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USS IOWA
USS IOWA

USS IOWA

Date1908
Object number00040661
NamePostcard
MediumInk on paper
Dimensions88 x 140 mm
ClassificationsPosters and postcards
Credit LineANMM Collection Purchased with USA Bicentennial Gift funds
DescriptionThis postcard features a black and white photographic image of the USS IOWA. It was one of a series of cards by Waldon Fawcett who photographed ships of the Spanish American War and vessels that later participated in the Great White Fleet. This series was created before 1908, some as early as 1904. Patriotic postcards such as this were produced to commemorate the Great White Fleet world tour in 1907 - 1909.HistoryIn December 1907 United States President Theodore Roosevelt sent the US Atlantic Battle Fleet of 16 battleships on a 14 month goodwill cruise around the world. The fleet was a chance for the Navy to practice seamanship and express America's world power. Roosevelt was also concerned about rising Japanese aggression and their expansionist foreign policy. The cruise would be a political and public relations exercise to build domestic support for more naval construction. Led by the flagship, USS CONNECTICUT, the Great White Fleet as it became known, consisted of 16 battleships painted white, as was the practice of all US Navy ships in times of peace. The ships sailed in four divisions of four ships each. Early in the voyage the order of the ships was altered to allow the best-looking vessels to be at the front of the fleet. The cruise incorporated six continents, 26 countries and 32 ports with 614 officers and 13,504 crew. It consumed 435,000 tons of coal, more than any other naval expedition and was the largest fleet to ever accomplish a circumnavigation of the globe. The Great White Fleet began its tour on 16 December 1907 from Hampton Roads, Virginia. The Fleet sailed to Trinidad, the British West Indies, Brazil, Chile, Peru and Mexico before sailing up the West Coast of America. The Fleet landed at San Diego, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara, Monterey and then San Francisco, California. The Fleet departed San Francisco on 7 July 1908 for the third and final legs of its tour, visiting Hawaii, New Zealand, Australia, the Philippine’s, Japan, Ceylon and Egypt. The Fleet visited Messina, Italy in January 1909 to offer support and assistance following an earthquake, and after departing Messina, the Fleet visited Naples and Gibraltar before returning home to Hampton Roads, Virginia on 22 February 1909. Vast arrays of souvenirs were produced for a population caught up in the euphoria generated by the Great White Fleet's world tour. Badges, medallions, pins, postcards and photographs all reflected the enthusiasm surrounding the tour. The USS IOWA was a coastline battleship, named after the State of Iowa and laucnhed on 28 March 1896 by William Cramp and Sons in Pennsylvania. The vessel was commissioned in 1897 under the command of Captain William T. Sampson and assigned to the Atlantic Fleet in 1898. IOWA, also known as battleship No. 4, participated in the Battle of Santiago during the Spanish American War, on 3 July 1898 under the command of Captain Robley D. Evans. Evans was later the Commander of the Great White Fleet. From late 1898 IOWA was stationed in Chile and Peru in an effort to ease pro-Spanish tensions following the Battle of Santiago. For two years from 1899 IOWA served in the Pacific Squadron under Captain Goodrich. In 1902 the battleship became the flagship of the South Atlantic Squadron, before being decommissioned in June 1903. Later that year IOWA was recommissioned and served with the North Atlantic Squadron before being decommissioned again on 23 July 1908. In 1910 the battleship was recommissioned for the final time and used as a training ship for the Atlantic Reserve Fleet until 27 May 1914 when IOWA was decommissioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard.SignificanceThe tour of the American Great White Fleet in 1908 was an event of enormous proportions. Souvenir items such as this postcard demonstrate the excitement the visit generated around the world.