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SS Caserta

SS Caserta was an Italian ocean liner named for the city of Caserta in the Campania region of Italy. She was previously known as SS Maritzburg and SS Mendoza, and was later renamed SS Venezuela. Launched in 1904 as Maritzburg for the Bucknall Line, the ship was sold to Lloyd Italiano in 1905 and renamed Mendoza. Renamed Caserta in 1914, she was placed under the Navigazione Generale Italiana banner in 1918. During World War I she was employed as a troopship carrying United States troops to France as part of the United States Navy Cruiser and Transport Force. In 1923, she was renamed Venezuela and transferred to La Veloce for South American service, but reverted to NGI control in 1924. She was scrapped in 1928.

History
Italy
Name
  • 1904: SS Maritzburg
  • 1905: SS Mendoza
  • 1914: SS Caserta
  • 1923: SS Venezuela
Namesake
Owner
Port of registry1905: Genoa
Builder
Yard number739
Launched16 August 1904
FateScrapped, March 1928
General characteristics
Tonnage6,847 GRT
Length420 ft (130 m)[2]
Beam51 ft (16 m)[2]
Propulsion
Speed14 knots (26 km/h)[2]
Notesone funnel and two masts[2]

Early career Edit

SS Maritzburg, an ocean liner with a 6,847 gross register tons (GRT),[3] was built in 1904 by Sir W. G. Armstrong, Whitworth and Company of Newcastle upon Tyne, England.[2] Sailing for the Bucknall Line during her first year of operation, the liner was sold in 1905 to Lloyd Italiano and renamed SS Mendoza.[3]

Mendoza completed one trip to New York in January 1908, and two trips in September and October 1909.[4] For the next two years, she began service to New York in May and continued through December. Beginning in May 1912, Mendoza began year-round service on the New York route, sailing opposite Taormina.[5] In 1914, the ship was renamed SS Caserta after the city of Caserta, Italy,[3] and continued New York service opposite Taormina.[6]

In May 1915, Italy declared war on Austria-Hungary, and ships from New York to Italy often carried Italian immigrants returning to fight for their homeland. One voyage of Caserta was typical; she sailed from New York on 1 November carrying some 1,200 men, nearly all of whom were, according to an article in The New York Times, reservists of the Italian Army.[7]

Before her 1 February 1916 arrival in New York, Caserta had been armed with two 3-inch (76 mm) guns mounted on her after deckhouse, and manned by two gunners mates and two assistants. Caserta had been escorted by Italian Navy torpedo boats until she reached Gibraltar. The gunners practiced from Gibraltar to the Azores by shooting at submarine-like targets—butter barrels, which had been equipped with a stick, painted gray, and tossed from the bow of the ship.[8] Caserta, by this time the only Lloyd Italiano ship sailing to New York, completed two more roundtrips to New York before Italy joined the war against Germany in August 1916. Caserta completed two more New York roundtrips before the end of the year.[9] Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare on 1 February 1917. Lloyd Italiano did not have any U.S. passenger service that year, and Caserta's activities in 1917 are unknown.[10]

U.S. Troopship service Edit

Beginning in May 1918, Caserta was chartered as a United States troop transport and attached to the United States Navy Cruiser and Transport Force.[11]

Caserta departed New York 10 May 1918 on the first of five convoy voyages to Europe before the war's end—carrying elements of the U.S. 4th Infantry Division's 47th Infantry Regiment, who called her a "cattle boat"—and accompanied by U.S. Navy transports President Lincoln, Covington, Rijndam, UK troopship Dwinsk, and Italian steamship Dante Alighieri. This group rendezvoused with a similar group that left Newport News, Virginia, the same day, consisting of American transports Lenape, Pastores, Wilhelmina, Princess Matoika, Antigone, and Susquehanna, the UK steamship Kursk, and the Italian Duca d'Aosta.[12] American cruiser Frederick served as escort for the assembled ships, which were the 35th U.S. convoy of the war.[13] On 20 May, the convoy sighted and fired on a "submarine" that turned out to be a bucket; the next day escort Frederick left the convoy after being relieved by nine destroyers. Three days later the convoy sighted land at 06:30 and anchored at Brest that afternoon.[14]

