USS Vicksburg
United States Navy gunboat
Vessel Wikidata
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The USS Vicksburg (PG-11) was a United States Navy gunboat constructed at Bath, Maine, by Bath Iron Works. Laid down in March 1896, she was launched on December 5, 1896, and commissioned on October 23, 1897. The vessel measured approximately 200 feet in length, with a beam of around 30 feet, and was designed for patrol, blockade, and support duties. Vicksburg’s early service was marked by her participation in the Spanish-American War. She departed Newport, Rhode Island, in January 1898, heading toward the Caribbean to help enforce the blockade of Cuba. During this period, she patrolled near Havana, capturing four blockade runners—three small sailing ships carrying fish from the Gulf of Campeche to Havana, and a provisions vessel. She engaged shore batteries near Havana on two occasions but remained operational until August 1898, when hostilities ended. She then returned to Newport and operated along the U.S. East Coast and Caribbean until being decommissioned in May 1899. Recommissioned in May 1900, Vicksburg was assigned to the Asiatic Station, supporting the Philippine–American War, notably aiding in the capture of Philippine President Emilio Aguinaldo at Palanan in March 1901. She also cruised off China, Japan, and Korea, including a stint at Chemulpo during the Russo-Japanese War in 1904. Afterward, she was placed out of commission but was recommissioned in 1909 for service along Central America’s coasts, supporting American diplomatic efforts during regional upheavals. During World War I, after being recommissioned in April 1917, Vicksburg patrolled the U.S. and Mexican coasts, notably intercepting a schooner with German nationals in 1918. She continued patrols post-war until her final decommissioning in October 1919, after which she served as a training ship for the Washington State Nautical School until 1921. Transferred to the Coast Guard, she was renamed Alexander Hamilton and later Beta, serving as a training and station ship until 1944. Her long service record makes her one of the few American ships to serve actively in three major conflicts—Spanish-American War, World War I, and World War II—before presumably being scrapped after 1946.
This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.