun sponson which she was outfitted with while operating as an auxiliary cruiser can be seen overhanging the side of the vessel. Via SpanAm War.com http://www.spanamwar.com/Stpaultroops.htm

It was some of the first major joint Army-Navy operations since the Civil War, and improvisation was key, with troops moving ashore via sugar lighters and cargo nets.

Troops transferring to sugar-lighters at sea. There was a heavy ground swell and the boat rose and fell alongside, making it a difficult task. NH 108558

Each sugar-lighter held one company of men. NH 108559

Her last trip from Puerto Rico, in August, was to bring soldiers home to New York. From there, she steamed to Cramp’s to be disarmed and refitted for merchant service, decommissioned and released by the War Department on 2 September. Her very active wartime life lasted less than five months.

Saint Paul was also notable as the first merchant ship fitted with a Marconi wireless, in 1899. On November 15 of that year Guglielmo Marconi issued The Transatlantic Times, the first newspaper ever published at sea, using information received by radio transmission from his wireless telegraph station on the Isle of Wight.

By November 1898, she was back on the Southampton run, which was her regular route, carrying passengers, mail, and coin. For example, on one 1902 run, she brought “670 passengers eastbound, 1.173 mailbags and $200.000 in gold” to England from New York. It was her bread and butter and in her career she completed more than 200 such crossings across two decades.

William M. Vander Weyde photo of ladies waving bon voyage as St. Paul leaves the pier, from the George Eastman Kodak Museum.

Photographed circa the 1890s or early 1900s. Description: Courtesy of the Saint Paul “Minnesota Dispatch,” 1963. Catalog #: NH 92841

SS St. Paul Bain News Service, 1915, via LOC

ST. PAUL sails, 8/7/14 (LOC)

Then it was back to peacetime liner operations for an uneventful (for us) 19 years other than a 1908 collision with the British Arrogant-class cruiser HMS Gladiator, killing 27 RN personnel and sending the smaller 5,700-ton manowar to the bottom off the Isle of Wright. A British high court held Gladiator responsible.

Then, war came once again.

Saint Paul was taken over by the War Department for use as the troop transport Knoxville on 27 October 1917, making 12 rushed crossings over the Atlantic carrying the boys “over there” to fight the Huns over the next five months. For such duty, the fast transport was given a Navy gun crew to man four newly-installed 6″ guns and painted in Thayer’s quarter-shading camo process. She was credited with carrying more than 30,000 GIs to France.

The Navy, in turn, arranged for the former auxiliary cruiser’s transfer in April 1918 to the sea service and, designated USS Saint Paul (SP 1643), was taken back into Navy service. While being further converted, on 28 April, she flooded and capsized in the North River in New York.

Lot-10821-4: USS Saint Paul (ID# 1643), salvage operations of the auxiliary cruiser during 1918. Shown: First stage of pumping and rolling operation. Courtesy of the Library of Congress. (2017/08/04).

Lot-10821-2: USS Saint Paul (ID# 1643), salvage operations of the auxiliary cruiser during 1918. Shown: As she lay on the bottom

Lot-10821-3: USS Saint Paul (ID# 1643), salvage operations of the auxiliary cruiser during 1918. Shown: 6-inch gun on the starboard side of the foredeck.

Salvage operations continued into 1919 and she was eventually returned to the American Lines in floating condition. Returning to service in the low-rent steerage trade, she was still too uneconomical to run at a profit and by 1923 was retired. She was towed across the Atlantic by Jacob van Heemskerk and broken up at the former naval dockyard at Wilhelmshaven in Weimar Germany, where labor at the time was dirt cheap.

As for her sister, Saint Louis, she also served in the Great War as the armed transport USS Louisville (there was another USS St. Louis in the fleet at the time), but was gutted in a fire in 1920 and scrapped in 1924. As it turned out, the proud “20-knot” liner never made it back to carry civilian passengers after their second war.

Their company likewise faltered. The American Line itself was defunct by 1932 as was the Red Star Line by 1935. The International Navigation Co. endured in a way, merging in 1931 with the Roosevelt Steamship Company under the United States Lines banner.

