Marblehead
Country | United States |
Ship Class | Omaha-class Light Cruiser |
Hull Number | CL-12 |
Builder | William Cramp and Sons, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States |
Laid Down | 4 Aug 1920 |
Launched | 9 Oct 1923 |
Commissioned | 8 Sep 1924 |
Decommissioned | 1 Nov 1945 |
Displacement | 7,160 tons standard |
Length | 556 feet |
Beam | 55 feet |
Draft | 14 feet |
Machinery | Geared turbines, four screws |
Power Output | 90,000 shaft horsepower |
Speed | 35 knots |
Crew | 458 |
Armament | 2x2x150mm/53cal guns, 8x1x150mm/53cal guns, 2x76mm/50cal guns, 10x530mm torpedo tubes |
Armor | 3in belt, 1.5in deck, 1.5in conning tower |
Contributor: C. Peter Chen
ww2dbaseUSS Marblehead entered US Navy service in 1924. Prior to the opening of the Pacific War, she held her shakedown cruise in the English Channel and the Mediterranean Sea; visited Samoa, Society Islands, Australia, GalƔpagos Islands, Nicaragua, Hawaii, Shanghai and Hankou in China, Japan; and then served with Pacific, Atlantic, and Asiatic Fleets of the US Navy in the 1930s. She was anchored at Tarakan, Borneo, Dutch East Indies when the war broke out. Sailing alongside of Dutch and Australian warships, she screened Allied shipping in the Dutch East Indies in the opening days of the war. During the Battle of Makassar Strait on 4 Feb 1942, she successfully maneuvered through three Japanese aerial attacks, but the fourth wave scored two bomb hits and one near miss, killing 15 men and wounding 84. She suffered a list to starboard, a few fires, and jammed rudder, but survived the battle. After repairs were completed at Simon's Town, South Africa between Mar and Apr 1942 and New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn, New York, United States between May and Oct 1942, she was assigned to the South Atlantic Force based in Recife and Bahia, Brazil. She would remain in Brazil until Feb 1944, after which date she patrolled the North Atlantic Ocean until being relocated to the Mediterranean Sea to support the Allied invasion of Southern France. Upon the completion of Operation Dragoon, she returned to the United States. She was decommissioned after the war in Nov 1945, and was sold for scrap in Feb 1946.
ww2dbaseSource: Wikipedia
Last Major Revision: Dec 2014
Light Cruiser Marblehead (CL-12) Interactive Map
Photographs
Marblehead Operational Timeline
4 Aug 1920 | The keel of Marblehead was laid down by William Cramp and Sons in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. |
9 Oct 1923 | Marblehead was launched in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States, sponsored by the wife of Joseph Evans. |
8 Sep 1924 | USS Marblehead was commissioned into service with Captain Chauncey Shackford in command. |
16 Dec 1925 | Captain William Siebel Miller was named the commanding officer of USS Marblehead, replacing Captain Chauncey Shackford. |
11 Oct 1927 | Captain Harry Kimball Cage was named the commanding officer of USS Marblehead. |
1 Jun 1929 | Captain Ralph A. Koch was named the commanding officer of USS Marblehead, replacing Captain Harry Kimball Cage. |
29 Dec 1930 | Captain William Rea Furlong was named the commanding officer of USS Marblehead, replacing Captain Ralph A. Koch. |
16 May 1939 | USS Marblehead arrived at Gulangyu island, an international settlement off Xiamen, China in response to the arrival of a Japanese Special Naval Landing Force detachment nearby. She disembarked a contingent of US Marines. |
28 Nov 1941 | USS Marblehead arrived at Tarakan, Borneo, Dutch East Indies. |
8 Dec 1941 | While at Tarakan, Borneo, Dutch East Indies, USS Marblehead received the alert that Japan had started hostilities. |
24 Jan 1942 | During the night, American warships screened the withdrawal of US and Dutch warships after those ships had successfully attacked a Japanese convoy off Balikpapan, Borneo, Dutch East Indies. Japanese aircraft responded, damaging USS Houston and USS Marblehead, wounding 70 servicemen; the Japanese lost four aircraft. The Japanese pilots inaccurately reported 3 cruisers sunk. |
4 Feb 1942 | USS Marblehead suffered two bomb hits and one near miss during the Battle of Makassar Strait, killing 15 men and wounding 84. She suffered a list to starboard, a few fires, and jammed rudder, but survived the battle. USS Stewart and USS Edwards escorted damaged USS Marblehead and USS Houston toward Tjilatjap, Java, Dutch East Indies. |
6 Feb 1942 | USS Stewart, USS Edwards, USS Marblehead, and USS Houston arrived at Tjilatjap, Dutch East Indies. |
21 Feb 1942 | USS Marblehead arrived at Trincomalee, Ceylon. |
2 Mar 1942 | USS Marblehead departed Trincomalee, Ceylon. |
24 Mar 1942 | USS Marblehead arrived at Simon's Town, South Africa to repair damages sustained during the Battle of Makassar Strait. |
15 Apr 1942 | USS Marblehead departed Simon's Town, South Africa. |
4 May 1942 | USS Marblehead arrived at New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn, New York, United States to repair damages sustained during the Battle of Makassar Strait. |
15 Oct 1942 | USS Marble completed her repairs New York Navy Yard in Brooklyn, New York, United States and departed for South America. |
20 Feb 1944 | USS Marblehead arrived in New York, United States. |
29 Jul 1944 | USS Marblehead arrived in Palermo, Sicily, Italy. |
15 Aug 1944 | USS Marblehead bombarded Axis positions near Saint-Raphaƫl, France. |
16 Aug 1944 | USS Marblehead bombarded Axis positions near Saint-Raphaƫl, France. |
17 Aug 1944 | USS Marblehead bombarded Axis positions near Saint-Raphaƫl, France. |
18 Aug 1944 | USS Marblehead arrived at Corsica, France. |
1 Nov 1945 | USS Marblehead was decommissioned from service. |
28 Nov 1945 | Marblehead was struck from the US Navy Register. |
27 Feb 1946 | Marblehead was sold for scrap. |
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7 Dec 2019 07:22:50 PM
My father Ben H Groscup was assigned to this ship and I believe he was one of the 84 seaman injured. Any information on this would be appreciated, thanks Mike Groscup