Spanish cruiser Reina Mercedes
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Reina Mercedes Spanish cruiser.jpg |Ship caption=Reina Mercedes sometime prior to 1898 }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=Spain |Ship flag=File:Flag of Spain (1785-1873 and 1875-1931).svg |Ship name=Reina Mercedes |Ship namesake=Mercedes of Orleans, Queen Consort of Spain. |Ship ordered= |Ship awarded= |Ship builder=Naval shipyard, Cartagena, Spain |Ship original cost= |Ship yard number= |Ship way number= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched=9 September 1887Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905, page 384; [http://www.spanamwar.com/reinam.htm The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Reina Mercedes] claims the launch date was 12 September 1887 |Ship sponsor= |Ship christened= |Ship completed= |Ship acquired= |Ship commissioned= |Ship recommissioned= |Ship decommissioned= |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship in service= |Ship out of service= |Ship renamed= |Ship reclassified= |Ship refit= |Ship struck= |Ship reinstated= |Ship homeport= |Ship identification= |Ship motto= |Ship nickname= |Ship honours= |Ship honors= |Ship captured= |Ship fate=Scuttled as blockship night of 4–5 July 1898; captured and salvaged by US Navy |Ship notes= |Ship badge= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship class={{sclass|Alfonso XII|cruiser}} |Ship displacement=3,042 tons |Ship length={{convert|278|ft|3|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship beam={{convert|43|ft|4|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship height= |Ship draught= |Ship draft={{convert|20|ft|0|in|m|abbr=on}} |Ship depth= |Ship power={{convert|4,400|ihp|abbr=on}} |Ship propulsion=1-shaft compound |Ship sail plan= |Ship speed=*{{convert|17|kn|abbr=on}} (designed); |Ship range= |Ship endurance= |Ship complement=370 officers and enlisted |Ship sensors= |Ship EW= |Ship armament=*6 × Gonzalez Hontoria de 16 cm mod 1883 guns
|Ship armour= |Ship armor=none |Ship aircraft= |Ship aircraft facilities= |Ship notes=*500 tons coal (normal)
}} |
Reina Mercedes, was an {{sclass|Alfonso XII|cruiser|0}} unprotected cruiser of the Spanish Navy.
During the Spanish–American War, Reina Mercedes was captured by the United States and later salvaged and commissioned into the U.S. Navy. For information about her characteristics and operational history in U.S. Navy service, see {{USS|Reina Mercedes|IX-25|6}}.
Technical characteristics
Reina Mercedes was built by the naval shipyard at Cartagena and launched on 9 September 1887. She had two funnels. Her main armament was built by Hontoria and sponson-mounted. Her five torpedo tubes all were fixed; two were forward, one was on each beam, and one was aft. Although unprotected and therefore lacking armor, she had 12 watertight compartments built in a French-style cellular system to help her resist flooding.Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905, page 384 She was designed for colonial service, with high speed and moderate armament, but in practice chronic machinery problems made her a relatively slow steamer.[http://www.spanamwar.com/reinam.htm The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Reina Mercedes]
Operational history
Reina Mercedes spent her early years in Spanish waters as part of the Spanish Navy's Instructional Squadron. In 1893 she was transferred to the Caribbean, where she became flagship of Spanish naval forces operating in Cuban waters. On 29 May 1897, Reina Mercedes fired two shots at the American passenger liner {{SS|Valencia}} off Guantánamo Bay, Cuba; she ceased fire after Valencia displayed her colors, and it was later discovered that the crew of Reina Mercedes was well aware of Valencia{{'}}s identity, and fired the shots merely to make her display her colors.{{cite news |url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1897/06/13/102094152.pdf |title=Valencia Arrives Safely in Port |date=13 June 1897 |work=New York Times |accessdate=8 September 2013}}
When the Spanish–American War broke out in April 1898, Reina Mercedes was in the harbor at Santiago de Cuba, on Cuba's southeastern coast, awaiting repair, with seven of her ten boilers out of commission. Little of military significance happened at Santiago de Cuba until Vice Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete's squadron arrived there from Spain on 19 May 1898 to reinforce Spanish forces in the Caribbean. U.S. Navy forces hunting Cervera found his squadron there on the evening of 27 May 1898, and a 37-day blockade of the harbor ensued.
