SpanishAmerican War service (18981899) On 25 April 1898,
Congress declared war on
Spain, beginning the Spanish-American War. An immediate objective was to defeat Spain in the
Caribbean, taking Cuba and Puerto Rico. At the time, the United States had few overseas possessions, and thus its military had limited ocean-capable sealift to support such an offensive. American political leaders preferred to acquire American ships to support the war effort, rather than enrich foreigners and rely on foreign crews. There were also legal constraints on using neutral-flagged vessels in American military operations. Through some quirks in the Congressional funding of the war, the
US Navy was able to charter transport ships prior to the declaration of war and tied-up the best of the American merchant fleet for its use. When the Army was able to begin acquiring ships after the declaration of war, fewer domestic options remained. While the Atlantic Transport Line was British-flagged, it was American owned, making it a more attractive option. Army
Colonel Frank J. Hecker approached the Atlantic Transport Line to charter its fleet, and was refused. He then offered to buy the vessels he sought and a deal was struck, subject to the approval of the
Secretary of War Russel Alger. In addition to
Manitoba, the Atlantic Transport Line sold
Massachusetts,
Mohawk,
Mobile,
Michigan,
Mississippi, and
Minnewaska. Even though the war was over, the Army faced substantial logistical challenges. It had to garrison the new possessions, and return the men temporarily mobilized for the offensive.
Manitoba moved thousands of troops and animals to and from Cuba and Puerto Rico in the immediate post-war period.
Preparation for Pacific service (18991900) Having taken Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines, the Army had a permanent need for transport to overseas bases. The annexation of
Hawaii in 1898 also required new ocean transport. The Army Transport Service chose the best vessels acquired during the war to become a permanent sealift capability.
Manitoba and her three sister ships were retained for this purpose. To mark their transition to permanent military service, they were renamed in March 1899.
Manitoba became United States Army Transport
Logan, named for
Civil War General
John A. Logan. When she emerged from the shipyard she had a new steam-powered steering system. As equipped for her Pacific service, she could accommodate 1,650 soldiers sleeping in three-tier canvas berths suspended from steel posts. Her coal bunkers were enlarged to hold 1,780 tons. She had fourteen fresh water tanks with 1,270 tons capacity. Her refrigerated space of 20,580 cubic feet was kept at 18 degrees Fahrenheit. The ship was also equipped with a vault for gold and silver in order to fund overseas operations. During her December 1900 sailing, for example, she carried $1.3 million to pay the troops in the Philippines. A sea trial for the improved
Logan took place on 13 November 1899. As configured for her Pacific service ''Logan's'' authorized complement was 13 officers and 172 crew. As she sailed, her crew was typically between 175 and 200 officers and men. On 20 November 1899
Logan sailed from New York, bound for
Manila, via the
Suez Canal. She stopped at
Gibralter for water in December 1899. She reached
Singapore on 2 January 1900, and Manila on 5 January. After disembarking her troops in Manila, she sailed to San Francisco, via
Nagasaki, with 19 passengers aboard. She arrived at her new home port on 10 February 1900.
Boxer Rebellion and Philippine Insurrection (19001901) After a brief shipyard visit, she sailed again for Manila on 16 May 1900. By the time she reached the Philippines, the Boxer Rebellion had come to a critical point. The War Department instructed
General Arthur MacArthur Jr., Military Governor of the Philippines, to hold
Logan for possible
intervention in
China. The U.S.
9th Infantry Regiment was embarked on
Logan at Manila. The ship carried 32 officers and 1,230 men. The regiment's baggage, horses, wagons sailed on
Port Albert. After a stop for coal and water at Nagasaki,
Logan landed the troops at
Taku, China on 8 July 1900. On her return trip,
Logan evacuated sick and wounded soldiers, Christian missionaries, and other refugees. She arrived back in San Francisco from Manila, via Nagasaki and
Yokohama, on 6 August 1900.
Logan began a regular shuttle service between San Francisco, Honolulu, Guam, and Manila. The
Army Transport Service maintained a roughly monthly schedule of sailings from San Francisco using
Logan,
USAT Sheridan,
USAT Sherman, and
USAT Thomas. The ships carried supplies, cash, and fresh troops to the Philippines to fight insurgents, and relieved, discharged, wounded, and dead troops back to the United States. Many officers brought their wives and children aboard as cabin passengers. Details of ''Logan's'' trans-Pacific trips during this period are shown in the table below.
