fbpx
Wikipedia

Spanish cruiser Rapido

Rapido was an auxiliary cruiser that served in the Spanish Navy during the Spanish–American War in 1898. Before her Spanish Navy service, she served as the commercial passenger ship SS Columbia for the Hamburg America Line from 1889 to 1898. She returned to commercial service as Columbia with Hamburg America from 1899 to 1904, but early in 1904 the Imperial Russian Navy purchased her for service as the auxiliary cruiser Terek during the Russo-Japanese War of 1904–1905.

SS Columbia
History
German Empire
NameColumbia
OwnerHamburg America Line
OperatorHamburg America line
BuilderLaird Brothers, BirkenheadEngland
Yard numberV0564
Launched27 February 1889
FateSold to Spanish Navy 8 April 1898
AcquiredPurchased from Spanish Navy late 1898 or 1899
FateSold to Imperial Russian Navy early 1904
Spain
NameRapido
Acquired8 April 1898
Commissioned20 April 1898
FateSold to Hamburg America Line late 1898 or 1899
Russian Empire
NameTerek
AcquiredEarly 1904
Commissioned25 August 1904
StrickenDecember 1906
FateScrapped 1907
General characteristics (Columbia as built)
TypePassenger ship
Tonnage7,241[2] or 7,383[1] gross register tons
Length
Beam17.0 m (55.8 ft)[2]
PropulsionTriple expansion engines, 2 screws, auxiliary sails[1]
Speed
  • 20.5 knots (38.0 km/h; 23.6 mph) (trials)[1]
  • 18.0 knots (33.3 km/h; 20.7 mph) (in service)[1]
Capacity
  • 220 first-class passengers[1]
  • 120 second-class passengers[1]
  • 800 third-class passengers[1]
Notes3 masts, 3 funnels[1]
General characteristics (as Rapido)
TypeAuxiliary cruiser
Displacement9,500 tons[3]
Length145 m (475 ft 9 in)[3]
Beam16.5 m (54 ft 2 in)[3]
Draft10.8 m (35 ft 5 in)[3]
Propulsion12,500 horsepower (9,321 kW), twin screws[3]
Speed19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)[3]
Complement320
Armament
Armor
  • 1 in (2.5 cm) deck
  • 4.5 in (11 cm) gun shields
General characteristics (as Terek)
TypeAuxiliary cruiser
Displacement10,000 tons
Length139.9 m (459 ft 0 in)
Beam17.1 m (56 ft 1 in)
Propulsion13,300 hp (9,918 kW)
Speed19 knots (35 km/h; 22 mph)
Armament

Hamburg America Line (1889–1898) edit

 
Interior of the Columbia in 1890

Columbia was built in 1889 as a steam passenger ship for the German Empire′s Hamburg America Line. With a capacity of 400 first-class, 120 second-class, and 580 third-class passengers in commercial use, she was designed so that she could be converted into an auxiliary cruiser for service in the Imperial German Navy in the event of a war. She was launched by floating out of drydock on 27 February 1889[2] and was delivered to Hamburg America soon thereafter. Assigned to the Hamburg-Southampton-New York City route, she began her maiden voyage from Hamburg on 18 July 1889.[2][3]

Spanish Navy edit

On 8 April 1898,[3] the Spanish Navy purchased Columbia from Hamburg America for Spanish–American War service as an auxiliary cruiser.[2][1][4] Armed and renamed Rapido, she was commissioned on 20 April 1898.[3]

 
Rapido with Camara's squadron at Port Said in 1898.

Rapido became part of the relief expedition for the Philippines commanded by Rear Admiral Manuel de Camara and charged with destroying the United States Navy Asiatic Squadron of Commodore George Dewey there, as well as with delivering 4,000 Spanish Army troops to reinforce the Philippines.[5] Camara's squadron – consisting of the battleship Pelayo, the armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V, the auxiliary cruiser Patriota, the destroyers Audaz, Osado, and Proserpina, the transports Buenos Aires, Panay, Alfonso XII, and Antonio Lopez, and four colliers as well as Rapido – sortied from Cadiz on 16 June 1898.[6]