During the blockade, Reina Mercedes traded blows with the American blockaders. On 3 June 1898, the U.S. Navy attempted to trap the Spanish ships in the harbor by sinking the collier {{USS|Merrimac|1898|6}} in the entrance channel. Spanish shore batteries disabled Merrimac, and she drifted up the channel toward the anchored Spanish warships; Reina Mercedes, the armored cruiser {{ship|Spanish cruiser|Vizcaya||2}}, and the destroyer {{ship|Spanish destroyer|Pluton||2}} opened fire on Merrimac as well, and the collier soon sank in a position which did not block the channel. Reina Mercedes took aboard as prisoners of war the eight Americans who had been aboard Merrimac.
On 6 June 1898, the blockading U.S. warships bombarded the harbor, hitting Reina Mercedes 35 times, starting two fires aboard her, and killing her second-in-command, Commander Emilio Acosta y Eyermann,Nofi, p. 163, claims that armored cruiser {{ship|Spanish cruiser|Infanta Maria Teresa||2}} took this damage and suffered the loss of her executive officer, but Cervera's papers, p. 101, and [http://www.spanamwar.com/reinam.htm The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Reina Mercedes] both confirm it to have been Reina Mercedes the first Spanish naval officer to die in the war.
File:Wreck of the Spanish Reina Mercedes, Santiago, Cuba. - NARA - 531117.gif.]]
By the beginning of July 1898, U.S. Army forces advancing overland seemed to be on the verge of capturing Santiago de Cuba, prompting Cervera to order his squadron to attempt an escape by running the blockade. Reina Mercedes could not follow because of her boiler problems. It was decided that most of her guns would be placed ashore to aid in the defense of Santiago de Cuba and that she would be sunk in the entrance channel to prevent her capture and to improve the harbor's defenses by preventing American ships from entering it.
On 3 July 1898, Cervera's squadron attempted its escape, and was completely destroyed in the Battle of Santiago de Cuba. At about 2000 hours on 4 July 1898, Reina Mercedes, by now without most of her guns, slipped her moorings and proceeded into the channel. Just before midnight, the battleship {{USS|Massachusetts|BB-2|6}} spotted her and, together with the battleship {{USS|Texas|1892|6}} opened fire. Although Reina Mercedes took many hits, her scuttling crew stayed on course, dropped anchor, and detonated their scuttling charges, but Reina Mercedes drifted to the eastern edge of the channel before sinking, going down in a location that failed to block the channel.
Between 2 January 1899 and 1 March 1899, the U.S. Navy raised her and later put her into service as the disarmed receiving ship {{USS|Reina Mercedes|IX-25|6}}.
See also
- {{USS|Reina Mercedes|IX-25|6}}
Notes
{{reflist}}
References
{{DANFS}}
- Cevera y Topete, Pascual, Ed. 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.
- Chesneau, Roger, and Eugene M. Kolesnik, Eds. Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905. New York, New York: Mayflower Books Inc., 1979. {{ISBN|0-8317-0302-4}}.
- Nofi, Albert A. The Spanish–American War, 1898. Conshohocken, Pennsylvania: Combined Books, Inc., 1996. {{ISBN|0-938289-57-8}}.
External links
{{Commons category|Reina Mercedes (ship, 1887)}}
- [http://www.spanamwar.com/reinam.htm The Spanish–American War Centennial Website: Reina Mercedes]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/19990418014351/http://history.navy.mil/photos/sh-fornv/spain/spsh-mr/r-merced.htm Department of the Navy: Naval Historical Center: Online Library of Selected Images: Spanish Navy Ships: Reina Mercedes (Cruiser, 1887–1898)]
{{Alfonso XII class cruiser}}
{{1898 shipwrecks}}
{{coord missing|Cuba}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Reina Mercedes}}
Category:Alfonso XII-class cruisers
Category:Ships built in Cartagena, Spain
Category:Spanish–American War cruisers of Spain
Category:Maritime incidents in 1898