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Frigate USS Constitution, on a tour of Pacific Coast ports, arrives in Seattle on May 31, 1933.
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On May 31, 1933, the historic frigate
USS Constitution arrives at the Port of Seattle, under tow of
the mine sweeper USS Grebe (AM-43). After making a grand
circuit of Elliott Bay, "Old Ironsides" is moored at Pier 41 in
Smith Cove. The visit is part of a three-year tour around the United
States, a public "thank you" to everyone who, from 1925 to 1930,
helped raise almost $1 million to completely restore the
deteriorating vessel. The Constitution, the oldest
commissioned warship afloat in the world, will be the centerpiece of
Seattle’s "Gala Days" and will be open to the public for two
weeks.
Old Ironsides
The USS Constitution is a
2,200-ton, 175-foot, wooden-hulled, three-masted frigate, built in
Boston, Massachusetts, at the Edmund Hartt Shipyard. Launched in
1797, she was one of six frigates authorized for construction by the
Naval Armament Act in 1794. Named by President George Washington
(1732-1799), the Constitution is most famous for her actions
against the British Navy during the War of 1812. She earned the
nickname “Old Ironsides” in an engagement with the HMS Guerriere,
a frigate mounting 49 guns. During a 20-minute, close-quarter
battle, the 44-gun Constitution, disabled, captured, and then
sunk the British warship, while her thick, oak hull sustained
relatively minor damage from cannon balls. It was a great moral
victory for the fledgling United States Navy against the most
powerful naval force in the world.
After the war (1812-1815), "Old
Ironsides" was refitted and served as flagship of the Mediterranean
Squadron. A survey in 1830 determined the frigate was unseaworthy
and Congress considered relegating her to the scrap yard. But public
sentiment and Oliver Wendell Holmes’ memorable poem "Old
Ironsides" saved the ship from destruction. The Constitution
was repaired, refitted, and returned to commissioned status four times
between 1832 and 1907. From 1897 to 1925, she was on exhibition at
the Boston Naval Shipyard.When a survey in 1924 determined that "Old
Ironsides" was again in dire need of repairs, Congress authorized
her restoration by public subscription and Secretary of the Navy
Curtis D. Wilbur (1867-1954) initiated a national voluntary campaign
to raise the necessary funds.
On March 15, 1930, the Constitution
left dry-dock with major repairs completed. The total cost of this
extensive restoration was close to $1 million. Approximately
two-thirds of the money had been raised by patriotic organizations
and school children, and the remainder, needed to complete the
restoration, was appropriated by Congress. On July 2, 1931, after
sitting for 34 years at the Boston Naval Shipyard, the USS
Constitution, under the command of Commander Louis J. Gulliver
(1884-1962), set sail on a goodwill tour of New England ports. The
voyage proved so popular that the historic warship was sent on a tour of
all the coastal states of America.
A Historic Vessel
Between July 1931 and May 1932, the USS
Constitution visited every port on the Atlantic and Gulf
coasts with water deep enough to accommodate her 23-foot draft. She
was then towed to the Washington Naval Shipyard to prepare for the
long expedition to the West Coast. On December 8, 1932, “Old
Ironsides,” under tow by the 188-foot, mine sweeper USS Grebe
(AS-43) set sail for the Pacific Coast, with week-long visitations
scheduled at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and Cristobal and Balboa, Panama.
The two ships transited the 48-mile-long Panama Canal on December 27
and arrived in San Diego on January 21, 1933. During the Winter and
Spring of 1933, the Constitution and Grebe slowly
worked their way up the coastline toward Washington state. En route,
the ships called at nine major ports, including Grays Harbor
(Gray’s Harbor County), arriving at Port Angeles (Clallam County)
in the Strait of Juan de Fuca on May 27, 1933. The historic vessel
was on exhibition there for four days before departing for Seattle.
Gala Days
On Wednesday afternoon, May 31, 1933,
the USS Constitution, under tow by the USS Grebe,
entered Seattle’s Elliott Bay and made a grand tour of the inner
harbor from West Point to Duwamish Head. The warships had been
convoyed from Hood Canal to Seattle by the Black Ball Line’s
221-foot steamship Tacoma and a flotilla of smaller vessels.
