| Act of 13 May 1908: |
"._._. The President
is hereby authorized to have constructed, two first-class battle ships to
cost, exclusive of armor and armament, not exceeding six million dollars
each, similar in all essential characteristics to the battle ship authorized
by the act making appropriations for the naval service for the fiscal year
ending June thirteenth, nineteen hundred and eight. At least one of such
battleships shall be built and constructed under the direction of the Secretary
of the Navy at one of the navy yards;
._._. |
. . . . . . . |
"._._. Said
vessels
._._. in all
their parts shall be of domestic manufacture; and the steel material shall
be of domestic manufacture,
._._." |
| Utah (Battleship No. 31) was laid down on 9 March 1909
at Camden, New Jersey, by the New York Shipbuilding Co.,; Launched 0n 23
December 1909; sponsored by Miss Mary Alice Spry, daughter of Governor William
Spry of Utah; and commissioned at the Philadelphia navy Yard on 31 August
1911, Capt. William S. Benson in command. |
| After her shakedown cruise -- a voyage that took her to Hampton
Roads, Virginia; Santa Rosa Island and Pensacola, Florida; Galveston, Texas;
Kingston and Portland Bight, Jamaica; and Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -- Utah
was assigned to the Atlantic Fleet in March 1912. She operated with the Fleet
early that spring, conducting exercises in gunnery and torpedo defense, before
she entered the New York Navy Yard on 16 April for an overhaul. |
| Departing New York on 1 June, Utah briefly visited Hampton
Roads and then steamed to Annapolis, Maryland, where she arrived on the 5th.
There, she embarked Naval Academy midshipmen and got underway on the 10th
for the Virginia capes and the open Atlantic. She conducted a midshipmen
training cruise off the New England seaboard well into the summer before
disembarking her contingent of officers-to-be back at Annapolis on 24 and
25 August. Soon thereafter, the battleship headed for the Southern Drill
Grounds to conduct gunnery exercises. |
| For a little over two years, the dreadnought maintained that schedule
of operations off the eastern seaboard, ranging from the New England coast
to Cuban waters. During that time, she made one cruise to European waters,
visiting Naples, Italy, and Vilefranche, France, from 8 to 30 November 1913
with battleships
Wyoming (BB-32)
and
Delaware
(BB-28). |
| Utah began the year 1914 at the New York Navy Yard and
sailed south on 5 January. After stopping at Hampton Roads, she reached Cuban
waters later in the month for torpedo and small arms exercises. However,
due to tension in Mexico, Utah sailed for Mexican waters in early
February and reached Vera Cruz on the 16th. She operated off that port until
getting underway for Tampico on 9 April with several hundred refugees
embarked. |
| Soon thereafter, it was learned that a German steamship, SS
Ypiranga, was bound for Vera Cruz with a shipment of arms and munitions
earmarked for the dictator Victoriano Huerta. Utah received orders
to search for the ship and put to sea and reached Vera Cruz n the 16th. When
it appeared that the shipment might be landed, the Navy took steps to take
the customs house at Vera Cruz and stop the delivery. Accordingly, plans
were drawn up for a landing at Vera Cruz, to commence on 21 April 1914. |
| Utah consequently landed her "battalion" -- 17 officers
and 367 sailors under the command of Lt. Guy W. S. Castle -- as well as her
Marine detachment, which formed up of detachment, which formed part of the
improvised "First Marine Brigade," made up of detachments of marines from
the other ships that had arrived to show American determination. In the ensuing
fighting, in which the men of Utah's bluejacket battalion distinguished
themselves, seven won medals of honor. Those seven included Lt. Castle, the
battalion commander; company commanders Ens. Oscar C. Badger and Ens. Paul
F. Foster; section leaders, Chief Turret Captains Niels Drustrup and Abraham
Desomer; Chief Gunner George Bradley; and Boatswain's Mate Henry N.
