USS Kansas (Battleship #21) BB-21

Type:
Battleship
Class:
Connecticut (Class Overview)
Builder:
New York Shipbuilding Corp.
Camden, New Jersey
Hull Number:
Battleship #21
BB-21 (July 17, 1920)
Ordered:
June 16, 1903
Commissioned:
April 18, 1907
Keel Laid:
February 10, 1904
Decommissioned:
December 16, 1921
Launched:
August 12, 1905
Stricken:


November 10, 1923
Fate:
Sold Jan. 23, 1924 and scrapped.


Dimensions, machinery and performance
Length:
456' 3"
Engines:
2 four cylinder vertically inverted triple expansion
Beam:
76' 10"
Boilers:
12 Babcock & Wilcox (coal fired)
Draft:
24' 6"
Shafts:
2
Displacement:
16,000 std. / 17,650 full
HP:
16,500
Speed:
18 knots
Crew:
963
Range:
5,000 NM @ 10 knots


Armament as designed
Number Carried
Type
Arrangement
Maximum Range / Ceiling
4
12"/45 (305mm) Mk 5
2 twin turrets
20,000 yards @ 15° (11.3 miles)
870 lb. AP shell
Rate of fire 2-3 RPM

8
8"/45 (203mm) Mk 6
4 twin turrets
22,500 yards @ 20.1° (12.7 miles)
260 lb. AP shell
Rate of fire 1-2 RPM

12
7"/45 (178mm) Mk 2
single mounts
(casemates)
16,500 yards @ 15° (9.3 miles)
165 lb. AP shell
Rate of fire 4 RPM

20
3"/50 (76mm)
single mounts
14,600 yards @ 43° (8.2 miles)
AA ceiling 30,400'
13 lb. HE shell
Rate of fire 15-20 RPM

4
21" torpedo tubes
submerged
4,000 yards @ 27 knots (2.2 miles)
200 lb. wet gun-cotton warhead


The second Kansas (BB-21) was launched by New York Shipbuilding Corp., Camden, N. J., 12 August 1905; sponsored by Miss Anna Hoch, daughter of the Governor of Kansas; and commissioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard 18 April 1907, Captain Charles B. Vreeland in command.

The new battleship departed Philadelphia 17 August 1907, for shakedown training out of Provincetown, Mass., and returned home for alterations 24 September 1907. She joined the "Great White Fleet" at Hampton Roads 9 December 1907 and passed in review before President Theodore Roosevelt while getting underway on the first leg of the fleet's historic world cruise. The American ships arrived Port of Spain, Trinidad, 23 December 1907 and 6 days later got underway for Rio de Janeiro. From there they sailed south along the east coast of South America and transited the perilous Straits of Magellan in open order. Turning north, the fleet visited Valparaiso, Chile, and Callao Bay, Peru, en route to Madalena Bay, Mexico, for a month of target practice.

The "Great White Fleet" reached San Diego 14 April 1908, and moved on to San Francisco 7 May 1908. Exactly 2 months later the spotless warships sortied through the Golden Gate and headed for Honolulu. From Hawaii they set course for Auckland, New Zealand, to be greeted as heroes upon arrival 9 August 1908. The fleet made Sydney 20 August 1908 and, after enjoying a week of the most warm and cordial hospitality, sailed to Melbourne where they were welcomed with equal graciousness and enthusiasm.

Kansas had her last glimpse of Australia 19 September 1908 on leaving Albany for ports in the Philippine Islands, Japan, and Ceylon before transiting the Suez Canal. She departed Port Said, Egypt, 4 January 1909, for a visit to Villefranche, France, and then staged with the combined "Great White Fleet" at Gibraltar and departed for home 6 February 1909. She again passed in review before President Roosevelt as she entered Hampton Roads 2 February 1909, ending a widely acclaimed voyage of good will subtly but effectively demonstrating American strength to the world.

