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词条 USS James (SP-429)
释义

  1. A Menhaden fisherman

  2. World War I service

     Outfitted as a minesweeper  Assigned to the European coast  Damaged in a storm at sea  James sinks 

  3. References

  4. External links

{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=USS James World War I improved photo.jpgShip caption=W.T. James (American Steam Trawler, 1912) Halftone reproduction, printed on a postal card, of a photograph probably taken when this "Menhadden fisherman" type steam trawler was completed in 1912.
}}{{Infobox ship career
Hide header=Ship country=United States1945}}Ship name=USS JamesShip namesake=Former name retained, in partShip owner=Taft Fish Co., of Tappahannock, VirginiaShip operator=Ship ordered=Ship awarded=Ship builder=Harlan and Hollingsworth, of Wilmington, DelawareShip original cost=Ship yard number=Ship way number=Ship laid down=date unknownShip launched=date unknownShip sponsor=Ship christened=Ship completed=1912 at Wilmington, Delaware as the trawler W. T. JamesShip acquired= leased in July 1917 as the trawler JamesShip commissioned= on 10 August 1917 in the 5th Naval DistrictShip recommissioned=Ship decommissioned=Sunk 28 April 1919Ship maiden voyage=Ship in service=Ship out of service=Ship renamed=Ship reclassified=Ship refit=Ship struck= circa 28 April 1919Ship homeport=Ship motto=Ship nickname=Ship honors=Ship fate=sank in a storm, 28 April 1919Ship status=Ship notes=Also known as USS W. T. JamesShip badge=
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=Ship type=Trawler267|LT|t|abbr=on}}150|ft|m|abbr=on}}22|ft|m|abbr=on}}8|ft|5|in|m|abbr=on}} (mean)Ship power=Ship propulsion=Steam engine13|kn|mph km/h|lk=in|abbr=on}}Ship range=Ship capacity=Ship complement=38 officers and enlisted3|in|mm|abbr=on}} gun, 2 × {{convert|.30|in|mm|abbr=on}} machine gunsShip notes=
}}

USS James (SP-429) — also known as USS W. T. James (SP-429) — was a steam trawler acquired by the United States Navy during World War I. She was converted into an armed minesweeper and assigned to the European Theater, where she performed varied tasks, including minesweeping, patrolling, and escorting of larger ships in convoy. In 1919, while returning to the United States, she was severely damaged in a storm off the French coast, and sank. Her crew were rescued.

A Menhaden fisherman

W. T. James — a "Menhaden fisherman" built in 1912 at Wilmington, Delaware by Harlan and Hollingsworth — operated out of the Virginia waterways over the next five years of her service as a trawler before becoming required for the World War I war effort. She was acquired by the Navy in the spring of 1917 from the Taft Fish Company, of Tappahannock, Virginia; ordered delivered on 1 April; and accepted on 28 May for service as a minesweeper.

Under the terms of General Order #314, issued in late July 1917, her name was officially shortened to James, but her original name, W. T. James, also continued in use, at least informally. The erstwhile fishing craft was commissioned in the 5th Naval District on 10 August 1917, Ensign E. R. Burr, USNRF, in command.

World War I service

Outfitted as a minesweeper

Later in 1917, James was refitted for minesweeping. Designated SP-429, James was fitted out for "distant service" at the Norfolk Navy Yard and, near the end of August, departed the Tidewater area, bound for Boston, Massachusetts. There, with other sister ships which had made the passage from Hampton Roads, Virginia, James prepared for the voyage to European waters.

Assigned to the European coast

Accordingly, after shifting from Boston to Provincetown, Massachusetts on 25 August, James got underway for the Azores two days later, on the first leg of the Atlantic Ocean crossing. Reaching Ponta Delgada, Azores on 6 September, James and her sister ships remained for five days, awaiting the tardy arrival of coal and water. On 11 September, the group departed the Azores on the last leg of the passage.

Disbanded as a mine squadron almost immediately after arriving at Brest, France on 18 September, the vessels of the group soon were busy escorting convoys into and out of port. Between these missions, they spent long weeks awaiting delivery of winches and French minesweeping gear. In November, the mine squadron was reconstituted under the command of Captain Thomas P. Magruder. James, among the second group to be fitted out for minesweeping service, soon shifted to Lorient, France, where she would base for the remainder of the war.

From Lorient, James not only conducted minesweeping operations but covered coastal convoys, cleared important passages near Belle Île, undertook night antisubmarine patrols using her crude listening gear, and assisted vessels in distress in her area. In July 1918, James and two sister ships swept a minefield south of Belle Isle and, despite the heavy weather in which the ships were forced to operate, accomplished their mission in such exemplary fashion that the three mine vessels received commendations from Vice Admiral Aubry, the French Prefet Maritime. During this operation, James cut out four mines in the space of 17 minutes.

Damaged in a storm at sea

James remained in European waters through the winter of 1918-1919. She departed Brest on 27 April 1919, bound for the U.S., but soon began encountering "boisterous weather" with increasing north westerly winds and a choppy sea. At 14:22, the escort commander, Captain (and future Commandant of the United States Coast Guard) Harry G. Hamlet, U.S. Coast Guard — in {{USS|Marietta|PG-15|2}} — ordered the group to return to Brest.

When it became evident that James was taking on more water than usual, she was directed to proceed to Brest without delay. Unfortunately, the "Menhaden fisherman" worked so much that her seams opened, allowing water to flood the engine rooms and affect the boiler fires — an occurrence that severely limited the ship's capacity to deal with the rising flood waters.

James — her predicament grave — signaled the nearby {{USS|Macdonough|DD-9|2}} and {{USS|Rambler|SP-211|2}} for aid. The former closed swiftly and unsuccessfully attempted to take the foundering minecraft in tow. The tug {{USS|Penobscot|SP-982|2}} managed to get a towline across to James the following morning and towed the ship for about 20 minutes before the line parted.

James sinks

By that point, the heavy seas were nearly swamping the ship. {{USS|Marietta|PG-15|2}} closed as close as was practicable in the gale and put over a line. Rigging up a ferry arrangement with a liferaft from James, the trawler's entire crew reached safety on board the gunboat by shortly after 08:00 on 28 April. Two hours later, James sank, {{convert|6|mi|km|abbr=on}} off Armen Light. In effecting the rescue, Captain Hamlet displayed admirable seamanship and on 5 January 1920, he was awarded the Gold Lifesaving Medal.

References

{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w1/w_t_james.htm}}

External links

  • USS W.T. James (SP-429), 1917-1919. Also known as James. Originally the Steam Trawler W.T. James (1912)
{{coord missing|Atlantic Ocean}}{{1919 shipwrecks}}{{DEFAULTSORT:James}}

7 : Shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean|United States Navy Virginia-related ships|Ships built in Wilmington, Delaware|1912 ships|Minesweepers of the United States Navy|World War I minesweepers of the United States|Maritime incidents in 1919

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