Caserta's next convoy left Newport News on 23 June and consisted of the Italian steamship Duca d'Aosta, Re d'Italia, the French Patria, and American transports Pocahontas and Susquehanna. Accompanied by Montana, South Dakota, Huntington, Gregory, and Fairfax, the convoy reached France on 5 July. Caserta returned to Virginia on 21 July with Re d'Italia.[15]

Caserta sailed again for France on 26 July with Pocahontas, Susquehanna, and Duca d'Aosta from Newport News, and met up with U.S. Navy transports Finland, and Kroonland, and steamship TaorminaCaserta's old Lloyd Italiano line mate—that had sailed the same day from New York.[16] Cruisers Pueblo and Huntington, and destroyers Rathburne and Colhoun ushered the transports to France, where they arrived on 7 August.[17] Caserta arrived back in the United States in late August.[16]

The Italian liner began her next crossing on 30 August when she sailed from Newport News with USS America and Duca d'Aosta to join the New York contingent of Kroonland Susquehanna, Harrisburg and Plattsburg. Caserta's convoy was escorted by Frederick and Colhoun.[17][18]

At 20:00 on 7 October, Caserta departed New York on her fifth Navy voyage with 1,577 men—including parts of the Twenty-ninth Engineers—and joined Kroonland and UK steamship Euripides in rendezvousing with Tenadores, Susquehanna, America, and UK troopship Czar from Newport News.[19] Cruisers Seattle and Rochester, and destroyers Murray and Fairfax served as convoy escorts for the group, which arrived in France on 20 October. Caserta headed back to New York, arriving there on 9 November.[20]

After the Armistice, Caserta was employed to return troops to the United States. In February 1919, she carried home 1,500 American troops, including the entire 63rd Artillery, Coastal Artillery Corps.[21] John Brown, a private in the 63rd Artillery kept a diary in which he described his journey home aboard Caserta in February 1919. Departing from Marseille in the evening of 6 February, the transport arrived at Gibraltar three days later, where she anchored to wait for a load of coal for the journey home. After four days, the ship was underway, but again delayed near the Azores by storms in the Atlantic. Meals on board Caserta during the trip were not necessarily to the liking of the troops. Twice-a-day servings of "spaghetti, macaroni, or noodles" were interrupted only occasionally by non-pasta meals, such as chicken in honor of Washington's Birthday, on 22 February. The liner, nicknamed the "Macaroni Barge" by the American troops, eventually reached New York on 27 February.[22] Also on board Caserta was 60-year-old Private Robert W. Louden of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Louden, a veteran of the Spanish–American War and the Mexican Expedition, was wounded twice in fighting in France. Contemporary news accounts called him the "oldest American to go through the war".[23] Another passenger on board was Sultan, a former German messenger dog adopted by two U.S. Army captains when they found him in an abandoned German trench near Verdun.[24] Caserta sailed for Gibraltar and Italy on 6 March.[25]

Caserta made at least one more voyage with American troops when she sailed from Marseille to New York on 22 April.[26] Among the 1,500 troops on board when the liner docked in New York on 8 May, were nearly 550 men from the 7th, 50th ("Dutch Girl"), 650th and 658th Aero Squadrons; the 50th Aero Squadron had located the "Lost Battalion" in October 1918.[27]

Later career Edit

When Caserta resumed regular passenger service in 1919, she began sailing under the Navigazione Generale Italiana (NGI) banner; NGI, which previously had a controlling interest in Lloyd Italiano, took over completely in 1918.[28] Caserta resumed New York service in July, which she continued, with occasional calls at Philadelphia, through the end of 1921.[29]

