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(Created page with "Category:The Men File:Header 4 New.jpg File:Red bar sub new.jpg === <big>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</big> === <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B"> |left|thumb|300px|<center>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</center> <div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="color:#00008B"> The photo above shows the fire fighting efforts to put out a gasoline fire on the waters surface at Mare Island Shipyard. Th...")
 
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=== <big>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</big> ===
=== <big>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</big> ===
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[[File:Grampus pike fire 1908a.jpg ||left|thumb|300px|<center>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</center>]]
[[File:Grampus pike fire 1908a.jpg ||left|500px|<center>Grampus & Pike fire of 1908</center>]]
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Revision as of 18:57, 30 October 2023

Grampus & Pike fire of 1908

Grampus & Pike fire of 1908
Grampus & Pike fire of 1908

The photo above shows the fire fighting efforts to put out a gasoline fire on the waters surface at Mare Island Shipyard. The fire also engulfed a work barge/machine shop for the submarines flotilla as well as the submarines Grampus and Pike that were moored to the barge on September 18, 1908. The ship on the left playing a stream of water onto the flames is the USS Arethusa (AO-7).

The submarines were to enter the dry dock later in the afternoon of September 18, 1908 and in accordance with the yard regulations all flammables were to be removed. There are conflicting reports as to the method used. The most likely was the submarines had pumped their fuel tanks overboard and the waste fuel was to have dissipated and gone out with the current. The other report was the fuel was pumped aboard the barge.

In any event, in the afternoon of the 18th while the submarines were completing their work preparatory to entering the dry dock the gasoline on the barge and in the water exploded into a sheet of flame throwing burning gas into the air and in an instant the barge was ablaze from end to end. The men on the barge and on the decks of the submarines leaped into the water to escape the flames on the barge. Burning fuel was thrown over the submarines and in less than a minute both had caught fire. Four men inside the Grampus pulled the submarines hatch shut and remained imprisoned inside until the fire was extinguished.

As the explosion unfolded, of the score or so of men on the barge and submarines jumped into the water to escape the flames, there were both Navy personnel and civilians. One of the Navy men was Chief Machinist Theodore May and Fred Martin, a civilian "bumboat boy" and an Italian laborer whose name is not known, all entered the water along side the burning vessels. As rescue efforts ramped up and those escaping the flames were pulled from the water these men were not found or even noted as having been in the water at all. When a head count was taken later in the day it was noted these three men were not anywhere and were presumed to have drowned. It was known that May did not know how to swim. No sign was ever found of them.

The most seriously injured were Lieut. Julius Curtis Townsend, Chief Gunners Mate M. H. Lehy and Chief Gunners Mate Morrin. It was not noted to which vessels these men were attached.

During the process of fighting the fire the naval tugs Fortune and Unadilla caught fire and sustained considerable damage. One of the tugs can be seen at the right side of the above photo.

The fire was put out eventually and the barge turned out to be a total loss. This barge acted as a work barge and machine shop for the only two submarines on the west coast of the United States and many useful items necessary for their maintenance probably were destroyed with it.

It is generally believed that a lighted match was thrown into the water and it ignited a quantity of refuse gasoline afloat on the surface and the flame ignited several hundred gallons of inflammable gas which had been pumped out of the tanks of the submarines Pike and Grampus, which were moored alongside the barge. The Grampus commanding officer and also the submarine flotilla commander, Lieut. Edwin Horace Dodd, was held responsible for the fire and damage.

Dodd was ultimately brought to a court martial on charges of neglect of duty. The court martial was concluded October 31, 1908 and the general conclusion was Dodd had done all he could that would have averted the accident. It was determined that he would have pumped the submarine fuel tanks away from the docks and barge out in mid current had there been a yard tug available to him for that purpose. As it was the fuel remained pocketed around the submarines and work barge and ignited when a lighted match was thrown in the water.

On December 2. 1908 is was reported in the newspapers that the submarine boat Pike which had been overhauled and repaired at the Mare Island Navy Yard due to the fire damage and the normal upkeep she was to enter the dock for in the first place was completed and she had been put through a series of tests the day before.

The boat was submerged several times and on one occasion staying under water for twenty minutes while checks of all systems and hull joints and rivets were made. The cost of this overhaul was $20.000. The Grampus was undergoing a similar overhaul and was to be tested the following week.

US Navy Photo

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