USAT Burnside

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NameYeoman (1882-1891)
OperatorBlue Anchor Line
BuilderCampbell, Macintosh, Bowstead
Launched25 March 1882
USAT Burnside
History
United Kingdom
NameYeoman (1882-1891)
OperatorBlue Anchor Line
BuilderCampbell, Macintosh, Bowstead
Launched25 March 1882
HomeportLondon, England
Identification
  • Official number 85149
  • Signal letters WKQL
FateSold
Spain
NameRita (1891-1898)
OperatorLinea de Vapores Serra
HomeportBilbao
FateCaptured by USS Yale
United States
Name
  • Rita (1898-1899)
  • Burnside (1899-1924)
OperatorArmy Transport Service
HomeportSeattle
IdentificationCall sign: BS (1909), WXR (1913)
FateSold and scrapped in 1924
General characteristics
Tonnage
  • 2,226 Gross registered tons
  • 1,427 Net registered tons
Length285.2 ft (86.9 m)
Beam36.7 ft (11.2 m)
Depth of hold23.5 ft (7.2 m)
Propulsion1 triple-expansion steam engine
Speed12 knots

USAT Burnside was the first American cable ship in the Pacific. Between 1900 and 1905 she laid 3,000 miles of submarine cable which connected many parts of the Philippines and Alaska to the rest of the world for the first time in history. She was responsible for maintenance of the Army cables on the Pacific coast of the United States for two decades.

The ship was built in England in 1882 for general freight service between London and Australia. Her initial name was Yeoman. She was sold in 1891 to a Spanish steamship company which renamed her Rita. The ship was at sea when the Spanish-American War was declared and had the bad luck to be taken as a prize by USS Yale in 1898. The US Army purchased her as a transport, and in 1900 converted her into a cable ship named Burnside.

Burnside was replaced by USAT Dellwood in 1923. She was sold and scrapped in 1924.

Yeoman was ordered by Wilhelm Lund for his steamship company, the Blue Anchor Line. She was built by Campbell, Macintosh, and Bowstead at the Scotswood Shipyard in Newcastle, England and launched on 25 March 1882.[1]

Yeoman's hull was built of iron plates. She was 285.2 feet (86.9 m) long, with a beam of 36.7 feet (11.2 m) and a depth of hold of 23.5 feet (7.2 m). Her gross register tonnage was 2,226, and her net register tonnage was 1,427.[2]

Her propeller was originally powered by a coal-fired double-expansion steam engine which was built by T. Clark and Company of Newcastle. It had high, and low-pressure cylinders with diameters of 35 inches, and 68 inches, respectively, with a stroke of 48 inches. The engine was rated at 300 horsepower.[2] This was replaced in 1887 by a triple-expansion engine with cylinders of 25, 38.5 and 63 inches with a stroke of 44 inches. This second engine was built by Wigham Richardson and Company of Newcastle. The more modern engine gave the ship a cruising speed of 12 knots.[3]

Electric lighting and refrigeration were installed on Burnside at the shipyard of Lewis Nixon in Elizabethport, NJ in December 1898 after the ship was taken over by the Army.[4][5]

She had a 3 kilowatt radio transmitter aboard in 1909, and was assigned the call sign, "BS".[6] In 1913 her call sign was changed to, "WXR".[7]

In 1913 Burnside was taken out of service briefly to have new oil-fired boilers installed.[7]

Blue Anchor Line (1882–1891)

The Blue Anchor Line pioneered regularly scheduled cargo and passenger service between London and Australia. Yeoman sailed this route, via the Suez Canal, stopping for coal and water at several points along her route.[8] She carried as many as 400 immigrants to Australia on a single trip, and general cargo. Her cargo included livestock,[9] musical instruments, china, furniture, stationary, cutlery, dolls, toys, purses, vases, and more.[10] She made port calls in Adelaide,[11] Fremantle, Albany, Hobart, Launceston, and Sydney.[3]

Linea de Vapores Serra (1891–1898)

Sometime in 1891 Lund sold Yeoman to a Spanish steamship company, Linea de Vapores Serra. Her name was changed to Rita, and her homeport became Bilbao.[12]

The ship hauled general cargos between ports in North America across the Atlantic to Europe. North American port calls include Boston,[13] Galveston,[14] Norfolk,[15] Pensacola,[16] Puerto Rico,[17] and St John.[18] European port calls included Liverpool, and Havre.[19]

In October 1892 Rita caught fire outside of Galveston while bound for Liverpool. The fire was extinguished, but 123 bales of cotton were damaged.[14]

US Army service (1898–1924)

Obsolescence, sale, and scrapping

References

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