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coast defense history 4
<html> <!--This file created 6/25/98 7:07 P by Claris Home Page version 3.0--> <head><script type="text/javascript" src="/_static/js/bundle-playback.js?v=HxkREWBo" charset="utf-8"></script> <script type="text/javascript" src="/_static/js/wombat.js?v=txqj7nKC" charset="utf-8"></script> <script>window.RufflePlayer=window.RufflePlayer||{};window.RufflePlayer.config={"autoplay":"on","unmuteOverlay":"hidden"};</script> <script type="text/javascript" src="/_static/js/ruffle/ruffle.js"></script> <script type="text/javascript"> __wm.init("https://web.archive.org/web"); __wm.wombat("http://www.cdsg.org:80/cdsghis4.htm","20121105102511","https://web.archive.org/","web","/_static/", "1352111111"); </script> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/_static/css/banner-styles.css?v=S1zqJCYt" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="/_static/css/iconochive.css?v=3PDvdIFv" /> <!-- End Wayback Rewrite JS Include --> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Adobe PageMill 3.0 Mac"> <title>coast defense history 4</title> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="Claris Home Page 3.0"> <x-claris-window top="66" bottom="603" left="8" right="683"> <x-claris-tagview mode="minimal"> </head> <body bgcolor="#cccc99"> <h1 align="CENTER"><img src="/web/20121105102511im_/http://www.cdsg.org/cdsglogo.gif" width="322" height="59" align="BOTTOM" naturalsizeflag="3"></h1> <h3 align="CENTER">United States Seacoast Defense Construction 1781-1948: a Brief History<br> </h3> <h3 align="CENTER"><i>Modern U.S. Harbor Defense Construction, 1886-1917; The Endicott and Taft Boards</i></h3> <p>During the years following the termination of the har-bor defense construction in the 1870s, several advances took place in the design and construction of heavy ordnance, including the development of breech-loading, longer-ranged cannon. Coupled with these developments was a growing alarm over the obsolescence of existing seacoast defenses. In 1883, the navy began a new construction program for the first time since the Civil War. The navy's new ships were to be used in offensive roles rather than defensively. This change in naval policy, along with the advances in weapon technology, required a new system of seacoast defenses which would safeguard the harbors and free the navy for its new role. In 1885 President Cleveland appointed a joint army, navy and civilian board, headed by Secretary of War William C. Endicott, to evaluate proposals for new defenses. The board painted a grim picture of existing defenses in its 1886 report and recommended a massive $127 million construction program of breech-loading cannons and mortars, floating batteries, and submarine mines for some 29 locations around the coast-line.</p> <p>In 1888 Congress created the Board of Ordnance and Fortification to test weapons and implement the new program. Funding for the actual construction of a more modest building program began in 1890, under the direction of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The new guns were dispersed over a large area in widely separated concrete emplacements, having underground magazines and earthen and concrete parapets that were designed to blend in with their surroundings. A key part of these new defenses were electrically controlled mine fields. Facilities for planting, retrieving, storing and controlling these mines were installed at many locations. In 1898 the outbreak of the Spanish-American War necessitated the use of some of the older muzzle-loading ordnance and other guns in hurriedly-built "temporary" defenses around the United States. Mine fields were planted and maintained during the time of that conflict.</p> <p align="CENTER"><img src="/web/20121105102511im_/http://www.cdsg.org/introgifs/popham1.gif" width="600" height="330" align="BOTTOM" border="0" naturalsizeflag="0"></p> <p align="CENTER">A 1898 emergency battery built next to Fort Popham, on the Kennebec River, ME (Fort Popham State Park)</p> <p align="CENTER"><img src="/web/20121105102511im_/http://www.cdsg.org/introgifs/MILLER3.gif" width="583" height="395" align="BOTTOM" border="0" naturalsizeflag="0"></p> <p align="CENTER">An early Endicott-era battery: Battery Marcus Miller at Fort Winfield Scott, San Francisco, CA (Golden Gate National Rec. Area)</p> <p align="CENTER"><img src="/web/20121105102511im_/http://www.cdsg.org/introgifs/russelpic4.gif" width="600" height="306" align="BOTTOM" border="0" naturalsizeflag="0"></p> <p align="CENTER">A late Endicott-era battery-Battery David Russell at Fort Stevens, near Astoria, OR. (Fort Stevens State Park)</p> <p>In 1905, President Theodore Roosevelt convened an-other board, this one under his secretary of war William N. Taft, to update and review the progress on the earlier board's program. Most of the changes recommended by this board were technical; such as adding more searchlights, electrification including lighting, communications, and projectile handling, and a more sophisticated optical aiming technique. The board also recommended the fortification of key harbors in the newly acquired territories of Cuba, the Philippines and Hawaii, and a few other sites. (The Panama defenses were authorized by the Spooner Act of 1902 which authorized the construction of the Panama Canal.) The Taft program fortifications differed slightly in battery construction and had fewer numbers of guns at a given location than those of the Endicott program. These two modern programs, although not fully realized, gave the United States a coastal defense system that was equal to any other nation by the beginning of World War I.</p> <p align="CENTER"><img src="/web/20121105102511im_/http://www.cdsg.org/introgifs/osgood1.gif" width="569" height="285" align="BOTTOM" border="0" naturalsizeflag="0"></p> <p align="CENTER">A Taft-era battery-Battery Osgood at Fort MacArthur in Los Angeles, CA (Angels Gate Park, City of Los Angeles)</p> <p align="CENTER"><a href="cdsghis5.htm">Next</a></p> <p align="CENTER"><a href="home.htm">CDSG Home</a> </body> </html> <!-- FILE ARCHIVED ON 10:25:11 Nov 05, 2012 AND RETRIEVED FROM THE INTERNET ARCHIVE ON 07:32:27 Nov 24, 2024. JAVASCRIPT APPENDED BY WAYBACK MACHINE, COPYRIGHT INTERNET ARCHIVE. 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