The fireboats Alki and Duwamish were on hand, whistles
blowing and monitors streaming water, to welcome "Old Ironsides"
while a squadron of U.S. Navy Berliner-Joyce OJ-2 pursuit aircraft
from Sandpoint Naval Air Station circled overhead. Following the
pageant, Foss Maritime Company tugboats escorted the warships to
Smith Cove where they moored at the south end of Pier 41 (now Pier
91).
Generally, the public was not pleased
that the Port of Seattle had chosen Pier 41 to exhibit "Old
Ironsides." Lake Union would have been a more convenient location,
but the ship’s mainmast, 220 feet tall, could not pass beneath the
150-foot-high arch of the new George Washington Memorial Bridge
(commonly known as the Aurora Bridge) over the Lake Washington Ship
Canal. The weather for early spring was unseasonably warm and the
hike from the nearest streetcar stop, at 15th Avenue W and
W Garfield Street, to the Constitution at the south end of
Pier 41 was approximately one mile. Only vehicles with a “special
permit” were allowed on the pier and parking space nearby was
woefully lacking. Concessionaires, following the Constitution
from port to port, were not allowed onto the pier and made to hawk
their souvenirs on the Garfield Street Bridge (now the Magnolia
Bridge) or near streetcar stops along 15th Avenue W and
Elliott Avenue W.
The public’s interest wasn’t
diminished, however, as approximately 14,000 persons a day lined up
on Pier 41 to see “Old Ironsides.” Visiting hours were from
10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. every day the ship was in port. Rope
barriers along the pier funneled the crowd to and from the ship.
Gangplanks were positioned, fore and aft, to facilitate the flow of
traffic through the historic vessel. The Seattle Police Department
stationed patrolmen on the pier and at the ship’s side to ensure
order and the Seattle Fire Department parked an engine nearby to
cover any fire emergencies.
Honoring the Old Warship
Early Thursday morning, June 15, 1933,
two Foss Maritime Company tugboats accompanied the USS Constitution
to Tacoma for a one-week visit. A large crowd was on hand at Pier 41
to bid the frigate farewell. During her two-week stay in Seattle, "Old Ironsides" had been toured by 201,422 people. At the Port
of Tacoma, the frigate was moored at the McCormick Steamship Company
Pier on Dock Street where she was visited by over 84,000 people.
After departing Tacoma on June 22, the Constitution visited
the ports of Bremerton, Everett, Bellingham, Anacortes and Port
Townsend. On July 30, 1933, the Grebe and Constitution
left the Strait of Juan de Fuca and sailed south. At the Columbia
River "Old Ironsides" made calls at the ports of Astoria and
Portland in Oregon, and Klama and Longview in Washington. On August
26, the Grebe and Constitution crossed the Columbia
River Bar and headed toward California. They visited 10 more ports
in California before finally reaching San Diego on November 3, 1933.
The USS Constitution wintered at
the San Diego Naval Base, making repairs and provisioning for the
long voyage back to the East Coast. On March 20, 1934, she departed
San Diego harbor, under tow by the 350-foot submarine tender USS
Bushnell (AS-2), en route to the Canal Zone. South of the
Gulf of Tehuantepec, off the coast of Mexico, the Bushnell
transferred "Old Ironsides" to the USS Grebe for the
passage east through the Panama Canal. Back on the Atlantic Coast,
the Constitution called at Saint Petersburg, Florida, and
Charleston, South Carolina, before returning to Boston.
Serving at Home
Between 1931 and 1934, “Old
Ironsides” traveled 22,000 miles, called at 76 ports in 21 states
and was visited by over 4.6 million people. She returned home to the
Boston Naval Shipyard on May 7, 1934, and has remained on permanent
exhibition there ever since. The Boston Naval Shipyard, one of the
first shipyards built in the United States, is on the National Park
Service, Register of Historic Places (NR No. 66000134), that includes "Old Ironsides," the oldest commissioned ship in the U.S. Navy.