Nickerson. |
| Utah remained at Vera Cruz for almost two months before
returning north to the New York Navy Yard in late June for an overhaul. Over
the next three years, the battleship operated on a regular routine of battle
practices and exercises from off the eastern seaboard into the Caribbean,
as the United States readied its forces for the possible entry of the United
States into the worldwide war that broke out in July 1914. |
| After the United States finally declared war on 6 April 1917,
Utah operated in the waters of the Chesapeake Bay as an engineering
and gunnery training ship and continued that duty until 30 August 1918, when
she sailed for the British Isles with Vice Admiral Henry T. Mayo, Commander
in Chief, United States Atlantic Fleet, embarked. |
| Fears of possible attacks by German heavy units upon the large
convoys crossing the Atlantic with troops and munitions for the western front
prompted the dispatch of dreadnoughts to Irish waters. Utah -- as
part of that movement -- reached Brerehaven, Bantry Bay, Ireland, on 10
September. There, she became the flagship of Rear Admiral Thomas S. Rodgers,
Commander, Battleship Division 6. Until the signing of the armistice on 11
November 1918, Utah, along with the sisterships
Oklahoma
(BB-37) and
Nevada (BB-36),
operated from Bantry Bay, covering the Allied convoys approaching the British
Isles, ready to deal with any surface threat that the German Navy could hurl
at the valuable transports and supply ships. |
| After the cessation of hostilities, Utah visited Portland,
England, and later served as part of the honor escort for the transport
George Washington (Id. No. 3018), as that ship bore President Woodrow
Wilson into the harbor of Brest, France, on 13 December 1918. The following
day, Utah turned homeward and reached New York on Christmas Say
1918. |
| Utah remained at anchor in the North River, off New York
City, until 30 January 1919. During that time, she half-masted her colors
at 1440 on 7 January due to the death of former President
Theodore
Roosevelt and, on the 8th, fired salutes at half-hour intervals
throughout the day in memory of the great American statesman. |
| Utah carried out a regular routine of battle practices
and maneuvers, training from the New England coast to the Caribbean, into
mid-1921. During that time, she was classified at BB-31 on 17 July 1920,
during the Navy-wide assignment of hull numbers. |
| Ultimately departing Boston on 9 July 1921k, Utah proceeded
via Lisbon, Portugal, and reached Cherbourg, France soon thereafter. There,
Utah became the flagship for the United States naval forces in European
waters. She "showed the flag" at the principal Atlantic coast ports of Europe
and in the Mediterranean until relieved by
Pittsburgh
(CA-4) in October 1922. |
| Returning to the United States on 21 October 1922, Utah
then became the flagship of Battleship Division (BatDiv) 5, United States
Scouting Fleet and operated with the Scouting Fleet over the next three and
one half years. An interesting side bar, in 1923, many years prior to becoming
infamous as "Public Enemy #1," John Dellinger served aboard, and deserted
from, the USS Utah. |
| Late in 1924, Utah was chosen to carry the United States
diplomatic mission to the centennial celebration of the Battle of Ayacucho
(9 December 1824), the decisive action in the Peruvian struggle for independence.
Designated as flagship for the special squadron assigned to represent the
United States at the festivities, Utah departed New York City on 22
November 1924 with General of the Armies John J. Pershing, USA, and former
congressman, the Honorable F. C. Hicks, embarked, and arrived at Callao on
9 December. |
| Utah disembarked General Pershing and the other members
of the mission on Christmas 1924, so that the general and his mission could
visit other South American cities inland on their goodwill tour. Meanwhile,
Utah, in the weeks that followed, called at the Chilean ports of Punta
Arenas and Valparaiso before she rounded Cape Horn and met General Pershing
at Montevideo, Uruguay. Reembarking the general and his party there, the
battleship then visited in succession: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; La Guaira,
Venezuela; and Havana, Cuba, before ending her diplomatic voyage at New York
City on 13 March 1925. |
| Utah spent subsequent summers of 1925 and 1926 with the
Midshipman Practice Squadron and, after disembarking her midshipmen at the
conclusion of the 1925 cruise, entered the Boston Navy Yard and was
decommissioned on 31 October 1925 for modernization. During that period of
alterations and repairs, the ship's "cage" mainmast was replaced by a lighter
pole mast; she was fitted to burn oil instead of coal as fuel; and her armament
was modified to reflect the increased concern over antiaircraft defense.
