OKLAHOMA USS (BB-37)

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aukepalmhof
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Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2009 1:28 am

OKLAHOMA USS (BB-37)

Post by aukepalmhof » Wed Feb 03, 2010 8:40 pm

Built as a battleship under yard No 130 by the New York Shipbuilding Corporation, Camden NJ. For the USA Navy.
26 October 1912 laid down.
23 March 1914 launched as the USS OKLAHOMA (BB-37), christened by Miss Lorena J. Cruce, daughter of Governor Cruce of Oklahoma. She had one sister the NEVADA.
Displacement 27,500 tons, full load 28,400 tons. Dim. 178 x 29.0 x 8.7m. (draucht)
Powered by triple expansion steam engines, 24,800 hp., speed 20.5 knots.
Bunker capacity 2,042 tons of fuel oil.
Armament: 10 – 14 inch, 21 – 5 inch, 4 – 3pdr. saluting, 2 – 1pdr. guns. 4 - 21 inch torpedo tubes.
Crew 863.
02 May 1916 commissioned at Philadelphia under command of Capt. Roger Welles.
Joining the Atlantic Fleet with Norfolk her home port, OKLAHOMA trained on the eastern seaboard until sailing 13 August 1918 with sister ship NEVADA to join in the task of protecting Allied convoys in European waters. In December she was par t of the escort as President Woodrow Wilson arrived in France, departing the 14th for New York and winter fleet exercises in Cuban waters. She returned to Brest 15 June 1919 to escort President Wilson in GEORGE WASHINGTON home from his second visit to France, returning to New York 8 July.
A part of the Atlantic Fleet for the next two years, OKLAHOMA was overhauled, trained, and twice voyaged to South America's west coast; early in 1921 for combined exercises with the Pacific Fleet, and later that year for the Peruvian Centennial. She then joined the Pacific Fleet for six years highlighted by the cruise of the Battle Fleet to Australia and New Zealand in 1925. Joining the Scouting Fleet in early 1927, OKLAHOMA continued intensive exercises during that summer's Midshipmen Cruise, voyaging to the East Coast to embark midshipmen, carrying them through the Panama Canal to San Francisco, and returning by the way of Cuba and Haiti.
Modernized at Philadelphia between September 1927 and July 1929, OKLAHOMA rejoined the Scouting Fleet for exercises in the Caribbean, and returned to the west coast in June 1930 for fleet operations through spring 1936. That summer she carried midshipmen on a European training cruise, visiting northern ports. The cruise was interrupted with the outbreak of civil war in Spain, as OKLAHOMA sped to Bilbao, arriving 24 July 1936 to rescue American citizens and other refugees whom she carried to Gibraltar and French ports. She returned to Norfolk 11 September, and to the West Coast 24 October.
OKLAHOMA's Pacific Fleet operations during the next four years included joint operations with the Army and the training of reservists.
She was based at Pearl Harbor from 6 December 1940 for patrols and exercises, and was moored in Battleship Row 7 December 1941, when the Japanese attacked. Outboard alongside MARYLAND OKLAHOMA took 3 torpedo hits almost immediately after the first Japanese bombs fell. As she began to capsize, 2 more torpedoes struck home, and her men were strafed as they abandoned ship. Within 20 minutes after the attack began, she had swung over until halted by her masts touching bottom, her starboard side above water, and a part of her keel clear. Many of her crew, however, remained in the fight, clambering aboard MARYLAND to help serve her antiaircraft batteries. Twenty officers and 395 enlisted men were either killed or missing, 32 others wounded, and many were trapped within the capsized hull, to be saved by heroic rescue efforts. Such an effort was that of Julio DeCastro, a civilian yard worker who organized the team which saved 32 OKLAHOMA sailors.
The difficult salvage job began in March 1943, and OKLAHOMA entered dry dock 2 December. Decommissioning 1 September 1944, OKLAHOMO was stripped of guns, auxiliary machinery, stores and superstructure, and sold 5 December 1946 for scrap to Moore Drydock Co., Oakland, Calif. For $ 146,000 OKLAHOMA parted her tow line and sank 17 May 1947 540 miles out, bound from Pearl Harbor to San Francisco.
OKLAHOMA received 1 battle star for World War II service.

Marshall Islands 1997 20c sg924, scott649aj. Domminica 1991 $6 sg?, scott1377. Guyana 1991 sg?, scottSS2452 St Vincent Grenadines 1991 sg?, scott SS 818 Sierra Leone 1991 sg?, scott SS1447 and 1991 75Le sg?, scott1447c Uganda 1992 200sh sg?, scott975c
Djibouti 2016 960F sg?, scott?
Solomon Islands 2016 $1200 sg?, scott?
Grenada 2016 $3.50 sg?, scott?
Jane’s 1914. Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.
Attachments
tmpFD.jpg
Oaklahoma.jpg
djibouti 2016, (2).jpg
2016 OKLAHOMA.jpg
2016 oklahoma 1.jpg

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