After detaching Alfonso XII and Antonio Lopez to make independent voyages to the Caribbean, Rapido and the rest of the squadron passed Gibraltar on 17 June 1898[7] and arrived at Port Said, Egypt, on 26 June 1898.[8] There Camara requested permission to transship coal, which the Egyptian government finally denied on 30 June 1898 out of concern for Egyptian neutrality.[8]

By the time Rapido and the rest of Camara's squadron arrived at Suez on 5 July 1898,[9] the squadron of Vice Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete had been annihilated off Cuba in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba, freeing up the U.S. Navy's heavy forces from the blockade of Santiago de Cuba. Fearful for the security of the Spanish coast, the Spanish Ministry of Marine recalled Camara's squadron on 7 July 1898.[10] Rapido and the rest of the squadron departed Suez on 11 July 1898 for Spain, and Camara's squadron was dissolved on 25 July 1898.[11]

The war ended in August 1898 without Rapido seeing combat. After the war, the Spanish Navy used Rapido as a troopship to transport Spanish Army soldiers from Cuba to Spain.[3]

Hamburg America Line (1899–1904) edit

In late 1898 or in 1899, Hamburg America bought Rapido from the Spanish Navy and returned her to commercial passenger service under her original name, Columbia.[2][4] Again operating on the Hamburg-Southampton-New York City route, Columbia began her first post-war commercial voyage by departing Hamburg on 31 August 1899.[2]

Imperial Russian Navy edit

After the Russo-Japanese War broke out in February 1904 with an Imperial Japanese Navy surprise torpedo attack against the Imperial Russian Navy Pacific Squadron at its anchorage at Port Arthur in Manchuria, the Russian Admiralty Board decided to outfit six passenger ships of the Russian Volunteer Fleet (Dobroflot) for use as auxiliary cruisers. One of them was Columbia, which the Russians purchased from the Hamburg America Line for Dobroflot shortly after the war began and steamed to Libau, where she underwent conversion into an auxiliary cruiser.[12] She was commissioned into naval service as Terek on 25 August 1904.

Initially, the Admiralty Board planned for the six auxiliary cruisers to operate from a base in the Sunda Islands in the Netherlands East Indies, from which they would attack shipping bound for Japan so as to cut Japan off from war material shipments from Europe and the United States and buy time for the Russian Pacific Squadron to recover from the surprise attack.[12] These plans changed while Terek was undergoing conversion at Libau, the Admiralty Board deciding instead that a battle squadron from the Baltic Fleet should make the long voyage to East Asian waters to reinforce the Pacific Squadron and that the auxiliary cruisers should accompany the battle squadron.[12] Terek was commissioned just as Vice Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky took command of the squadron in August 1904 and the first serious preparations for the East Asian deployment began.[13]

While the squadron prepared at Libau, Terek deployed to the Atlantic Ocean for anti-shipping operations during September 1904. She stopped British merchant ships to inspect them for contraband, including the 2,490-gross register ton steamer Margit Groedel on 6 September, the 1,642-gross register ton collier Treherbert – bound from Newport, Wales, to Algiers in French Algeria – near Gibraltar on 12 September, and the steamer Derwen in the waters between Cape St. Vincent and Gibraltar on 14 September, in each case allowing the ship to proceed after searching her and examining her papers.[14][15][16] Working her way southward, Terek then arrived at Las Palmas in the Canary Islands, where she began coaling on 22 September.[17] The same day, Spanish authorities in Madrid, saying that they were acting in response to a protest by the British ambassador to Spain demanding that Spanish authorities not allow Terek to use any Spanish port as a base for harassing British shipping,[18] prohibited Terek from taking aboard any fresh water or provisions and ordered her to stop coaling and leave Las Palmas immediately, but Terek′s commanding officer replied that he could not leave because his ship′s engines required repairs.[19] The British protected cruisers HMS St George and HMS Brilliant anchored at Las Palmas on the morning of 23 September to signal British concern over Terek′s activities, however, and Terek departed at noon that day.[20][21] By 28 September, Terek had arrived at Lisbon, Portugal,[18] and on 4 October 1904 she stopped the British merchant ship Carisbrook in the Bay of Biscay and detained her for a lengthy period while examining her papers before allowing her to proceed.[22]

