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Wisconsin (Battleship : BB-9)

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Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Truman Handy Newberry

Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Truman Handy Newberry

Acting Secretary of the Navy Newberry’s letter helped President Roosevelt better understand the situation. Roosevelt believes the best itinerary for the Great White Fleet to follow is through the Straits of Magellan and returning through the Suez Canal, but he seeks advice from the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation, Admiral Willard H. Brownson. Roosevelt also believes several reporters should accompany the fleet.

Collection

Library of Congress Manuscript Division

Creation Date

1907-08-10

The “Wisconsin” in a typhoon, China Sea

The “Wisconsin” in a typhoon, China Sea

Postcard showing the smokestacks and top of the battleship Wisconsin above the waves of the China Sea.

Comments and Context

In Charles C. Myers’s own words, “I assure you that a storm at sea is no pleasant experience when the ocean’s surface is like high mountains and deep valleys all traveling with the speed of the wind and the ship is tossed up and down and around like a small cork in a large tank of water, first on one side and then the other till you are sure that the ship is going to turn clear over and the next instant it seems to be standing nearly on the end and you are thrown against one wall and then the other whenever you attempt to walk across the room. At one instant the ship is on the summit of the mountain of water and then it goes down like an elevator with lightening speed as the mountain glides out from under it and then up again as it rides the surface of the next mountain coming along.

The China sea well deserves its reputation as being the roughest body of water on the globe and seldom may a ship cross this sea without seeing something of a storm. We are now with the Battleship Fleet and crossing the China Sea enroute from Philipine [sic] Islands to Japan, a seven days trip, and on the third day out from Manilla [sic] a typhoon crossed before us and we had the full experience of the rough water. This shows one of the great swells or ocean mountains with the battleship Wisconsin just beyond the summit, the next instant from this same location we would be looking down upon the ship while it was way down in the deep valley.”