USS Prairie (AD-5) at the New York Navy Yard soon after commissioning.
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History | |
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United States | |
Name: | Prairie |
Builder: | |
Completed: | 1890 |
Acquired: | 6 April 1898 |
Commissioned: |
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Struck: | 22 November 1922 |
Identification: | AD-5 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 6,620 light tons |
Length: | 404 ft 9 in (123.37 m) |
Beam: | 48 ft 3 in (14.71 m) |
Draft: | 20 ft 9 in (6.32 m) |
Speed: | 15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) |
USS Prairie (AD-5), formerly Morgan Liner SS El Sol, was built in 1890 by William Cramp and Sons, Philadelphia. She was purchased by the United States Navy on 6 April 1898 from the Southern Pacific Company, and commissioned two days later at New York, Commander Charles J. Train in command.
Prairie was converted into an auxiliary cruiser and assigned at first to the Northern Patrol Squadron and later to the North Atlantic Fleet. During the Spanish–American War, she served in Cuban waters July and August 1898, and returned to Fore River, Massachusetts on 28 August. She decommissioned on 15 March 1899 at Philadelphia.
Prairie was placed in reserve commission on 23 March 1899 and cruised with the naval militia off the Atlantic coast until she was decommissioned at New York on 18 February 1901. She carried government exhibits to France at the turn of the 20th century for the Paris Exposition. She was recommissioned at Boston on 9 November 1901 as a training ship, and remained with this mission until she was decommissioned at Boston on 14 June 1905.
She was recommissioned 26 September 1906 at Boston as a transport and was attached to the Atlantic Fleet. She protected American interests in Cuba, March to April 1907. Later, she resumed her training duties with the naval militia from May to September 1907, July to August 1908 and July to August 1909.
She took part on the U.S. occupation of Veracruz in 1914, firing her 3-inch guns at the Naval Academy and other tactical targets, on 21 April 1914.