 
Terek

Terek eventually returned to Libau, where she made her own preparations for the voyage to East Asia. Although Rozhestvensky himself departed Libau on 16 October 1904 with the majority of the Baltic Fleet forces bound for East Asia – by now redesignated as the Second Pacific Squadron – Terek remained at Libau for another month, finally departing on 16 November 1904 in company with the protected cruisers Izumrud and Oleg, the auxiliary cruiser Kuban, the hospital ship Orel, and the destroyers Gromki, Grozni, Prozorlivi, Ryani, and Ryezvi. She transited the Mediterranean Sea and Suez Canal and rendezvoused with the rest of the Second Pacific Squadron at Nosy Be off the northwest coast of Madagascar on 13 January 1905.[23][24][25] She accompanied the squadron, performing scouting, reconnaissance, and escort functions and providing security for the other warships while they coaled, as it crossed the Indian Ocean, transited the Strait of Malacca, and passed through the South China Sea.[26][27] In the East China Sea on 23 May 1905, Rozhestvenski detached Terek and Kuban with orders to proceed independently, steam into the Pacific Ocean up the east coast of Japan to the vicinity of Tokyo Bay, and capture or sink both Japanese shipping and neutral merchant ships carrying contraband to or from Japan. Rozhestvenski hoped that their activities would provide a diversion that would distract the Japanese and tie down some of their naval forces while the Second Pacific Squadron passed through the Strait of Tsushima and the Sea of Japan.[28][29]

The two raiders do not seem to have had much success at drawing away Japanese naval forces, but Rozhestvenski's decision to detach them spared them from the almost complete annihilation of his squadron in the Battle of Tsushima on 27–28 May 1905, and the Terek subsequently captured and sank two ships carrying war materiel to Japan. First, on 5 June 1905, she captured the 3,382-gross register ton SS Ikona, a British steamer carrying a cargo of rice from Rangoon to Japan,[30] and sank her at a position reported variously as 150 nautical miles (278 km) north of Hong Kong, and in the Philippine Sea at 20°02′N 134°01′E / 20.033°N 134.017°E / 20.033; 134.017 (Ikona).[citation needed] On 22 June 1905, she captured and sank the 3,518-gross register ton SS Prinsesse Marie, a Danish steamer on a voyage from Singapore to Japan with a cargo of hardware and provisions,[30] in the South China Sea at 13°57′N 113°15′E / 13.950°N 113.250°E / 13.950; 113.250 (Prinsesse Marie).[citation needed] She arrived at Batavia in the Netherlands East Indies on 29 June 1905, putting the crew of Prinsesse Marie ashore and demanding coal, but the Dutch colonial authorities refused.[30] They interned her at Batavia on 9 June 1905, bringing her active naval career to an end.[30]

