Monday, October 8, 2012

Shipwreck Monday-USS Oklahoma

 

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USS Oklahoma (BB-37) was the only ship of the United States Navy to ever be named for the 46th state. She was a World War I-era battleship and the second of two ships in her class; her sister ship was USS Nevada. USS Oklahoma, along with her sister, were the first two U.S. warships to use oil fuel instead of coal.

Commissioned in 1916, USS Oklahoma served in World War I as a member of BatDiv 6. She protected Allied convoys on their way across the Atlantic. After years of spending time in the Pacific and the Scouting Fleets, USS Oklahoma was modernized from 1927 to 1929. She rescued American citizens and refugees from the Spanish Civil War in 1936. After returning to the West coast in August of that year, USS Oklahoma spent the rest of her life in the Pacific. She was sunk by Japanese bombs and torpedoes on 7 December 1941.  She took 429 of her crew with her as she capsized.

USS Oklahoma was up righted in 1943. Unlike most of the other battleships damaged in the Pearl Harbor attack, USS Oklahoma was never repaired and returned to duty. Instead, USS Oklahoma was stripped of her guns and superstructure, and sold for scrap. She sank while under tow to the mainland in 1947.

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