In 1923, Caserta was renamed Venezuela and transferred to La Veloce Navigazione Italiana a Vapore, commonly known as La Veloce, for service between Italy and South America. Transferred back to NGI in 1924, the liner was scrapped in 1928.[28]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "SS Mendoza (1904)". www.tynebuiltships.co.uk. Retrieved 16 March 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Immigrant Ship Information - C". Retrieved 24 June 2008.
  3. ^ a b c . Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 24 June 2008.
  4. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, pp. 130, 138.
  5. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, pp. 146, 161, 170
  6. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, p. 179.
  7. ^ "New Yorkers were on Ancona" (PDF). The New York Times. 11 November 1915. p. 2. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  8. ^ "Liner Caserta armed" (PDF). The New York Times. 2 February 1916. p. 2. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  9. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, p. 189.
  10. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, pp. 191–92.
  11. ^ Gleaves, p. 240. (Page 240 shows the date as "July 1, 1916", but is wrong. See p. 102 for a description of the appendices with the correct date of "July 1, 1918" listed.)
  12. ^ Names of ships: Crowell and Wilson, p. 609. Nationalities of the ships: Gleaves, p. 202. "Cattle boat": Pollard, p. 26.
  13. ^ Crowell and Wilson, p. 609.
  14. ^ Pollard, p. 27.
  15. ^ Crowell and Wilson, p. 611.
  16. ^ a b Crowell and Wilson, p. 614.
  17. ^ a b Crowell and Wilson (p. 614) list the destroyer as "Calhoun". The only USS Calhoun ever was a former Confederate steamship captured during the American Civil War.
  18. ^ Crowell and Wilson, p. 616.
  19. ^ 29th Engineers: Black, p. 118. Time, date, ships: Crowell and Wilson, p. 618. Date, number of men: Crowell and Wilson, p. 561.
  20. ^ Crowell and Wilson, p. 618.
  21. ^ "13,000 soldiers are coming home on eight vessels". Chicago Daily Tribune. 9 February 1919. p. 6.
  22. ^ Brown, entries for 6–27 February.
  23. ^ "Three transports buffeted by gale" (PDF). The New York Times. 28 February 1919. p. 8. Retrieved 26 June 2008.
  24. ^ "Some dogs of war". Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 March 1919. p. 7.
  25. ^ "Foreign Ports" (PDF). The New York Times. 6 March 1919. p. 13. Retrieved 26 June 2008.
  26. ^ Morse, p. 82.
  27. ^ Troops: "Three transports dock at New York with 2,690 Yanks". Chicago Daily Tribune. 9 May 1919. p. 6. 50th Aero Squadron: Morse, p. 9.
  28. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 22 January 2009. Retrieved 24 June 2008.
  29. ^ Immigration Information Bureau, pp. 197, 200, 205.

References Edit

  • Black, William Murray; U.S. Army Engineer School (1919). Pamphlet on the Evolution of the Art of Fortification. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. OCLC 6287280.
  • Brown, John (c. 1920). The Diary of a Buck: The Personal Record of Private John Brown, His Wanderings with the Sixty-third Artillery, C.A.C., A.E.F., 1918–1919, Including Names and Addresses of Officers and Enlisted Men (convenience copy online). s.l.: s.n. OCLC 6984135. Retrieved 25 June 2008.
  • Crowell, Benedict; Robert Forrest Wilson (1921). The Road to France: The Transportation of Troops and Military Supplies, 1917–1918. How America Went to War: An Account From Official Sources of the Nation's War Activities, 1917–1920. New Haven: Yale University Press. OCLC 18696066.
  • Gleaves, Albert (1921). A History of the Transport Service: Adventures and Experiences of United States Transports and Cruisers in the World War. New York: George H. Doran Company. OCLC 976757.
  • Immigration Information Bureau (1987) [1931]. Morton Allan directory of European passenger steamship arrivals for the years 1890 to 1930 at the Port of New York and for the years 1904 to 1926 at the ports of New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Baltimore. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Company. ISBN 978-0-8063-0830-2. OCLC 16464579.
  • Morse, Daniel Parmelee (1920). The history of the 50th aero squadron. New York: Blanchard Press. OCLC 2660896.
  • Pollard, James E. (1919). The Forty-Seventh Infantry: A History, 1917–1918, 1919. Saginaw, Michigan: Press of Seeman & Peters. OCLC 3067517.
  • National Archives and Records Administration. U.S. Army Transport Service Arriving and Departing Passenger Lists, 1910-1939, Outgoing, Caserta, 16 Mar 1918-26 Jul 1918