Terek was stricken in December 1906.[citation needed] She was scrapped in 1907.[2][1]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k S.S. Columbia – Auxiliary Sail Passenger Steamship
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Norway Heritage: S/S Columbia, Hamburg America Line
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m spanamwar.com Auxiliary Cruiser RAPIDO
  4. ^ a b Department of the Navy: Naval Historical Center: Online Library of Selected Images: Spanish Navy Ships: Rapido (Auxiliary Cruiser, 1898)
  5. ^ Nofi. p. 168
  6. ^ Nofi, p. 273
  7. ^ Nofi, p. 168
  8. ^ a b Cervera's papers, p. 154
  9. ^ Nofi, p. 282
  10. ^ Nofi, p. 283
  11. ^ The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Pelayo
  12. ^ a b c Corbett, p. 10.
  13. ^ Corbett, p. 27.
  14. ^ "Russian Cruisers: More British Steamers Stopped," The Argus, 17 September 1904, p. 15.
  15. ^ Anonymous, "Latest Telegrams," The Wei-Hai-Wei Gazette, 17 September 1904, p. 1.
  16. ^ Anonymous, "Stopping British Steamers," The Straits Times, 16 September 1904, p. 4.
  17. ^ Anonymous, "The Cruiser Terek," The Straits Times, 22 September 1904, p. r.
  18. ^ a b Anonymous, "The Cruiser 'Terek': Cock and Bull Story About England From Spain," The Straits Times, 28 September 1904, p. 4.
  19. ^ Anonymous, "Russian Ship Refuses To Go," New York Times, 23 September 1904.
  20. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 March 2018. Retrieved 2 March 2018.
  21. ^ Anonymus, "British Ships Dog Raider? Two Cruisers Arrive at Las Palmas, Where the Terek Put In", New York Times, 24 September 1904.
  22. ^ McCarthy, Michael John Fitzgerald, The Coming Power: A Contemporary History of the Far East, 1898–1905, London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1905, p. 298.
  23. ^ Anonymous, Tribune Almanac and Political Register 1905, New York: The Tribune Association, 1905, p. 296.
  24. ^ Anonymous, "More Slav Warships Sail," San Francisco Call, 17 November 1904, p. 2.
  25. ^ Semenov, Vladimir, Rasplata (The Reckoning), New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1909, p. 345.
  26. ^ Corbett, p. 194.
  27. ^ Semenov, Vladimir, Rasplata (The Reckoning), New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1909, pp. 397, 398, 412, 413, 426, 429.
  28. ^ Corbett, p. 213.
  29. ^ Semenov, Vladimir, Rasplata (The Reckoning), New York: E. P. Dutton and Company, 1909, pp. 467, 476.
  30. ^ a b c d Corbett, p. 342.

References edit

  • Cervera Y Topete, Pascual. Office of Naval Intelligence War Notes No. VII: Information From Abroad: The Spanish–American War: A Collection of Documents Relative to the Squadron Operations in the West Indies, Translated From the Spanish. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1899.
  • Corbett, Julian S., Maritime Operations in the Russo-Japanese War, Volume II, Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1994, ISBN 1-55750-129-7
  • Nofi, Albert A. The Spanish–American War, 1898. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania:Combined Books, Inc., 1996. ISBN 0-938289-57-8.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Columbia (ship, 1889) at Wikimedia Commons
  • Department of the Navy: Naval Historical Center: Online Library of Selected Images: Spanish Navy Ships: Rapido (Auxiliary Cruiser, 1898)
  • The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Pelayo
  • The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Auxiliary Cruiser Rapido

