AcePilots Home World War Two Ships Home US Navy Page Battleships Page

New York (BB–34) displaced 27,000 tons, was 573’ long.
Her
main armament consisted of ten 14” guns, supplemented by twenty-one 5”
guns. A look at the overhead sketch shows the arrangement of New York's five turrets (two 14 inch guns in each). One of them sits amidships, which limited its field of fire and whose operations tended to interfere with the ship's other machinery. An unsatisfactoy arrangement, even called "disgusting" by the Naval General Board, rectified in the succeeding class, the Nevada battleships.
The fifth New York (BB–34) was laid down 11
September 1911 by
Brooklyn
Navy Yard, New York; launched 30 October 1912; sponsored by
Miss Elsie
Calder; and commissioned 15 April 1914, Captain Thomas S. Rodgers in
command.
Ordered south soon after commissioning, New York was flagship
for Rear
Admiral Frank Fletcher, commanding the fleet occupying and blockading
Vera Cruz until resolution of the crisis with Mexico in July 1914. New
York then headed north for fleet operations along the Atlantic coast as
war broke out in Europe.
Upon the entry of the United States into the war, New York
sailed as
flagship with Battleship Division 9 commanded by Rear Admiral Hugh
Rodman to strengthen the British Grand Fleet in the North Sea, arriving
Scapa Flow 7 December 1917. Constituting a separate squadron in the
Grand Fleet, the American ships joined in blockade and escort missions
and by their very presence so weighted the Allies’ preponderance of
naval power as to inhibit the Germans from attempting any major fleet
engagements. New York twice encountered U-boats.
During her World War I service, New York was frequently visited
by
royal and other high-ranking representatives of the Allies, and she was
present for one of the most dramatic moments of the war, the surrender
of the German High Seas Fleet in the Firth of Forth 21 November 1918.
As a last European mission, New York joined the ships escorting
President Woodrow Wilson from an ocean rendezvous to Brest en route the
Versailles Conference.

Returning to a program which alternated individual and fleet
exercises
with necessary maintenance, New York trained in the Caribbean
in spring
1919, and that summer joined the Pacific Fleet at San Diego, her home
port for the next 16 years. She trained off Hawaii and the West Coast,
occasionally returning to the Atlantic and Caribbean for brief missions
or overhauls. In 1937, carrying Admiral Hugh Rodman, the President’s
personal representative for the coronation of King George VI of
England, New York sailed to take part in the Grand Naval Review
of 20
May 1937 as sole U.S. Navy representative.
For much of the following 3 years, New York trained Naval
Academy
midshipmen and other prospective officers with cruises to Europe,
Canada, and the Caribbean. In 1938, the first operational shipboard radar, the XAF, installed aboard the
battleship U.S.S. New York; able to detect ships at 12 miles and aircraft at
85 miles. In mid 1941 she joined the Neutrality
Patrol. She escorted troops to Iceland in July 1941, then served as
station ship at Argentia, Newfoundland, protecting the new American
base there. From America’s entry into World War II, New York
guarded
Atlantic convoys to Iceland and Scotland when the U-boat menace was
gravest. Submarine contacts were numerous, but the convoys were brought
to harbor intact.
New York brought her big guns to the invasion of North Africa,
providing crucial gunfire support at Safi 8 November 1942. She then
stood by at Casablanca and Fedhala before returning home for convoy
duty escorting critically needed men and supplies to North Africa. She
then tookup important duty training gunners for battleships and
destroyer escorts in Chesapeake Bay, rendering this vital service until
10 June 1944, when she began the first of 3 training cruises for the
Naval Academy, voyaging to Trinidad on each.

New York sailed 21 November for the West Coast, arriving San
Pedro 6
December for gunnery training in preparation for amphibious operations.
She departed San Pedro 12 January 1945, called at Pearl Harbor, and was
diverted to Eniwetok to survey screw damage. Nevertheless, despite
impaired speed, she joined the Iwo Jima assault force in rehearsals at
Saipan. She sailed well ahead of the main body to join in preinvasion
bombardment at Iwo Jima 16 February. During the next 3 days, she fired
more rounds than any other ship present; and, as if to show what an
old-timer could do, made a spectacular direct 14”-hit on an enemy
ammunition dump.
Leaving Iwo Jima, New York at last repaired her propellers at
‘Manus,
and had speed restored for the assault on Okinawa, which she reached 27
March to begin 76 consecutive days of action. She fired preinvasion and
diversionary bombardments, covered landings, and gave days and nights
of close support to troops advancing ashore. She did not go unscathed;
a kamikaze grazed her 14 April, demolishing her spotting plane on its
catapult. She left Okinawa 11 June to regun at Pearl Harbor.
Click to see a track chart of the USS New York in World War Two.
New York prepared at Pearl Harbor for the planned invasion of
Japan,
and after war’s end, made a voyage to the West Coast returning veterans
and bringing out their replacements. She sailed from Pearl Harbor again
29 September with passengers for New York, arriving 19 October.
Here
she prepared to serve as target ship in operation “Crossroads,” the
Bikini atomic tests, sailing 4 arch 1946 for the West Coast. She left
San Francisco 1 May, and after calls in Pearl Harbor and Kwajalein,
reached Bikini 15 June. Surviving the surface blast 1 July and the
underwater explosion 2.5 July, she was taken into Kwajalein and
decommissioned there 29 August 1946. Later towed to Pearl Harbor, she
was studied during the next two years, and on 8 July 1948 was towed out
to sea some 40 miles and there sunk after an 8-hour pounding by ships
and planes carrying out full-scale battle maneuvers with new weapons.
New York received 3 battle stars for World War II service.
Sources: Public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships
and pictures from my father's 1943 Naval Recognition Manual
Continue the discussion at the Ships Forum or email me (photos of WW2 ships welcome).
Copyright 2007, by Acepilots.com. All rights reserved.