caserta, italian, ocean, liner, named, city, caserta, campania, region, italy, previously, known, maritzburg, mendoza, later, renamed, venezuela, launched, 1904, maritzburg, bucknall, line, ship, sold, lloyd, italiano, 1905, renamed, mendoza, renamed, caserta,. SS Caserta was an Italian ocean liner named for the city of Caserta in the Campania region of Italy She was previously known as SS Maritzburg and SS Mendoza and was later renamed SS Venezuela Launched in 1904 as Maritzburg for the Bucknall Line the ship was sold to Lloyd Italiano in 1905 and renamed Mendoza Renamed Caserta in 1914 she was placed under the Navigazione Generale Italiana banner in 1918 During World War I she was employed as a troopship carrying United States troops to France as part of the United States Navy Cruiser and Transport Force In 1923 she was renamed Venezuela and transferred to La Veloce for South American service but reverted to NGI control in 1924 She was scrapped in 1928 HistoryItalyName1904 SS Maritzburg 1905 SS Mendoza 1914 SS Caserta 1923 SS VenezuelaNamesake1904 Maritzburg 1905 Mendoza Province Argentina 1914 Caserta Campania 1923 VenezuelaOwner1904 Bucknall Line 1905 Lloyd Italiano 1918 Navigazione Generale Italiana 1923 La Veloce 1924 Navigazione Generale ItalianaPort of registry1905 GenoaBuilderSir W G Armstrong Whitworth and Company 1 Newcastle upon Tyne EnglandYard number739Launched16 August 1904FateScrapped March 1928General characteristicsTonnage6 847 GRTLength420 ft 130 m 2 Beam51 ft 16 m 2 Propulsiontwo triple expansion steam engines twin screw propellers 2 Speed14 knots 26 km h 2 Notesone funnel and two masts 2 Contents 1 Early career 2 U S Troopship service 3 Later career 4 Notes 5 ReferencesEarly career EditSS Maritzburg an ocean liner with a 6 847 gross register tons GRT 3 was built in 1904 by Sir W G Armstrong Whitworth and Company of Newcastle upon Tyne England 2 Sailing for the Bucknall Line during her first year of operation the liner was sold in 1905 to Lloyd Italiano and renamed SS Mendoza 3 Mendoza completed one trip to New York in January 1908 and two trips in September and October 1909 4 For the next two years she began service to New York in May and continued through December Beginning in May 1912 Mendoza began year round service on the New York route sailing opposite Taormina 5 In 1914 the ship was renamed SS Caserta after the city of Caserta Italy 3 and continued New York service opposite Taormina 6 In May 1915 Italy declared war on Austria Hungary and ships from New York to Italy often carried Italian immigrants returning to fight for their homeland One voyage of Caserta was typical she sailed from New York on 1 November carrying some 1 200 men nearly all of whom were according to an article in The New York Times reservists of the Italian Army 7 Before her 1 February 1916 arrival in New York Caserta had been armed with two 3 inch 76 mm guns mounted on her after deckhouse and manned by two gunners mates and two assistants Caserta had been escorted by Italian Navy torpedo boats until she reached Gibraltar The gunners practiced from Gibraltar to the Azores by shooting at submarine like targets butter barrels which had been equipped with a stick painted gray and tossed from the bow of the ship 8 Caserta by this time the only Lloyd Italiano ship sailing to New York completed two more roundtrips to New York before Italy joined the war against Germany in August 1916 Caserta completed two more New York roundtrips before the end of the year 9 Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare on 1 February 1917 Lloyd Italiano did not have any U S passenger service that year and Caserta s activities in 1917 are unknown 10 U S Troopship service EditBeginning in May 1918 Caserta was chartered as a United States troop transport and attached to the United States Navy Cruiser and Transport Force 11 Caserta departed New York 10 May 1918 on the first of five convoy voyages to Europe before the war s end carrying elements of the U S 4th Infantry Division s 47th Infantry Regiment who called her a cattle boat and accompanied by U S Navy transports President Lincoln Covington Rijndam UK troopship Dwinsk and Italian