Pacific and Asiatic Fleets The keel for
Wisconsin was
laid down on 9 February 1897 at the
Union Iron Works in San Francisco. She was
launched on 26 November 1898 and was
commissioned into the fleet on 4 February 1901. The ship steamed out of San Francisco on 12 March for initial training in
Magdalena Bay, Mexico from 17 March to 11 April. She was back in San Francisco on 15 April for repairs, which lasted until 28 May. She then left for
Port Orchard, Washington, arriving on 1 June.
Wisconsin stayed there for nine days before returning to San Francisco. Later that month, she joined the battleships and
Iowa, the
protected cruiser , and the torpedo boat for a tour of the west coast of the United States. They arrived in
Port Angeles, Washington on 29 June and proceeded to
Port Whatcom, Washington on 2 July, where they took part in
Independence Day celebrations. The following day, they returned to Port Angeles and took part in training exercises, which lasted to mid-July.
Wisconsin entered the drydock at the
Puget Sound Navy Yard in
Bremerton, Washington on 23 July for repairs that lasted until 14 October. She then sailed to
Honolulu, Hawaii, arriving on 23 October. There, she took on coal and continued on to
American Samoa, conducting gunnery training while en route. She arrived in
Tutuila on 5 November, and stayed with the
collier and the
hospital ship for about two weeks before steaming to
Apia in
German Samoa.
Wisconsin left the island on 21 November for Hawaii, from which she continued on to Central America. She arrived in
Acapulco, Mexico on 25 December and remained there for three days to coal. She made visits to
Callao, Peru and
Valparaíso, Chile before returning to Acapulco on 26 February 1902. The ship then conducted a wide variety training exercises in Magdalena Bay and
Pichilinque Bay from 5 to 22 March, before steaming up the west coast of the United States, stopping in
Coronado, San Francisco, and Port Angeles. She arrived in the Puget Sound Navy Yard on 4 June for repairs that lasted until 11 August. The ship took part in gunnery training off
Tacoma and
Seattle before additional maintenance at Puget Sound on 29 August.
Wisconsin departed Washington on 12 September bound for Panama—then still part of
Colombia—to protect American interests in the country. She was by this time serving as the
flagship of the Pacific Squadron, under
Rear Admiral Silas Casey III. The
Thousand Days' War was being waged in Panama, and so Casey brought representatives from the two sides aboard
Wisconsin for negotiations that ultimately ended the conflict. The ship left Panama on 22 November and steamed back to San Francisco, arriving on 5 December. On the 9th, Casey transferred his flag to the
armored cruiser .
Wisconsin then conducted gunnery training until 17 December, followed by another period in drydock at Puget Sound from 20 December to 13 May 1903. She was then assigned to the
Asiatic Fleet; she coaled in Honolulu before arriving in
Yokohama, Japan on 12 June. Rear Admiral
Philip H. Cooper, the commander of the Northern Squadron, Asiatic Fleet hoisted his flag aboard
Wisconsin on 15 June. in
Amoy;
Wisconsin is the second ship from the right
Wisconsin spent the next three years in the Asiatic Fleet; during this time, her routine consisted of operations off north China and Japan in the summer and in the Philippines in the winter. She visited numerous
East Asian ports, including
Kobe, Yokohama,
Nagasaki in Japan and
Amoy,
Shanghai,
Yantai,
Nanjing, and
Taku in China. The ship left the Asiatic Fleet on 20 September 1906 when she departed Yokohama, bound for Honolulu. After coaling there from 3 to 8 October, she proceeded to San Francisco, arriving on 18 October.
Wisconsin spent a week there before steaming north to Puget Sound, where she was decommissioned on 16 November for a lengthy overhaul that lasted until the end of April 1908. She then steamed south to San Francisco, where she arrived on 6 May to take part in a
naval review there. She was back in Puget Sound on 21 May to have new fire control equipment installed; the work lasted until 22 June.
Great White Fleet and the Atlantic Fleet The ship then steamed back down to San Francisco in early July. There, she joined the
Great White Fleet, which had departed
Hampton Roads, Virginia, the previous year on the first leg of its global cruise. The cruise of the Great White Fleet was conceived as a way to demonstrate American military power, particularly to Japan. Tensions had begun to rise between the United States and Japan after the latter's victory in the
Russo-Japanese War in 1905, particularly over racist opposition to Japanese immigration to the United States. The press in both countries began to call for war, and Roosevelt hoped to use the demonstration of naval might to deter Japanese aggression. The Great White Fleet then began its crossing of the Pacific, with a visit to Hawaii on the way. Stops in the South Pacific included
Melbourne,
Sydney, and
Auckland. After leaving Australia, the fleet turned north for the Philippines, stopping in
Manila, before continuing on to Japan where a welcoming ceremony was held in Yokohama. Three weeks of exercises followed in
Subic Bay in the Philippines in November. The ships passed
Singapore on 6 December and entered the Indian Ocean; they coaled in
Colombo before proceeding to the
Suez Canal and coaling again at
Port Said, Egypt. The fleet called in several Mediterranean ports before stopping in
Gibraltar, where an international fleet of British, Russian, French, and Dutch warships greeted the Americans. The ships then crossed the Atlantic to return to Hampton Roads on 22 February 1909. There, they conducted a naval review for President
Theodore Roosevelt.
