USS Leonidas (AD-7)

USS Leonidas (AD-7) was a destroyer tender, the lone ship in her class, named for Leonidas I (a king of Sparta), and the second United States naval vessel to bear the name.

Leonidas (AD-7) underway on 22 April 1914, while serving as a survey ship.
History
Name: USS Leonidas
Builder: S P Austin & Son Ltd.
Laid down: 1897
Launched: 1898
Acquired: 16 April 1898
Commissioned: 21 May 1898
Decommissioned: 28 November 1921
Fate: Sold, 5 June 1922
General characteristics
Type: Destroyer tender
Displacement: 4,264 long tons (4,332 t)
Length: 264 ft 3 in (80.54 m)
Beam: 39 ft 3 in (11.96 m)
Draft: 21 ft (6.4 m)
Speed: 9.5 knots (17.6 km/h; 10.9 mph)
Complement: 52 officers and enlisted (collier)
Armament: 2 × 3-pounder guns

Originally built as Elizabeth Holland by S. P. Austin & Son, Ltd., Sunderland, England in 1897–98, she was acquired by the Navy from Samuel P. Holland, London, 16 April 1898, and commissioned at New York on 21 May 1898 with Commander William Irwin Moore in command.

Service history

Collier, 18981912

Converted into a collier for duty with the newly established Navy Fleet Train, Leonidas departed New York on 30 May 1898 on a coaling voyage to Key West, Florida, and following her return to Norfolk in mid-June, sailed again on the 23rd for Cuba and Jamaica, supplying occupation troops and naval units. Putting into League Island Navy Yard, Philadelphia on 15 December, she decommissioned on the 27th and remained there in reserve for nearly two years.

Reactivated on 8 November 1900 she served with the Collier Service, carrying coal to naval ships and stations along the Atlantic coast and in the West Indies through 1908. Decommissioning at Portsmouth Navy Yard in Kittery, Maine, from 15 February to 11 June 1909, the ship resumed her service as an Atlantic Fleet Auxiliary. In 1912, the Leonidas carried several tons of relics retrieved from the USS Maine, including the battleship's main mast, to the United States.[1][2] She was placed out of service on 3 May 1912 at Portsmouth to fit out for duty as a survey ship.

Survey ship, 19141917

Recommissioned on 1 April 1914, Leonidas sailed from Portsmouth via Boston to survey the coast of Panama. From that date until 24 April 1917 the converted survey ship made four surveying trips to the Caribbean, charting the coasts of Panama, Honduras, and Nicaragua and making general observations on climate and terrain.

With the outbreak of World War I, she took up patrol duty in the Caribbean, searching for possible enemy submarine bases in Central America. As part of the Caribbean Detachment, Patrol Force, Atlantic Fleet, Leonidas remained in the West Indies until sailing for home 4 September, arriving Portsmouth 30 October.

Tender, 19181922

There the survey ship was converted, once again, this time into a tender capable of supplying two squadrons of submarine chasers. Leonidas sailed for the Mediterranean on 8 March 1918 via New York, Bermuda, the Azores and Gibraltar, arriving Corfu, Italy on 8 June and remaining there tending her submarine chasers guarding the area from submarine attack. After the Armistice on 20 November, the tender sailed for home via ports in Italy, the Riviera, and Spain, and escorted a convoy of submarine chasers from the Azores to Bermuda. She twice more escorted homeward bound small craft before arriving New York on 8 September.

Following short voyages to New London and Newport in support of her submarine chasers, the ship sailed for Key West on 11 October and operated off the southern U.S. coast as tender for the destroyers of Reserve Destroyer Squadron 1, Atlantic Fleet, out of Charleston, South Carolina until sailing for New York and arriving 19 May 1921. Leonidas sailed to Newport for duty 1 June to 17 October and, after returning to New York, sailed for Norfolk on the 28th, arriving two days later. She decommissioned there on 28 November, and was sold on 5 June 1922 to Ammunitions Products Corporation of Washington, D.C. as the SS Elizabeth Holland.

gollark: Pfft, "using food".
gollark: Wait, what is the other half used for?
gollark: Ridiculous. Nuclear is the one true power source.
gollark: ... ???
gollark: No idea. I just burn TBU oxide in crazy quantities.

References

  1. "Bringing Maine's Mast, Naval Collier Leonidas is on the way here". Evening Star (Washington, D.C.). 8 February 1912. p. 2.
  2. "Collier on Way to Annapolis with the Maine Relics". The Washington Times. 1 February 1912. p. 17.

See also

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