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BB-3 USS Oregon
Build this 1890's Battleship BB-3 Oregon.
Relive the by-gone
era of the spit-in-polish Navy.
This kit can be built with photo
etching.
This book will show you how to build a fine
model ship 21" long .
This is the Classic GLENCOE Kit# BB147 or
SP101
- $GONE
You can also super detail this model with photeching!
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Essential Skills Scale Modeling
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Build this ship model today!
Oregon (Battleship No. 3) was laid down 19 November 1891 by Union Iron
Works, San Francisco, Calif.; launched 26 October 1893, sponsored by Miss Daisy Ainsworth,
and commissioned 15 July 1896,
Capt. Henry L. Howison in command.
After commissioning, Oregon was fitted out for duty on the Pacific Station, where she
served for a
short time.
Leaving dry dock on 16 February 1898, she received news that Maine
had blown up in
Havana harbor the previous day. As tensions with Spain grew, on 9 March Oregon arrived in San Francisco
and loaded ammunition.
Three days later she was ordered on
what was to become one of the most
historic voyages ever undertaken by a Navy ship.
Oregon departed San Francisco on 19 March for Callao Peru, the first coaling stop on her
trip around South America to the East Coast for action in the impending war with Spain.
Arriving at Callao 4 April and departing several days later, her commanding officer, Capt.
Charles E. Clark, elected not to stop at Valparaiso, Chile, for coal but to continue on
through the Straits of Magellan.
On 16 April Oregon entered the Straits and ran into a
terrific gale which obscured the perilously close rocky coastline.
For a time she was in
great danger, but just after dark she let go her anchors on a rocky shelf fringed by
islets and reefs, and safely weathered the night.
Before dawn on the 17th, the gale
moderated and Oregon proceeded around Cape Forward to Punta Arenas, where she was joined
by gunboat Mariet, also sailing to the East Coast.
Both ships coaled and departed on the 21st for Rio de Janeiro, keeping their guns manned
all the while for a Spanish torpedo boat rumored to be in the area.
Head seas and winds
delayed them, and they did not reach Rio until 30 April. There Oregon received news of the
declaration of war against Spain and on 4 May she left on the next leg of her remarkable
journey.
With a brief stop in Bahia, Brazil, she arrived at Barbados for coal on 18 May,
and, on the 24th, anchored off Jupiter Inlet, Fla., reporting ready for battle.
Altogether, Oregon had sailed over 14,000 miles since leaving San Francisco 66 days
earlier. On one hand the feat had demonstrated the mally capabilities of a heavy
battleship in all conditions of wind and sea.
On the other it swept away all opposition
for the construction of the Panama Canal, for it was then made clear that the country
could not afford to take two months to send warships from one coast to the other each time
an emergency arose.
On 26 May Oregon proceeded to the Navy Baie at Key West, joined Admiral Sampson's fleet
two days later, and on 1 June arrived off Santiago,
Cuba, to shell military installations
and to help in the destruction of Admiral Cervera's fleet on 3 July.
Oregon then went to
the New York Navy Yard for a refit, and in October sailed for the Asiatic station.
She arrived at Manila on 18 March 1899 and remained in the area until the following
February.
In cooperating with the Army during the Philippine insurrection, the battleship
performed blockade duty in Manila Bay and off Lingayen Gulf, served as a station ship, and
aided in the capture of Vigan.
Departing Cavite 13 February 1900, Oregon cruised in Japanese waters until May when she
went to Hong Kong.
Under orders then to proceed to Taku on account of the Boxer Rebellion,
she departed 23 June for that northern port; and, on the 28th, while steaming through the
Straits of Pechili, she grounded on an uncharted rock.
Suffering some damage and taking on
water, the battleship was in a precarious situation for a week.
On 5 July Oregon refloated
and the following day was towed to Hope Sound for temporary repair.
Arriving Kure Japan,
on 17 July she was placed in dry dock at the naval station there for final repairs.
On 29 August 1900 the battleship departed again for the coast of China and cruised off the
Yangtze River and served as station ship at Woosung.
On 5 May 1901 she got underway for
the United States. Sailing via Yokohama and Honolulu she arrived at San Francisco 12 June
and entered Puget Sound Navy Yard on 6 July for overhaul.
Remaining in the Puget Sound area for well over a year, it was not until 18 March 1903
that Oregon returned to Asiatic waters, and arrived in Hong Kong on that day.
Visiting
various Chinese, Japanese, and Philippine ports, the battleship remained in the Far East
until returning to the West Coast in February 1906.
She decommissioned at the Puget Sound
Navy Yard 27 April that year.
Oregon recomissioned 29 August 1911, but remained in reserve until October, when she
sailed to San Diego.
The following years were ones of relative inactivity for the aging
veteran, as she operated out of West Coast ports.
On 9 April 1913 she was placed in
ordinary at Bremerton, Wash., and on 16 September 1914 went into a reserve status,
although she remained in commission.
On 2 January 1915 she was again in full commission
and sailed to San Francisco for the Panama Pacific International Exposition. From 11
February 1916 to 7 April 1917 she was placed in commission in reserve, this time at San
Francisco.
Returned to full commission again on the latter date, Oregon remained first on
the West Coast, then acted as one of the escorts for transports of the Siberian
Expedition.
With World War I over, on 12 June 1919 she decommissioned at Bremerton. From
21 August to 4 October of that year she recomissioned briefly and was the reviewing ship
for President Woodrow Wilson during the arrival of the Pacific Fleet at Seattle.
With the adoption of ship classification symbols on 17 July 1920, Oregon was redesignated
BB-3.
In 1921 a movement was begun to preserve the battleship as an object of historic and
sentimental interest, and to lay her up permanently at some port in Oregon.
In accordance with the Washington Naval Treaty, Oregon was rendered incapable of further
warlike service on 4 January 1924, and was retained on the Navy List as a naval relic with
a classification of "unclassified.
" In June 1925 she was loaned to the State of
Oregon, restored, and moored at Portland as a floating monument and museum, to be visited
by thousands in the ensuing years.
On 17 February 1941, when identifying numbers were assigned to unclassified vessels,
Oregon was redesignated IX22.
With the outbreak of World War II, it was deemed that the
scrap value of the old veteran was vital and necessary to the war effort of the nation.
Accordingly, she was struck from the Navy List on 2 November 1942 and sold on 7 December.
Towed to Kalima, Wash., the following March for dismantling,
the Navy requested that the
scrapping process be halted when progress reached the main deck and after the ship's
interior had been cleared out.
She was returned to the Navy to be used as a storage hulk
or breakwater in connection with the reconquest of Guam, and by July 1944 she had been
loaded with dynamite and other types of ammunition and towed to that island.
The hulk of the old battleship remained at Guam for several years; during a typhoon on
14-15 November 1948, she broke her moorings and drifted to sea.
Finally, on 8 December,
the old warrior was located by search planes some 500 miles southeast of Guam and towed
back.
She was sold on 15 March 1956 to the Massey Supply Corp.; resold to the Iwai Sanggo
Co.; towed to Kawasaki, Japan; and scrapped.