Wisconsin steamed out of Hampton Roads on 6 March for
Portsmouth, New Hampshire, arriving on the 9th. There, she entered the drydock for repairs and modifications, including a new gray paint scheme. After returning to service in June, she was assigned to the
Atlantic Fleet, and she joined her unit in Hampton Roads at the end of the month. She immediate steamed back north for
Portland, Maine, where she participated in Independence Day celebrations on 4 July.
Wisconsin rejoined the fleet in Hampton Roads on 6 August for gunnery training off the
Virginia Capes. Routine maintenance was performed at Hampton Roads during this period. In late September, she steamed to New York for the
Hudson–Fulton Celebration. The celebration saw an international fleet of warships from Germany, Britain, France, Italy, and other countries join the Atlantic Fleet to commemorate
Henry Hudson's discovery of the
Hudson River.
Wisconsin left the ceremonies on 5 October for repairs at Portsmouth, which lasted from 7 October to 28 November. She then returned to Hampton Roads, by way of
Newport, Rhode Island, where she embarked sailors assigned to the Atlantic Fleet. The ship conducted exercises with the rest of the fleet off the Virginia Capes until the middle of December, when she departed for New York, where she would spend Christmas and New Year's Day. In early January 1910, she steamed south to Cuban waters for exercises. During this period, which lasted from 12 January to 19 March, she was based in
Guantánamo Bay, Cuba. After the conclusion of the exercises,
Wisconsin made visits to
Tompkinsville, New York, and
New Orleans, Louisiana. On 22 April, she arrived back in New York, where she unloaded her stocks of ammunition, before proceeding to the
Portsmouth Navy Yard. There, she was placed in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet. She was transferred to Philadelphia in April 1912 and later that year she participated in a naval review, which was held off
Yonkers, New York. The ship then returned to the Atlantic Reserve Fleet; she was placed
in ordinary on 31 October 1913. In early 1915,
Wisconsin was assigned to the
United States Naval Academy Practice Squadron, along with the battleships and . The three ships made a cruise to the Pacific coast via the recently completed
Panama Canal;
Wisconsin was the third battleship to transit the canal since its opening.
World War I Wisconsin continued in her service as a training ship into 1917; she was in the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 6 April when the United States declared war on Germany, entering
World War I. On the 8th, the ship began to receive men from the
Naval Militia to flesh out her crew. She was placed in full commission on 23 April and was assigned to the
Coast Battleship Patrol Squadron, along with
Missouri and
Ohio, commanded by
Commander David F. Sellers. On 6 May,
Wisconsin steamed to the Virginia Capes, arriving in
Yorktown, Virginia the next day. From then to early August, the ship was employed as a training ship for engine room personnel in the Chesapeake Bay area. She then took part in squadron exercises from 13 to 19 August; these included the battleships , , , ,
Ohio,
Missouri, and .
Wisconsin then proceeded to
Port Jefferson, New York for additional exercises. The ship then steamed to the
York River in the western Chesapeake in early October, followed by a short period in drydock at the Philadelphia Navy Yard from 30 October to 18 December. She returned to the Chesapeake, where she remained into early 1918. More repairs at Philadelphia followed from 13 May to 3 June, after which she steamed to Annapolis. While en route, she received orders to cruise close to shore, as the German
submarine had been operating in the area since 23 May, and had sunk several ships.
Wisconsin reached Annapolis on 7 June, having stopped in the
Delaware River to wait for
U-151 to depart. A contingent of 175
midshipmen came aboard
Wisconsin on 8 June for a training cruise to the Chesapeake. On 29 August she returned to Annapolis and disembarked the midshipmen before returning to Yorktown the next day. There, she took on 217 men for another round of training. On 11 November, Germany signed the
Armistice that ended the fighting in Europe.
Wisconsin continued in her training ship duties until 20 December, when she was sent to New York for a naval review for
Secretary of the Navy Josephus Daniels and
Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt on 26 December. Following the German surrender in November 1918, most of the battleships of the Atlantic Fleet were used as transports to ferry American soldiers back from France.
Wisconsin and her sisters were not so employed, however, owing to their short range and small size, which would not permit sufficient additional accommodations.
Wisconsin instead steamed to Cuba for training with the Atlantic Fleet into 1919. She went on a midshipmen training cruise to the Caribbean in mid-1919. On 15 May 1920,
Wisconsin was decommissioned; she was reclassified as BB-9 on 17 July. She was eventually sold on 26 January 1922 and
broken up for scrap. ==Footnotes==