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This was the fourth American ship to use the name South
Carolina and the first US all big gun battleship. The
only battleships larger at that time were the 18,110-ton
British Dreadnought from 1906 and the four German
18,569-ton Nassau class from 1909/1910. South
Carolina’s first deployments were peaceful
visits to the West Indies, Cuba and Europe. As political
unrest escalated in Mexico and Haiti in 1913, she was
deployed to the East Coast of Mexico to help protect
American interests in Tampico and Vera Cruz. The following
year saw her land US marines at Port-au-Prince/Haiti to
protect US legation on the Island. After the political
situation had stabilized in Haiti, she steamed to Vera Cruz
with a landing force to occupy that city.
By the time America entered World War One in April
1917, the British Navy had already cleared the seas of
German warships at such battles as Jutland and the Falkland
Islands. This allowed South Carolina to be mainly
operated on anti submarine patrols along the east coast of
America. She set out with other US warships September 9th
1918 to escort a convoy bound for France. A week later,
they turned the convoy over to European warships and
returned to America. Following the German surrender
November 11th 1918, South Carolina returned over
4,000 US servicemen by making four round trips between
America and Brest/France. She was decommissioned at
Philadelphia December 15th 1921 after only 11 years in
service. The following year, the Washington Treaty set
about cutting the number of battleships throughout the
world. This led to South Carolina and her sister
ship Michigan being scrapped in 1924.
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