Curiously, Saint Paul‘s nemesis, the Spanish Terror, outlived her. Returning to Spain following the loss of Puerto Rico in 1899, she was repaired and served in the Spanish Navy in North Africa and European waters until she was retired in 1924.

Our liner is, of course, remembered in various period maritime art.

Specs:
Displacement: 11,612 in commercial service, 14,910 long tons (15,150 t) as aux cruiser
Dimensions 535’6” (bp) x 63′ x 27’5”
Machinery 2 screws, VQE, 6 D/E & 4 S/E boilers, IHP 20000,
Speed: 19.25 knots practical but made 22 knots after funnel caps removed in 1900
Coal: 2677 tons
Complement 281 crew + 1540 passengers as liner,
1898: 357 Navy, 50 Marines
Armament: (1898)
6 5”/40 Mark 4 rapid-fire guns (four fwd, two aft) in open mounts with 600 rounds
6 6 pdr. Hotchkiss with 1800 rounds
6 3 pdr. Nordenfeldt guns (two on promenade deck, four on wings) with 1800 rounds
Extensive small arms locker for Marine detachment
(1917-18)
6 6″/50 Mark 6 guns repurposed from old battleships and cruisers.

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Warship Wednesday April 20, 2016: The Slugger of the Nevada Test Site

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take off every Wednesday for a look at the old steam/diesel navies of the 1859-1946 time period and will profile a different ship each week. These ships have a life, a tale all of their own, which sometimes takes them to the strangest places. – Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday April 20, 2016: The Slugger of the Nevada Test Site

NHHC Catalog #: 80-G-466457

NHHC Catalog #: 80-G-466457

Here we see the Northampton-class heavy cruiser USS Louisville (CL/CA-28) at the Naval Fleet Review in New York Harbor on 31 May 1934. If you will, please note USS Lexington (CV-2) in the background. The sparkly new “Treaty cruiser” found herself in the thick of a very unsportsmanlike naval war just seven years after this peaceful scene.

When the U.S. wrapped up World War I, they stopped making large cruisers for over a decade, coasting on the legacy vessels commissioned during and prior to that Great War. Then in 1928 came the top-heavy but very modern two-ship 11,500-ton (full load) Pensacola (CA-24) class cruisers with their armament of 10 decent 8″/55 (20.3 cm) Mark 9 guns (the same pieces carried on Lexington shown above).

Mark 9 turrets and guns intended for USS Louisville CA-28 under construction at the Washington Navy Yard via navweaps

Mark 9 turrets and guns intended for USS Louisville CA-28 under construction at the Washington Navy Yard via navweaps

However, with the limits of the Washington Naval Treaty, the need was seen to trim back on the P-Cola design and the next six resulting 9,200-ton Northampton‘s, with just 9 of the 8″/55s and a trimmed back armor scheme were ordered after.

The subject of our study, CA-28, was laid down at Puget Sound Naval Yard, Bremerton, Washington on Independence Day 1928, just a little over a year before the Stock Market Crash brought the Roaring 20s to a sudden halt. As such, she was the third ship on the Naval List to carry the name, with the first being a City-class ironclad during the Civil War and the second a WWI troopship.

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) Gift of Admiral H.G. Bowen, 6/68 Catalog #: NH 65629

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) Gift of Admiral H.G. Bowen, 6/68 Catalog #: NH 65629

Louisville‘s armor was so thin, in fact, that she was originally classified as a light cruiser when commissioned 15 January 1931 (CL-28) but due to the nature of her armament was reclassified as a heavy a few months later.

She had a happy peacetime life, conducting training cruises for mids, visiting foreign ports throughout the Caribbean, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific.