On October 28, 2009, President Barack H. Obama (b. 1961) signed the
National Defense Authorization Act For Fiscal Year 2010 (HR 2647)
which, per section 1022, designates the USS Constitution as
“America’s Ship of State,” or flagship. According to the act,
the ship should be used to conduct pertinent matters of state, “such
as hosting visiting heads of state, signing legislation relating to
the Armed Forces, and signing maritime related treaties.” The
primary mission of the USS Constitution, however, remains
education and public outreach.
Sources:
Karl Heinz Marquardt, The 44-Gun
Frigate USS Constitution: "Old Ironsides" (Annapolis: Naval
Institute Press, 2006); David Fitz Enz, Old Ironsides: Eagle of
the Sea (Lanham, Maryland: Taylor Trade Publishing, 2004); "Old
Ironsides to Sail to the Pacific Coast," The New York Times,
November 1, 1932, p. 30; "Pacific Visit Ordered for Old Ironsides,"
Ibid., November 27, 1932, p. 8; "Planes Salute ‘Old
Ironsides,’ Passing Through Panama Canal," Ibid., December
28, 1932, p. 19; "Ironsides Week Opens," The Oregonian,
October 25, 1925, p. 1; "Historic Warship Slips into Harbor,"
Ibid., August 3, 1933, p. 1; "Constitution May Sail Again
Before Making Her Last Trip," The Springfield Republican
(Massachusetts), April 28, 1934, p. 1; "Old Ironsides Back at
Boston after Three Years of Wandering," Ibid., May 8, 1934,
p. 12; "Pennies, Nickels Donated to Save Old Ironsides,"
Times-Picayune (New Orleans), October 20, 1925, p. 16; "Seattle to Help in Saving Old Frigate," The Seattle Times,
May 14, 1927, p. 5; "Rejuvenated Ironsides Once More Rides Waves in
Majesty," Ibid., March 17, 1930, p. 4; “Launched Again
After 132 Years,” Ibid., March 21, 1930, p. 4; “Old
Ironsides,” Ibid., June 28, 1930, p. 6; "21,000 Seattle
Children to See Old Ironsides," Ibid., May 28, 1933, p. 14; "Program of Gala Days While Ships Are in Port," Ibid., May
28, 1933, p. 2; "History of Famous Vessel Tells of Many Victories,"
Ibid., May 30, 1933, p. 14; "Famous Frigate Will Visit City
for Two Weeks," Ibid., May 30, 1933, p. 14; "Famous Ship’s
Story Told in Brief Outline," Ibid., May 30, 1933, p. 15; "Schools to Be Shown through Old Ironsides," Ibid., May
30, 1933, p. 15; "Historic Old Ironsides to Arrive Here Late
Today," Ibid., May 31, 1933, p. 1; "Ironsides, at Berth,
Visited by Awed Pupils," Ibid., June 1, 1933, p. 1; "10,000
Persons Are Visitors to Frigate in Day," Ibid., June 2,
1933, p. 9; "Interesting Old Warship," Ibid., June 4,
1933, p. 4; "Tomorrow Is Last Chance to Visit Frigate," Ibid.,
June 13, 1933, p. 5; "Flag Day Ends Seattle Visit of Old
Ironsides," Ibid., June 14, 1933, p. 10; "Old Ironsides
Off for Tacoma," Ibid., June 15, 1933, p. 16; "Old
Ironsides Is Home," Ibid., May 8, 1934, p. 21;"“Old
Ironsides tied Up After Long Cruise," Ibid., June 9, 1934,
p. 9.
By Daryl C. McClary, December 22, 2012
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USS Constitution (right) and USS Grebe (left), Pier 41, Smith Cove, Seattle, June 2, 1933
Photo by Lee Picket, Courtesy UW Special Collections (Neg. No. Pickett 5027)
USS Constitution, Elliott Bay, Seattle, May 31, 1933
Courtesy UW Special Collections (Neg. No. UW 7604)
Mine sweeper USS Grebe (AM-43), ca. 1930
Courtesy U.S. Navy
Fireboat Alki, Elliott Bay, Seattle, ca. 1949
Photo by Joseph Scaylea, Courtesy MOHAI
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