spanish, cruiser, rapido, rapido, auxiliary, cruiser, that, served, spanish, navy, during, spanish, american, 1898, before, spanish, navy, service, served, commercial, passenger, ship, columbia, hamburg, america, line, from, 1889, 1898, returned, commercial, s. Rapido was an auxiliary cruiser that served in the Spanish Navy during the Spanish American War in 1898 Before her Spanish Navy service she served as the commercial passenger ship SS Columbia for the Hamburg America Line from 1889 to 1898 She returned to commercial service as Columbia with Hamburg America from 1899 to 1904 but early in 1904 the Imperial Russian Navy purchased her for service as the auxiliary cruiser Terek during the Russo Japanese War of 1904 1905 SS ColumbiaHistoryGerman EmpireNameColumbiaOwnerHamburg America LineOperatorHamburg America lineBuilderLaird Brothers Birkenhead EnglandYard numberV0564Launched27 February 1889FateSold to Spanish Navy 8 April 1898AcquiredPurchased from Spanish Navy late 1898 or 1899FateSold to Imperial Russian Navy early 1904SpainNameRapidoAcquired8 April 1898Commissioned20 April 1898FateSold to Hamburg America Line late 1898 or 1899Russian EmpireNameTerekAcquiredEarly 1904Commissioned25 August 1904StrickenDecember 1906FateScrapped 1907General characteristics Columbia as built TypePassenger shipTonnage7 241 2 or 7 383 1 gross register tonsLength141 3 m 463 6 ft 2 146 3 m 480 0 ft length overall 1 Beam17 0 m 55 8 ft 2 PropulsionTriple expansion engines 2 screws auxiliary sails 1 Speed20 5 knots 38 0 km h 23 6 mph trials 1 18 0 knots 33 3 km h 20 7 mph in service 1 Capacity220 first class passengers 1 120 second class passengers 1 800 third class passengers 1 Notes3 masts 3 funnels 1 General characteristics as Rapido TypeAuxiliary cruiserDisplacement9 500 tons 3 Length145 m 475 ft 9 in 3 Beam16 5 m 54 ft 2 in 3 Draft10 8 m 35 ft 5 in 3 Propulsion12 500 horsepower 9 321 kW twin screws 3 Speed19 knots 35 km h 22 mph 3 Complement320Armament2 162 mm 35 breechloading guns 3 2 140 mm 35 breechloading guns 3 6 47 mm 44 quick firing guns 3 Armor1 in 2 5 cm deck 4 5 in 11 cm gun shieldsGeneral characteristics as Terek TypeAuxiliary cruiserDisplacement10 000 tonsLength139 9 m 459 ft 0 in Beam17 1 m 56 ft 1 in Propulsion13 300 hp 9 918 kW Speed19 knots 35 km h 22 mph Armament2 120 mm 45 guns 4 75 mm 48 guns 8 57 mm guns Contents 1 Hamburg America Line 1889 1898 2 Spanish Navy 3 Hamburg America Line 1899 1904 4 Imperial Russian Navy 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHamburg America Line 1889 1898 edit nbsp Interior of the Columbia in 1890Columbia was built in 1889 as a steam passenger ship for the German Empire s Hamburg America Line With a capacity of 400 first class 120 second class and 580 third class passengers in commercial use she was designed so that she could be converted into an auxiliary cruiser for service in the Imperial German Navy in the event of a war She was launched by floating out of drydock on 27 February 1889 2 and was delivered to Hamburg America soon thereafter Assigned to the Hamburg Southampton New York City route she began her maiden voyage from Hamburg on 18 July 1889 2 3 Spanish Navy editOn 8 April 1898 3 the Spanish Navy purchased Columbia from Hamburg America for Spanish American War service as an auxiliary cruiser 2 1 4 Armed and renamed Rapido she was commissioned on 20 April 1898 3 nbsp Rapido with Camara s squadron at Port Said in 1898 Rapido became part of the relief expedition for the Philippines commanded by Rear Admiral Manuel de Camara and charged with destroying the United States Navy Asiatic Squadron of Commodore George Dewey there as well as with delivering 4 000 Spanish Army troops to reinforce the Philippines 5 Camara s squadron consisting of the battleship Pelayo the armored cruiser Emperador Carlos V the auxiliary cruiser Patriota the destroyers Audaz Osado and Proserpina the transports Buenos Aires Panay Alfonso XII and Antonio Lopez and four colliers as well as Rapido sortied from Cadiz on 16 June 1898 6 After detaching Alfonso XII and Antonio Lopez to make independent voyages to the Caribbean Rapido and the rest of the squadron passed Gibraltar on 17 June 1898 7 and arrived at Port Said Egypt on 26 June 1898 8 There Camara requested permission to transship coal which the Egyptian government finally denied on 30 June 1898 out of concern for Egyptian neutrality 8 By the time Rapido and the rest of Camara s squadron arrived at Suez on 5 July 1898 9 the squadron of Vice Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete had been annihilated off Cuba in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba freeing up the U S Navy s heavy forces from the blockade of Santiago de Cuba Fearful for the security of the Spanish coast the Spanish Ministry of Marine recalled Camara s