Louisville 1934

Louisville 1934

USS Louisville saluting during Memorial Day ceremonies at New York City, May 1934

USS Louisville saluting during Memorial Day ceremonies at New York City, May 1934

Photographed during the early 1930s. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph. Catalog #: NH 51903

Photographed during the early 1930s. U.S. Naval History and Heritage Command Photograph. Catalog #: NH 51903

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) Caption: Photograph autographed June 1967 by Admiral Thomas C. Hart, USN (Ret). He used the LOUISVILLE as his flagship from 18 July 1934 to 1 April 1935 while serving as Commander, Cruiser Division 6 Scouting Force. Description: Catalog #: NH 51432

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) Caption: Photograph autographed June 1967 by Admiral Thomas C. Hart, USN (Ret). He used the LOUISVILLE as his flagship from 18 July 1934 to 1 April 1935 while serving as Commander, Cruiser Division 6 Scouting Force. Description: Catalog #: NH 51432

Northampton-class sister USS Chicago (CA-29) leads CruDiv5 into the Caribbean, Canal Zone, on 4 May 1934, fleet problem 15. Following are USS Louisville (CA-28), USS Portland (CA-33), and USS Indianapolis (CA-35)

Northampton-class sister USS Chicago (CA-29) leads CruDiv5 into the Caribbean, Canal Zone, on 4 May 1934, fleet problem 15. Following are USS Louisville (CA-28), USS Portland (CA-33), and USS Indianapolis (CA-35)

At Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1940. Note ship has 3-inch/50 caliber antiaircraft guns. Description: Courtesy of Donald Robertson Catalog #: NH 92256.

At Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1940. Note ship has 3-inch/50 caliber antiaircraft guns. Description: Courtesy of Donald Robertson Catalog #: NH 92256.

Her world started getting rough when the next World War broke out in 1939 and she started picking up new armament and getting ready for service in the Navy of the world’s largest armed neutral. This included running to South Africa and picking up a load of His Majesty’s gold to bring to the states. She arrived at 22 Jan 1941 at New York with $148,342.212.55 in British gold brought from Simonstown to be deposited in American banks.

When Pearl Harbor changed that whole neutrality thing, she was in waters off Borneo but luckily missed bumping into the Japanese fleet and joined TF 119 for a few pinprick carrier raids before sailing to the West Coast to have her armament changed wholesale.

View taken 10 November 1942, at Mare Island, California. Circles indicate alterations. Boat davits for a 26" motor whaleboat; bridge alterations; 20mm guns added to no. 2 turret. Note style of bow "28." Description: Catalog #: 19-N-36771

View taken 10 November 1942, at Mare Island, California. Circles indicate alterations. Boat davits for a 26″ motor whaleboat; bridge alterations; 20mm guns added to no. 2 turret. Note style of bow “28.” Description: Catalog #: 19-N-36771

Off the Mare Island Navy Yard, 11 November 1942. Description: Catalog #: 19-N-36765

Off the Mare Island Navy Yard, 11 November 1942. Description: Catalog #: 19-N-36765

Once made ready for the new war without treaty obligations, she sailed north for the Arctic region, where she took the fight to the Japanese occupation forces in the Aleutian Islands. She plastered both Attu and Kiska with her big 8-inchers and safeguarded convoys in the Northern Pac.

Steams out of Kulak Bay, Adak, Aleutian Islands, bound for operations against Attu, 25 April 1943. The photograph looks toward Sweepers Cove. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-72060

Steams out of Kulak Bay, Adak, Aleutian Islands, bound for operations against Attu, 25 April 1943. The photograph looks toward Sweepers Cove. Official U.S. Navy Photograph, now in the collections of the National Archives. 80-G-72060

View of bombardment in a fog, Aleutians. Probably taken during Attu Operation, May 1943. Description: Catalog #: NH 92379

View of bombardment in a fog, Aleutians. Probably taken during Attu Operation, May 1943. Description: Catalog #: NH 92379

USS Louisville (CA 28) operating in the Bering Sea during May 1943. She is followed by USS San Francisco (CA 38).

USS Louisville (CA 28) operating in the Bering Sea during May 1943. She is followed by USS San Francisco (CA 38).