Interestingly, Utah and sistership
Florida (BB-30)
never received the more modern "tripod" masts fitted to other classes. |
| Utah was placed back in commission on 1 December 1925 and,
after local operations with the Scouting Fleet, departed Hampton Roads on
21 November 1928, bound for South America. Reaching Montevideo on 18 December,
she there embarked President-elect and Mrs. Herbert C. Hoover; the Honorable
Henry T. Fletcher, Ambassador to Italy; and members of the press. Utah
transported the President-elect's party to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, between
21 and 23 December, and then continued her homeward voyage wit Mr. Hoover
embarked. En route, the President-elect inspected the battleship's crew while
at sea, before the ship reached Hampton Roads on 6 January 1929. |
| However, Utah's days as a battleship were numbered. Under
the terms of the 1933 Washington Naval Treaty, Utah was selected for
conversion to a mobile target, in place of the former battleship North Dakota;
and on 1 July 1931, Utah's classification was changed to AG-16. Her
conversion -- carried out at the Norfolk Navy Yard -- included the
installation of a radio-control apparatus. After having been decommissioned
for the duration of the conversion, Utah was recommissioned at Norfolk
on 1 April 1923, Comdr. Randal Jacobs in command. |
| Utah departed Norfolk on 7 April to train her engineers
in using the new installations and for trials of her radio gear by which
the ship could be controlled at varying rates of speed and changes of course
-- maneuvers that a ship would conduct in battle. Her electric motors, operated
by signals from the controlling ship, opened and closed throttle valves,
moved her steering gear, and regulated the supply of oil to her boilers.
In addition, a Sperry gyro pilot kept the ship on course. |
| Returning to port on 21 April, Utah passed her radio control
trials off the Virginia capes on 5 May. On 1 June Utah ran three hours
under radio control, with all engineering stations manned; over the next
two days, she made two successful runs, each of four hours duration, during
which no machinery was touched by human hands. Observes, however -- two in
each fire room and two in each boiler room -- kept telephone information
and recorded data. |
| Her trials completed, Utah departed Norfolk on 9 June 1923.
After transiting the Panama Canal, she reached San Pedro, California, on
30 June, reporting for duty with Training Squadron 1, Base Force, United
States Fleet. She conducted her first target duty, for cruisers of the Fleet,
on 25 July, and later, on 2 August, conducted rehearsal runs for
Nevada (BB-36),
Utah being controlled from Hovey (DD-208) and Talbot
(DD-114). |
| Over the next nine years, the erstwhile battleship performed a
vital service to the fleet as a mobile target, contributing realism to the
training of naval aviators in dive, torpedo, and high level bombings. Thus,
she greatly aided the development of tactics in those areas. On one occasion,
she even served as a troop transport, embarking 223 officers and men of the
Fleet Marine Force at Sand Island, Midway, for amphibious operations at Hilo
Bay, Hawaii, as part of Fleet Problem XVI in the early summer of 1935. She
then transported the marines from Hawaii to San Diego, California, disembarking
them there on 12 June 1935. |
| That same month, June 1935, saw the establishment of a fleet machine
gun school on board Utah while she continued her mission as a mobile
target, The former dreadnought received her first instructors on board in
August 1935, and the first students -- drawn from the ships' companies of
Raleigh (CL-7), Concord (CL-10), Omaha (CL-4),
Memphis (CL-13), Milwaukee (CL-5), and Ranger (CV-4)
-- reported aboard for training on 20 September. Subsequently, during the
1936 and 1937 gunnery year, Utah was fitted with a new quadruple 1.1-inch
machine gun mount for experimental test and development by the machine gun
school. Some of the first tests of that type of weapon were conducted on
board. |
| Utah -- besides serving as a realistic target for exercises
involving carrier-based planes -- also towed targets during battle practices
conducted by the Fleet's battleships and took part in the yearly "fleet
problems." She transited the Panama Canal on 9 January 1939 to participate
in Fleet Problem XX -- part of the maneuvers observed personally by President
Franklin D. Roosevelt from the heavy cruiser Houston (CA-30). |
| After providing mobile target services for the submarines of Submarine
Squadron 6 in the late autumn and early winter of 1939, Utah devoted
the eight months that followed to special machine gun practices. The following
summer, Utah sailed for the Hawaiian operating area until 14 December
1940, when she sailed for the west coast, retraining to Long Beach four days
before Christmas. |
| For the next two months, Utah operated as a mobile bombing
target off San Clemente Island, California, for planes from Patrol Wing 1,
and from the carriers Lexington (CV-2), Saratoga (CV-3), and
Enterprise (CV-6). Utah returned to Hawaiian waters on 1 April
1941, embarking gunners for the Advanced Antiaircraft Gun School, men drawn
form West
Virginia (BB-48),
Oklahoma (BB-37),
Colorado (BB-45),
Phoenix (CL-46), Nashville (CL-43), Philadelphia (CL-41), and New Orleans
(CA-32). |
| Over the weeks that followed, she trained her embarked gunnery
students in control and loading drills for the 5-inch batteries, firing runs
on radio-controlled drone targets as well as .50-caliber and 1.1-inch firing
on drones and balloons. Utah put into Los Angeles harbor on 20 May
and there embarked Fleet Marine Force passengers for transportation to Bremerton,
Washington. Putting the marines ashore a week later, the ship entered the
Puget Sound Navy Yard on 31 May 1941. |
| During the ensuing overhaul, Utah received repairs sand
alterations designed to make her a more effective gunnery training ship.