A week later Kansas entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for overhaul. Repairs completed 17 June 1909, the battleship began a period of maneuvers, tactical training, and battle practice which lasted almost until the close of the following year. With the 2nd Battleship Division, she sailed 15 November 1910, for Europe visiting Cherbourg, France, and Portland, England, before returning to Hampton Roads via Cuba and Santo Domingo. She again de parted Hampton Roads 8 May 1911, for Scandinavia, visiting Copenhagen, Stockholm, Kronstadt, and Kiel before returning to Provincetown, Mass., 13 July 1911. She engaged in fleet tactics south to the Virginia Capes before entering the Norfolk Navy Yard 3 November 1911 for overhaul.

Early in 1912, she began several months of maneuvers out of Guantanamo Bay and then returned to Hampton Roads to serve as one of the welcoming units for the German Squadron which visited there from 28 May to 8 June 1912 and New York from 8 to 13 June 1912.

The battleship embarked Naval Academy Midshipmen at Annapolis 21 June 1912 for a summer practice cruise which took her, among other ports of call along the Atlantic seaboard, to Baltimore during the Democratic National Convention which nominated Woodrow Wilson. After debarking her midshipmen at Annapolis 30 August 1912, she sailed from Norfolk 15 November 1912 for a training cruise in the Gulf of Mexico. She returned to Philadelphia 21 December 1912to enter the Navy Yard for overhaul.

Back in top shape 5 May 1913, Kansas operated on the East Coast until she stood out of Hampton Roads 25 October 1913, bound for Genoa, Italy. From there she proceeded to Guantanamo Bay en route to the coast of Mexico to operate off Vera Cruz and Tampico watching out for American interests in that land then troubled by revolutionary unrest as rival factions struggled to attain and hold power. She returned to Norfolk 14 March 1914, and entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for overhaul 11 April 1914.

Kansas departed Norfolk 1 July 1914 with the body of the Venezuelan Minister to the United States, arriving La Guaira 14 July 1914. Then she returned to the Mexican coast to patrol off Tampico and Vera Cruz supporting the A.E.F. which had landed there. She departed Vera Cruz 29 October 1914 to investigate reports of unstable conditions at Port au Prince, Haiti, where she arrived 3 November 1914. The battleship stood out of Port au Prince 1 December 1914 and reached Philadelphia a week later. Maneuvers off the East Coast and out of Guantanamo Bay occupied her until she entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard for overhaul 30 September 1916.

Kansas was still in that yard 6 April 1917 when the United States entered World War I. She arrived in York River from Philadelphia 10 July 1917 and became a unit of the 4th Battleship Division, spending the remainder of the war as an engineering training ship in Chesapeake Bay occasionally making escort and training cruises to New York. After the Armistice, she made five voyages to Brest, France, to embark and return veterans home.

She was overhauled at the Philadelphia Navy Yard from 29 June 1919 to 17 May 1920. Three days later she arrived at Annapolis where she embarked midshipmen and sailed 5 June 1920 for a practice cruise to Pacific waters, transiting the Panama Canal to visit Honolulu, Seattle, San Francisco, and San Pedro. She departed the latter port 11 August 1920, transited the canal, and visited Guantanamo Bay before returning to Annapolis 2 September 1920.

Proceeding to Philadelphia, Kansas became flagship of Rear Admiral Charles F. Hughes, Commander of Battle ship Division 4, Squadron 2, and future Chief of Naval Operations. She sailed for Bermuda 27 September 1920 and was inspected by the Prince of Wales at Grassey Bay, Bermuda, 2 October 1920. Two days later she was underway for the Panama Canal and Samoa. She was at Pago Pago, Samoa, 11 November 1920 when Captain Waldo Evans became Governor of American Samoa. After visiting Hawaiian ports and transiting the Panama Canal, she cruised in the Caribbean and the Panama Canal before returning to Philadelphia 7 March 1921.

Kansas embarked midshipmen at Annapolis and sailed 4 June 1921, with three other battleships bound for Christiana, Norway, Lisbon, Gibraltar, and Guantanamo Bay. She returned 28 August 1921 to debark her midshipmen before visiting New York from 3 to 19 September 1921. She entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard 20 September 1921 and decommissioned 16 December 1921. Her name was struck from the Navy List 10 November 1923, and she was sold for scrap in accordance with the Washington Treaty limiting naval armament.

(History from the DANFS)

 



Page revised Sept. 9, 2007