USS Hopkins (DD-6)


Hopkins in 1908
Career
Name: USS Hopkins
Builder: Harlan and Hollingsworth, Wilmington, Delaware
Laid down: 2 February 1899
Launched: 24 April 1902
Commissioned: 23 September 1903
Decommissioned: 20 June 1919
Fate: Sold for scrap, 17 September 1920
General characteristics
Class and type: Bainbridge-class destroyer
Displacement: 420 long tons (430 t)
Length: 248 ft 8 in (75.79 m)
Beam: 24 ft 6 in (7.47 m)
Draft: 6 ft (1.8 m)
Propulsion: 2-shaft reciprocating engines[1]
Speed: 29 kn (33 mph; 54 km/h)
Complement: 73 officers and enlisted
Armament: 2 × 3 in (76 mm)/50 cal guns, 5 × 6-pounders (57 mm (2.2 in)), 2 × 18 in (460 mm) torpedo tubes

The first USS Hopkins (DD-6) was a Bainbridge-class destroyer in the United States Navy named for Esek Hopkins.

Hopkins was launched by Harlan & Hollingsworth Company, Wilmington, Delaware, on 24 April 1902, and sponsored by Alice Gould Hawes, a great-great-granddaughter of Esek Hopkins. The ship was commissioned at Philadelphia Navy Yard on 23 September 1903, with Lieutenant Montgomery M. Taylor in command.

Contents

Pre-World War I

Hopkins sailed from Philadelphia on 12 May 1904, and joined the Fleet at Norfolk. That summer the destroyer deployed with the Coast Squadron for the midshipmen at sea training. During the following three years she ranged into the Caribbean Sea, exercising with the Flotilla, engaging in torpedo practice, and Fleet problems. In September 1906, Hopkins was present for the Presidential Review off Oyster Bay. On 29 September, she and Lawrence escorted the President in Mayflower to Cape Cod Bay to witness record target practice. In 1907-1908, Hopkins - as part of the Torpedo Flotilla - accompanied the Atlantic Fleet on a practice cruise to the Pacific. They sailed from Hampton Roads on 2 December 1907, exchanging courtesies at various Mexican and South American ports en route. After target practice in Magdelena Bay, the Flotilla arrived at San Francisco on 6 May 1908, in time for the review of the combined Atlantic and Pacific Fleets by the Secretary of the Navy. On 1 June of that year, Hopkins joined the Pacific Torpedo Fleet for tactics along the West Coast, at sea training north to Alaskan waters, and south to the coast of Mexico.

On February 14, 1910, Hopkins suffered a boiler accident. Two sailors, Chief Watertender Robert Earl Bonney and Watertender Edward Alvin Clary, were awarded the Medal of Honor for their actions during the incident.[2]

World War I

On 30 April 1917, after the United States entry into World War I, Hopkins departed San Diego for the Panama Canal Zone. She performed patrol duty, convoyed submarines and assisted them in torpedo proving. On 3 August, she arrived at Hampton Roads, for escort and patrol ranging along the coast to Bermuda.

Hopkins entered the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 29 January 1919, and decommissioned there 20 June. She was sold for scrapping on 7 September 1920 to the Denton Shore Lumber Company.

Notes

  1. ^ Haislip, Harvey, CAPT USN. (September 1977). A Memory of Ships. United States Naval Institute Proceedings. 
  2. ^ "Medal of Honor Recipients - Interim Awards, 1901-1911". Medal of Honor Citations. United States Army Center of Military History. August 3, 2009. http://www.history.army.mil/html/moh/inter1901-11.html. Retrieved May 8, 2010. 

References