steamship Dante Alighieri This group rendezvoused with a similar group that left Newport News Virginia the same day consisting of American transports Lenape Pastores Wilhelmina Princess Matoika Antigone and Susquehanna the UK steamship Kursk and the Italian Duca d Aosta 12 American cruiser Frederick served as escort for the assembled ships which were the 35th U S convoy of the war 13 On 20 May the convoy sighted and fired on a submarine that turned out to be a bucket the next day escort Frederick left the convoy after being relieved by nine destroyers Three days later the convoy sighted land at 06 30 and anchored at Brest that afternoon 14 Caserta s next convoy left Newport News on 23 June and consisted of the Italian steamship Duca d Aosta Re d Italia the French Patria and American transports Pocahontas and Susquehanna Accompanied by Montana South Dakota Huntington Gregory and Fairfax the convoy reached France on 5 July Caserta returned to Virginia on 21 July with Re d Italia 15 Caserta sailed again for France on 26 July with Pocahontas Susquehanna and Duca d Aosta from Newport News and met up with U S Navy transports Finland and Kroonland and steamship Taormina Caserta s old Lloyd Italiano line mate that had sailed the same day from New York 16 Cruisers Pueblo and Huntington and destroyers Rathburne and Colhoun ushered the transports to France where they arrived on 7 August 17 Caserta arrived back in the United States in late August 16 The Italian liner began her next crossing on 30 August when she sailed from Newport News with USS America and Duca d Aosta to join the New York contingent of Kroonland Susquehanna Harrisburg and Plattsburg Caserta s convoy was escorted by Frederick and Colhoun 17 18 At 20 00 on 7 October Caserta departed New York on her fifth Navy voyage with 1 577 men including parts of the Twenty ninth Engineers and joined Kroonland and UK steamship Euripides in rendezvousing with Tenadores Susquehanna America and UK troopship Czar from Newport News 19 Cruisers Seattle and Rochester and destroyers Murray and Fairfax served as convoy escorts for the group which arrived in France on 20 October Caserta headed back to New York arriving there on 9 November 20 After the Armistice Caserta was employed to return troops to the United States In February 1919 she carried home 1 500 American troops including the entire 63rd Artillery Coastal Artillery Corps 21 John Brown a private in the 63rd Artillery kept a diary in which he described his journey home aboard Caserta in February 1919 Departing from Marseille in the evening of 6 February the transport arrived at Gibraltar three days later where she anchored to wait for a load of coal for the journey home After four days the ship was underway but again delayed near the Azores by storms in the Atlantic Meals on board Caserta during the trip were not necessarily to the liking of the troops Twice a day servings of spaghetti macaroni or noodles were interrupted only occasionally by non pasta meals such as chicken in honor of Washington s Birthday on 22 February The liner nicknamed the Macaroni Barge by the American troops eventually reached New York on 27 February 22 Also on board Caserta was 60 year old Private Robert W Louden of Albuquerque New Mexico Louden a veteran of the Spanish American War and the Mexican Expedition was wounded twice in fighting in France Contemporary news accounts called him the oldest American to go through the war 23 Another passenger on board was Sultan a former German messenger dog adopted by two U S Army captains when they found him in an abandoned German trench near Verdun 24 Caserta sailed for Gibraltar and Italy on 6 March 25 Caserta made at least one more voyage with American troops when she sailed from Marseille to New York on 22 April 26 Among the 1 500 troops on board when the liner docked in New York on 8 May were nearly 550 men from the 7th 50th Dutch Girl 650th and 658th Aero Squadrons the 50th Aero Squadron had located the Lost Battalion in October 1918 27 Later career EditWhen Caserta resumed regular passenger service in 1919 she began sailing under the Navigazione Generale Italiana NGI banner NGI which previously had