squadron on 7 July 1898 10 Rapido and the rest of the squadron departed Suez on 11 July 1898 for Spain and Camara s squadron was dissolved on 25 July 1898 11 The war ended in August 1898 without Rapido seeing combat After the war the Spanish Navy used Rapido as a troopship to transport Spanish Army soldiers from Cuba to Spain 3 Hamburg America Line 1899 1904 editIn late 1898 or in 1899 Hamburg America bought Rapido from the Spanish Navy and returned her to commercial passenger service under her original name Columbia 2 4 Again operating on the Hamburg Southampton New York City route Columbia began her first post war commercial voyage by departing Hamburg on 31 August 1899 2 Imperial Russian Navy editAfter the Russo Japanese War broke out in February 1904 with an Imperial Japanese Navy surprise torpedo attack against the Imperial Russian Navy Pacific Squadron at its anchorage at Port Arthur in Manchuria the Russian Admiralty Board decided to outfit six passenger ships of the Russian Volunteer Fleet Dobroflot for use as auxiliary cruisers One of them was Columbia which the Russians purchased from the Hamburg America Line for Dobroflot shortly after the war began and steamed to Libau where she underwent conversion into an auxiliary cruiser 12 She was commissioned into naval service as Terek on 25 August 1904 Initially the Admiralty Board planned for the six auxiliary cruisers to operate from a base in the Sunda Islands in the Netherlands East Indies from which they would attack shipping bound for Japan so as to cut Japan off from war material shipments from Europe and the United States and buy time for the Russian Pacific Squadron to recover from the surprise attack 12 These plans changed while Terek was undergoing conversion at Libau the Admiralty Board deciding instead that a battle squadron from the Baltic Fleet should make the long voyage to East Asian waters to reinforce the Pacific Squadron and that the auxiliary cruisers should accompany the battle squadron 12 Terek was commissioned just as Vice Admiral Zinovy Rozhestvensky took command of the squadron in August 1904 and the first serious preparations for the East Asian deployment began 13 While the squadron prepared at Libau Terek deployed to the Atlantic Ocean for anti shipping operations during September 1904 She stopped British merchant ships to inspect them for contraband including the 2 490 gross register ton steamer Margit Groedel on 6 September the 1 642 gross register ton collier Treherbert bound from Newport Wales to Algiers in French Algeria near Gibraltar on 12 September and the steamer Derwen in the waters between Cape St Vincent and Gibraltar on 14 September in each case allowing the ship to proceed after searching her and examining her papers 14 15 16 Working her way southward Terek then arrived at Las Palmas in the Canary Islands where she began coaling on 22 September 17 The same day Spanish authorities in Madrid saying that they were acting in response to a protest by the British ambassador to Spain demanding that Spanish authorities not allow Terek to use any Spanish port as a base for harassing British shipping 18 prohibited Terek from taking aboard any fresh water or provisions and ordered her to stop coaling and leave Las Palmas immediately but Terek s commanding officer replied that he could not leave because his ship s engines required repairs 19 The British protected cruisers HMS St George and HMS Brilliant anchored at Las Palmas on the morning of 23 September to signal British concern over Terek s activities however and Terek departed at noon that day 20 21 By 28 September Terek had arrived at Lisbon Portugal 18 and on 4 October 1904 she stopped the British merchant ship Carisbrook in the Bay of Biscay and detained her for a lengthy period while examining her papers before allowing her to proceed 22 nbsp TerekTerek eventually returned to Libau where she made her own preparations for the voyage to East Asia Although Rozhestvensky himself departed Libau on 16 October 1904 with the majority of the Baltic Fleet forces bound for East Asia by now redesignated as the Second Pacific Squadron Terek remained at Libau for another month finally departing on 16 November 1904 in company with the protected cruisers Izumrud and Oleg the auxiliary cruiser Kuban the hospital ship Orel and the destroyers Gromki Grozni Prozorlivi Ryani and Ryezvi She transited the Mediterranean Sea and Suez Canal and rendezvoused with the rest of the Second Pacific Squadron at Nosy Be off the northwest coast of Madagascar on 13 January 1905 23 24 25 She accompanied the squadron performing scouting reconnaissance and escort functions and providing security for the other warships while they coaled as it crossed the Indian Ocean transited the Strait of Malacca and passed through the South China