Pacific service (19011918) In mid-1901
Logan went to the
Mare Island Naval Shipyard to replace her boilers and furnaces. Her first sailing after this extensive overhaul was on 1 May 1902. She resumed her roughly once a month Pacific crossings. In 1905 the ship hosted Secretary of War
William Howard Taft and a congressional delegation on a tour of the Philippines, with a side trip to
Hong Kong.
Logan continued her regular Pacific crossings until December 1907 when she went to the
Risdon Iron Works in San Francisco for an overhaul. Budget issues caused the Army to issue two contracts for this work. The first was for $85,000. Just as these repairs were completed, the Army issued another bid request for additional work. This contract, too, was awarded to Risdon. The cost of this second phase was $275,271. During this repair cycle an electrical system was installed on the ship. This work included the installation of a 3 kilowatt radio transmitter. She is recorded to have the wireless call sign "ATL", which was changed to "WXF" by 1913.
Logan returned to her San Francisco-Manila route in March 1909. In May 1911,
Logan was pulled out of service briefly for electrical upgrades and other maintenance. She was rushed back into commission in order to return troops from the Mexican border which had been sent there in response to possible instability arising from the
Mexican Revolution. She transported the 8th Infantry Regiment from
San Diego to its regular posts at
Monterey and the
Presidio in June 1911. She then returned to her regular Manila route.
Logan was the first Army transport to land at the newly constructed pier at
Fort Mason in November 1911. On 12 January 1912,
Logan embarked a battalion of the
15th Infantry regiment at Manila. She landed the troops, and their attached horses, mules, armaments and supplies at
Qinhuangdao, China in order to protect the railway between Beijing and the coast. This line of retreat for American and other foreign nationals was threatened by warring factions in the 1911 Revolution in China. The ship then resumed her regular San Francisco-Manila route, interrupted only by brief shipyard visits.
Logan had a minor modification of her route in January 1916. She sailed from San Francisco to the
Panama Canal where she embarked the
27th Infantry Regiment, which she took to Manila. ''Logan's'' arrivals from foreign ports were always accompanied by inspections and sometimes quarantine by local health authorities concerned with the spread of communicable diseases.
Allied Expeditionary Force Siberia (19181920) The revolutionary
Bolshevik government of
Russia made a
separate peace with the
Central Powers in March 1918, ending Russian participation in World War I. In July 1918,
President Wilson sent U.S. troops to
Siberia as part of an Allied Expeditionary Force to safeguard American interests threatened by this change. On 2 September 1918,
Logan sailed for
Vladivostok, Russia from San Francisco with 1,745 troops aboard. She and sister-ship USAT
Sheridan reached Vladivostok on 29 September 1918. They disembarked 3,682 troops, which brought the previously landed
27th and
31st Infantry Regiments to full strength. On 4 December 1918
Logan sailed from San Francisco for Russia again, with a stop in Honolulu, where she arrived on 13 December. She unloaded 100 tons of frozen food for the troops in Hawaii. She then sailed on to Vladivostok. A serious fire broke out en route which took seven hours to bring under control, but
Logan continued her voyage to Russia. She returned to San Francisco on 17 February 1919 with eleven wounded soldiers from the Siberian expedition.
Logan sailed again for Vladivostok on 25 February 1919. She returned to San Francisco on 6 May 1919 with more than 850 passengers aboard. She returned 1,278 soldiers from the 27th and 31st Infantry Regiments and 167 bodies of soldiers who had been killed in Siberia on 19 October 1919. During this period,
Logan sailed a triangular route between San Francisco, Vladivostok, and Manila, with her usual intermediate stops in Hawaii, and Guam.She left San Francisco for her last sailing in the Siberian Intervention on 2 June 1920. She evacuated 1,789 troops of the
Czechoslovak Legion from Vladivostok to
Trieste, Italy where she arrived on 28 September 1920. The trip to Vladivostok went via Honolulu and Manila. From Vladivostok she traveled via
Colombo, Singapore, and the Suez Canal to reach Trieste.
Logan returned to her San Francisco home port on 14 February 1921 via Gibraltar, New York, Puerto Rico, and the Panama Canal. En route she embarked elements of the
42nd Infantry Regiment in Puerto Rico and transported them to their station in the
Canal Zone. Upon her return to San Francisco,
Logan resumed her regular supply runs to Honolulu, Manila, and Guam. On 12 October 1922 she sailed from Manila for the last time. She carried units of the 9th Cavalry Regiment which were returning to the United States. After her final stop in Honolulu, she returned to San Francisco on 11 November 1922 where her government service ended. == Obsolescence, sale, and scrapping ==