a controlling interest in Lloyd Italiano took over completely in 1918 28 Caserta resumed New York service in July which she continued with occasional calls at Philadelphia through the end of 1921 29 In 1923 Caserta was renamed Venezuela and transferred to La Veloce Navigazione Italiana a Vapore commonly known as La Veloce for service between Italy and South America Transferred back to NGI in 1924 the liner was scrapped in 1928 28 Notes Edit SS Mendoza 1904 www tynebuiltships co uk Retrieved 16 March 2017 a b c d e f Immigrant Ship Information C Retrieved 24 June 2008 a b c Lloyd Italiano Line Archived from the original on 16 May 2008 Retrieved 24 June 2008 Immigration Information Bureau pp 130 138 Immigration Information Bureau pp 146 161 170 Immigration Information Bureau p 179 New Yorkers were on Ancona PDF The New York Times 11 November 1915 p 2 Retrieved 25 June 2008 Liner Caserta armed PDF The New York Times 2 February 1916 p 2 Retrieved 25 June 2008 Immigration Information Bureau p 189 Immigration Information Bureau pp 191 92 Gleaves p 240 Page 240 shows the date as July 1 1916 but is wrong See p 102 for a description of the appendices with the correct date of July 1 1918 listed Names of ships Crowell and Wilson p 609 Nationalities of the ships Gleaves p 202 Cattle boat Pollard p 26 Crowell and Wilson p 609 Pollard p 27 Crowell and Wilson p 611 a b Crowell and Wilson p 614 a b Crowell and Wilson p 614 list the destroyer as Calhoun The only USS Calhoun ever was a former Confederate steamship captured during the American Civil War Crowell and Wilson p 616 29th Engineers Black p 118 Time date ships Crowell and Wilson p 618 Date number of men Crowell and Wilson p 561 Crowell and Wilson p 618 13 000 soldiers are coming home on eight vessels Chicago Daily Tribune 9 February 1919 p 6 Brown entries for 6 27 February Three transports buffeted by gale PDF The New York Times 28 February 1919 p 8 Retrieved 26 June 2008 Some dogs of war Chicago Daily Tribune 1 March 1919 p 7 Foreign Ports PDF The New York Times 6 March 1919 p 13 Retrieved 26 June 2008 Morse p 82 Troops Three transports dock at New York with 2 690 Yanks Chicago Daily Tribune 9 May 1919 p 6 50th Aero Squadron Morse p 9 a b Navigazione Generale Italiana Line Archived from the original on 22 January 2009 Retrieved 24 June 2008 Immigration Information Bureau pp 197 200 205 References EditBlack William Murray U S Army Engineer School 1919 Pamphlet on the Evolution of the Art of Fortification Washington D C Government Printing Office OCLC 6287280 Brown John c 1920 The Diary of a Buck The Personal Record of Private John Brown His Wanderings with the Sixty third Artillery C A C A E F 1918 1919 Including Names and Addresses of Officers and Enlisted Men convenience copy online s l s n OCLC 6984135 Retrieved 25 June 2008 Crowell Benedict Robert Forrest Wilson 1921 The Road to France The Transportation of Troops and Military Supplies 1917 1918 How America Went to War An Account From Official Sources of the Nation s War Activities 1917 1920 New Haven Yale University Press OCLC 18696066 Gleaves Albert 1921 A History of the Transport Service Adventures and Experiences of United States Transports and Cruisers in the World War New York George H Doran Company OCLC 976757 Immigration Information Bureau 1987 1931 Morton Allan directory of European passenger steamship arrivals for the years 1890 to 1930 at the Port of New York and for the years 1904 to 1926 at the ports of New York Philadelphia Boston and Baltimore Baltimore Genealogical Publishing Company ISBN 978 0 8063 0830 2 OCLC 16464579 Morse Daniel Parmelee 1920 The history of the 50th aero squadron New York Blanchard Press OCLC 2660896 Pollard James E 1919 The Forty Seventh Infantry A History 1917 1918 1919 Saginaw Michigan Press of Seeman amp Peters OCLC 3067517 National Archives and Records Administration U S Army Transport Service Arriving and Departing Passenger Lists 1910 1939 Outgoing Caserta 16 Mar 1918 26 Jul 1918 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title SS Caserta amp oldid 1089410476, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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