Sea 26 27 In the East China Sea on 23 May 1905 Rozhestvenski detached Terek and Kuban with orders to proceed independently steam into the Pacific Ocean up the east coast of Japan to the vicinity of Tokyo Bay and capture or sink both Japanese shipping and neutral merchant ships carrying contraband to or from Japan Rozhestvenski hoped that their activities would provide a diversion that would distract the Japanese and tie down some of their naval forces while the Second Pacific Squadron passed through the Strait of Tsushima and the Sea of Japan 28 29 The two raiders do not seem to have had much success at drawing away Japanese naval forces but Rozhestvenski s decision to detach them spared them from the almost complete annihilation of his squadron in the Battle of Tsushima on 27 28 May 1905 and the Terek subsequently captured and sank two ships carrying war materiel to Japan First on 5 June 1905 she captured the 3 382 gross register ton SS Ikona a British steamer carrying a cargo of rice from Rangoon to Japan 30 and sank her at a position reported variously as 150 nautical miles 278 km north of Hong Kong and in the Philippine Sea at 20 02 N 134 01 E 20 033 N 134 017 E 20 033 134 017 Ikona citation needed On 22 June 1905 she captured and sank the 3 518 gross register ton SS Prinsesse Marie a Danish steamer on a voyage from Singapore to Japan with a cargo of hardware and provisions 30 in the South China Sea at 13 57 N 113 15 E 13 950 N 113 250 E 13 950 113 250 Prinsesse Marie citation needed She arrived at Batavia in the Netherlands East Indies on 29 June 1905 putting the crew of Prinsesse Marie ashore and demanding coal but the Dutch colonial authorities refused 30 They interned her at Batavia on 9 June 1905 bringing her active naval career to an end 30 Terek was stricken in December 1906 citation needed She was scrapped in 1907 2 1 Notes edit a b c d e f g h i j k S S Columbia Auxiliary Sail Passenger Steamship a b c d e f g h i Norway Heritage S S Columbia Hamburg America Line a b c d e f g h i j k l m spanamwar com Auxiliary Cruiser RAPIDO a b Department of the Navy Naval Historical Center Online Library of Selected Images Spanish Navy Ships Rapido Auxiliary Cruiser 1898 Nofi p 168 Nofi p 273 Nofi p 168 a b Cervera s papers p 154 Nofi p 282 Nofi p 283 The Spanish American War Centennial Website Pelayo a b c Corbett p 10 Corbett p 27 Russian Cruisers More British Steamers Stopped The Argus 17 September 1904 p 15 Anonymous Latest Telegrams The Wei Hai Wei Gazette 17 September 1904 p 1 Anonymous Stopping British Steamers The Straits Times 16 September 1904 p 4 Anonymous The Cruiser Terek The Straits Times 22 September 1904 p r a b Anonymous The Cruiser Terek Cock and Bull Story About England From Spain The Straits Times 28 September 1904 p 4 Anonymous Russian Ship Refuses To Go New York Times 23 September 1904 Anonymous Stopped Coaling The Evening Messenger 23 September 1904 p 3 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2 March 2018 Retrieved 2 March 2018 Anonymus British Ships Dog Raider Two Cruisers Arrive at Las Palmas Where the Terek Put In New York Times 24 September 1904 McCarthy Michael John Fitzgerald The Coming Power A Contemporary History of the Far East 1898 1905 London Hodder and Stoughton 1905 p 298 Anonymous Tribune Almanac and Political Register 1905 New York The Tribune Association 1905 p 296 Anonymous More Slav Warships Sail San Francisco Call 17 November 1904 p 2 Semenov Vladimir Rasplata The Reckoning New York E P Dutton and Company 1909 p 345 Corbett p 194 Semenov Vladimir Rasplata The Reckoning New York E P Dutton and Company 1909 pp 397 398 412 413 426 429 Corbett p 213 Semenov Vladimir Rasplata The Reckoning New York E P Dutton and Company 1909 pp 467 476 a b c d Corbett p 342 References editCervera Y Topete Pascual Office of Naval Intelligence War Notes No VII Information From Abroad The Spanish American War A Collection of Documents Relative to the Squadron Operations in the West Indies Translated From the Spanish Washington D C Government Printing Office 1899 Corbett Julian S Maritime Operations in the Russo Japanese War Volume II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press 1994 ISBN 1 55750 129 7 Nofi Albert A The Spanish American War 1898 Conshohocken Pennsylvania Combined Books Inc 1996 ISBN 0 938289 57 8 External links edit nbsp Media related to Columbia ship 1889 at Wikimedia Commons Department of the Navy Naval Historical Center Online Library of Selected Images Spanish Navy Ships Rapido Auxiliary Cruiser 1898 The Spanish American War Centennial Website Pelayo The Spanish American War Centennial Website Auxiliary Cruiser Rapido Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spanish cruiser Rapido amp oldid 1144913586, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.