The alterations included the addition of 5-inch / 38-caliber guns in single
mounts with gunshields -- similar to those fitted on the more modern types
of destroyers then in service. She also lost her prewar colors, bing repainted
in overall measure one camouflage -- dark gray with pale gray tops. With
war paint thus donned, Utah sailed for Hawaiian waters on 14 September,
after Visits to Port Townsend, Washington, and San Francisco and San Pedro,
California. She arrived at Pearl Harbor soon thereafter and carried out
antiaircraft training and target duties through the late autumn. |
| Utah completed an advanced antiaircraft gunnery cruise
to Hawaiian waters shortly before she returned to Pearl Harbor in early December
1941, mooring off Ford Island in berth F-11. On the morning of 7 December
1941, the senior officer on board -- the captain and executive officers were
ashore on leave -- was Lt. Comdr. Solomon S. Isquith, the engineer
officer. |
| Shortly before 0800, men topside noted three planes -- taken for
American planes on maneuvers -- heading in a northerly direction from the
harbor entrance. They made a low dive at the southern end of Ford Island
-- where the seaplane hangers were situated -- and began dropping
bombs. |
| The attack on the fleet at Pearl Harbor lasted a little under
two hours, but for Utah, it was over in a few minutes. At 0801, soon
after sailors had begun raising the colors at the ship's fantail, the erstwhile
battleship took a torpedo hit forward, and immediately stated to list to
port. |
| As the ship began to roll ponderously over on her beam ends,
6-by-12-inch timbers -- placed on the decks to cushion them against the impact
of the bombs used turing the ship's latest stint as a mobil target -- began
to shift, hampering the efforts of the crew to abandon ship. Below, Men headed
topside while they could. One, however, Chief Watertender Peter Tomich, remained
below, making sure that the boilers were secured and that all men had gotten
out of the engineering spaces. Another man, Fireman John B. Vaessen, USNR,
remained at his post in the dynamo room, making sure that the ship had enough
power to keep her lights going as long as possible. |
| Comdr. Isquith made an inspection to make sure men were out and
nearly became trapped himself. As the ship began to turn over, he found an
escape hatch blocked. While he was attempting to escape through a porthole,
a table upon which he was standing -- impelled by the ever-increasing list
of the ship -- slipped out from beneath him. Fortunately, a man outside grabbed
Isquith's arm and pulled him through at the last instant. |
| At 0812, the mooring lines snapped, and Utah rolled over
on her beam ends; her survivors struck out for shore, some taking shelter
on the mooring quays since Japanese strafers were active. |
| Shortly after most of the men had reached shore, Comdr. Isquith,
and others, heard a knocking farm within the overturned ship's hull. Although
Japanese planes were still strafing the area, Isquith called for volunteers
t return to the hull and investigate the tapping. Obtaining a cutting torch
from nearby Raleigh (CL-7) -- herself fighting for survival after
taking early torpedo hits -- the men went to work. |
| As a result of the persistence shown by Machinist S. A. Szymanski;
Chief Machinist's Mate Terrance MacSelwiney, USNR; and two others whose names
were unrecorded, 10 men clambered from a would-be tomb. The last man out
was Fireman Vaessen, who had made his way to the bottom of the ship when
she capsized, bearing a flashlight and wrench. |
| Utah was declared "in ordinary" on 29 December 1941 and
was placed under the control of the Pearl Harbor Base Force. Partially righted
to clear an adjacent berth, she was then declared "out of commission, not
in service," on 5 September 1944. Utah's name was struck from the
Navy list on 13 November 1944. Her partially submerged hulk still remains,
rusting, at Pearl Harbor with an unknown number of men trapped inside. |
| Of Utah's complement, 30 officers and 431 enlisted men
survived the ship's loss; 6 officers and 58 men died -- four of the latter
being recovered and interred ashore. Chief Watertender Tomich received the
Medal of Honor Posthumously of his selfless act in ensuring the safety of
others. |
 |
Utah (AG-16) received one battle star for her World War
II service |
|
|