Shells Attu, 11 May 1943. View of forward 8" guns in action. Description: Catalog #: NH 92382

Shells Attu, 11 May 1943. View of forward 8″ guns in action. Description: Catalog #: NH 92382

Next came service as the flag of Rear Admiral J. B. Oldendorf and a string of naval gunfire support in the Marshal Islands

Kwajalein invasion, January-February 1944 Caption: Namur Island under heavy bombardment, just prior to the initial landings, 1 February 1944. Blockhouse in lower center has just received a direct hit from an 8" gun of USS LOUISVILLE, one of whose planes took this photo. Description: Catalog #: 80-G-218802

Kwajalein invasion, January-February 1944 Caption: Namur Island under heavy bombardment, just prior to the initial landings, 1 February 1944. Blockhouse in lower center has just received a direct hit from an 8″ gun of USS LOUISVILLE, one of whose planes took this photo. Description: Catalog #: 80-G-218802

Then came the Marianas, the Palaus and on to the Philippines, where things got out of hand. As part of the Battle of Surigao Strait, Louisville helped to sink the Japanese battleship Fusō and, along with USS Denver (CL-58) and USS Portland (CA-33) rain fire on the Japanese “Treaty cruiser” Mogami.

Moving on to support operations off Luzon, Louisville was hit by two Yokosuka D4Y Suisei kamikazes in the Lingayen Gulf, 6 January 1945.

USS Louisville (CA 28) is hit by a Kamikaze in Lingayen Gulf, Philippine Islands, 6 January 1945. Photographed from USS Salamaua (CVE 96)

USS Louisville (CA 28) is hit by a Kamikaze in Lingayen Gulf, Philippine Islands, 6 January 1945. Photographed from USS Salamaua (CVE 96)

While she was able to remain operable, the damage inflicted by the twin hits killed a Marine and 42 Sailors including RADM. Theodore E. Chandler. She shipped for Mare Island for repairs.

View of wrecked 40mm quad mount and other kamikaze damage by the bridge received January 1945 in Lingayen Gulf. Taken at Mare Island, 7 February 1945. Description: Catalog #: NH 92367

View of wrecked 40mm quad mount and other kamikaze damage by the bridge received January 1945 in Lingayen Gulf. Taken at Mare Island, 7 February 1945. Description: Catalog #: NH 92367

Off the Mare Island Navy Yard, 7 April 1945. Note: anchors; NEPANET (YTB-189) at left. Description: Catalog #: 19-N-83899

Off the Mare Island Navy Yard, 7 April 1945. Note: anchors; NEPANET (YTB-189) at left. Description: Catalog #: 19-N-83899

Rushing back to the fleet, she joined TF 54 off Okinawa and was soon in the gunline pumping shells into the Emperor’s positions.

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) off the Southern coast of Okinawa, 30 May 1945. She was hit by a kamikaze a few days later. LCI-1090 is alongside. Description: Catalog #: 80-G-K-5827

USS LOUISVILLE (CA-28) off the Southern coast of Okinawa, 30 May 1945. She was hit by a kamikaze a few days later. LCI-1090 is alongside. Description: Catalog #: 80-G-K-5827

Another kamikaze hit on 5 June did less damage than the ones just five months before but she left for Mare Island again a week later for more repairs. Repairs complete, she sailed for Japan again in August but saw no more action before the end of the conflict. Finishing some post-war occupation and repatriation duties, Louisville was decommissioned on 17 June 1946 in Philadelphia.

She earned 13 battlestars for her service.

After floating in the mothballs fleet for 13 years, she was sold on 14 September 1959 to the Marlene Blouse Corporation of New York for her value in scrap.

In a way, she was much luckier than several of her sisters were. Class leader Northampton was sunk in the Battle of Tassafaronga, 30 November 1942 just a few months after Houston (CA-30) went down in the trap that was the Sunda Strait.

Battle of Sunda Strait, 28 February – 1 March 1942. Painting by John Hamilton depicting USS Houston (CA 30) in her final action with Japanese forces

Battle of Sunda Strait, 28 February – 1 March 1942. Painting by John Hamilton depicting Louisville’s sister, USS Houston (CA 30), in her final action with Japanese forces

Likewise, sister Chicago (CA-29) was lost in Battle of Rennell Island in 1943.

