USS Florida (BM-9)

USS Tallahassee tending to the K-5 and K-6 in Hampton Roads, 1916
USS Tallahassee (formerly USS Florida) tending to submarines K-5 and K-6 in Hampton Roads, 1916
History
United States
Name
  • Florida (1899–1908)
  • Tallahassee (1908–1922)
Namesake
Ordered4 May 1898
Awarded11 Oct 1898
BuilderCrescent Shipyard, Elizabeth, New Jersey
Cost$1,508,881.84
Laid down23 January 1899
Launched30 November 1901
Commissioned18 June 1903
Decommissioned24 March 1922
RenamedTallahassee, 1 July 1908
Identification
FateSold for scrapping, 25 July 1922
General characteristics
TypeArkansas-class monitor
Displacement
  • 3,225 long tons (3,277 t) (standard)
  • 3,356 long tons (3,410 t) (full load)
Length
Beam50 ft (15 m)
Draft12 ft 6 in (3.81 m) (mean)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed
  • 12.5 knots (23.2 km/h; 14.4 mph) (design)
  • 12.4 kn (23.0 km/h; 14.3 mph) (on trial)
Complement13 officers 209 men
Armament
Armor

USS Florida was an Arkansas-class monitor in the United States Navy.

Florida was ordered on 4 May 1898, and awarded to the Crescent Shipyard, Elizabethport, New Jersey, on 11 October 1898.[1] She was laid down 23 January 1899 and launched 30 November 1901 by Lewis Nixon and Arthur Leopold Busch, a marine engineer who worked at the Crescent Shipyard; sponsored by Miss S. Wood; and commissioned 18 June 1903, with Commander John Charles Frémont Jr., in command.[2] The total cost for the hull, machinery, armor and armament was $1,508,881.84.[3]

So that her name could be used for a new battleship, Florida was renamed Tallahassee in 1908 and was later assigned the hull number BM-9 in 1920. She was reclassified as IX-16 in 1921 and sold for scrap the following year.

  1. ^ Ships' Data 1914, pp. 52–53.
  2. ^ DANFS 2015.
  3. ^ Schmidt 1921, p. 744.