Of the two survivors besides our hero, USS Augusta (CA-31) spent her war in the Atlantic and Med, being sold for scrap just weeks before Louisville while USS Chester (CA-27) had already been disposed of in the summer of 1959– leaving Lucky Louie as the last of her class on the Naval List

Her bell is preserved at the Naval Support Center in Louisville while her name endures with USS Louisville (SSN-724), a Los Angeles-class nuclear attack submarine commissioned in 1986 and homeported at Pearl Harbor.

Ship's bell, currently located in Louisville, KY via navsource

However, there is another piece of the old cruiser that is quietly sitting in the high desert, having continued its military service well into the 1950s.

You see one of her Mark 9 turrets, sans guns, was sent to the Nevada Test Site and used there for several years.

5705d7b706304.image

From local media:

The turret’s purpose, in the days when nuclear tests were conducted on towers aboveground, was to cut costs by eliminating multiple stations for measuring the gamma ray output of nuclear explosions detonated at different sites.

The late Bill McMaster of Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory saw a way to create a single station that could turn and point its detectors at many sites. He had a surplus Navy gun turret shipped in from Mare Island Shipyard in the Bay Area.

The turret was installed as if aboard ship and fitted with a lead-lined barrel that could be aimed precisely at the top of a 500-foot tower a thousand or more yards away where the burst of gamma rays from a nuclear detonation would indicate its explosive yield.

The turret was used to diagnose three tests in 1957, all part of Operation Plumbbob. Soon after that, the turret was retired, as the U.S. and Soviet Union entered into agreements that led to an end to testing in the atmosphere.

There are no plans to move the old turret, which will likely remain as a quiet reminder of the old cruiser for decades to come.

Specs:

uss-ca-28-louisville-1945-cruiser
Displacement: 9,050 long tons (9,200 t) (standard)
Length: 600 ft. 3 in (182.96 m) oa
569 ft (173 m) pp
Beam: 66 ft. 1 in (20.14 m)
Draft: 16 ft. 4 in (4.98 m) (mean)
23 ft. (7.0 m) (max)
Installed power:
8 × White-Forster boilers
107,000 shp (80,000 kW)
Propulsion:
4 × Parsons reduction steam turbines, Curtis cruising gears
4 × screws
Speed: 32.7 kn (37.6 mph; 60.6 km/h)
Range: 10,000 nmi (12,000 mi; 19,000 km) at 15 kn (17 mph; 28 km/h)
Capacity: 1,500 short tons (1,400 t) fuel oil
Complement: 90 officers 601 enlisted
Armament: (As built)
9 × 8 in (203 mm)/55 caliber guns (3×3)
4 × 5 in (127 mm)/25 caliber anti-aircraft guns
2 × 3-pounder 47 mm (1.9 in) saluting guns
6 × 21 in (533 mm) torpedo tubes
(1945)
9 × 8 in (203 mm)/55 caliber guns (3×3)
8 × 5 in (127 mm)/25 caliber anti-aircraft guns
2 × 3-pounder 47 mm (1.9 in) saluting guns
6 × 21 in (533 mm) torpedo tubes
7 × quad 40 mm (1.6 in) Bofors guns
28 × 20 mm (0.79 in) Oerlikon cannons
Armor:
Belt: 3–3 3⁄4 in (76–95 mm)
Deck: 1–2 in (25–51 mm)
Barbettes: 1 1⁄2 in (38 mm)
Turrets: 3⁄4–2 1⁄2 in (19–64 mm)
Conning Tower: 1 1⁄4 in (32 mm)
Aircraft carried: 4 × floatplanes
Aviation facilities: 2 × Amidship catapults
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The International Naval Research Organization is a non-profit corporation dedicated to the encouragement of the study of naval vessels and their histories, principally in the era of iron and steel warships (about 1860 to date). Its purpose is to provide information and a means of contact for those interested in warships.

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