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USS RHODE ISLAND BB-17
"AMERICA'S GREAT WHITE FLEET"
Joseph Ballard Murdock, (sometimes listed as Murdoch) was Captain of the USS Rhode Island, a prominent ship of “Great White Fleet”. He entered the navy as midshipman from the Fourth Congressional District of Massachusetts July 26, 1866, and graduated in June 1870. He was born February 13, 1851, and was due for age retirement in 1913. He became an ensign in 1871 and was assigned to the Portsmouth Navy Yard in 1873. The next year was spent in the USS Monongahela, cruising in the South Atlantic; and in 1874 he went to the USS Lancaster. For five years, beginning 1875, he was connected with the Coast Survey. In 1879 he went with the training squadron in the USS Constitution. Becoming a lieutenant in March, 1880, he shortly after returned to the Naval Academy for several years teaching physics, and was in 1884 given special duty at Philadelphia for nearly a year. For a year from December, 1885, he was on the USS Dolphin; then at the Torpedo Station for several years; and in 1888 he was ordered to Pensacola, on the North Atlantic Station, for several months, going from there to the Asiatic Station in the USS Omaha, for three years. Upon is return fro the Orient in 1891 he was ordered to special duty in Europe, and immediately after that he was assigned to electrical duty at the New York Navy Yard. He was executive officer of the U.S.S. Panther during the Spanish-American War. In April, 1906, he was made a member of the Naval examining and retiring boards. Captain Murdock was placed in command of the USS Rhode Island as part of President Roosevelt’s Great White Fleet, 1907-1909. He then returned to New York, Naval District 3 as Rear Admiral, November 20, 1909, and Commendant of the Navy Yard, 1909-1910. Rear Admiral Murdock flew his flag on the battleship Minnesota (BB-22) as Commander, Battleship Division 3, U.S. Atlantic Fleet in 1910 until April 1911. In 1911 untll July 1912 he commanded the Asiatic Fleet and won distinction during the Chinese Revolution of 1911. He retired, by operation of law, February 13, 1913 after 43 years of service. For a year, during WWI he returned to duty as president of the general court martial at Portsmouth, from May 2, 1918 to May 1, 1919.
Joseph Murdock entered New Hampshire politics and served as Chairman of the House Committee on National Affairs, and a member of the Appropriations and Forestry Committees/Commission from 1921-1927. His memberships included the American Philosophical Society, the Franklin Institute, Union Club of Boston, Army and Navy Club of Washington, the Sons of the Revolution and the Society of the Colonial Wars. He died March 20, 1931, in Manchester, New Hampshire.
Other Comments:
America's (Great White) Fleet - Captain Murdock
Souvenir of the Visit of America's Fleet 1908. Captain Murdock was commander of the USS Rhode Island, BB-17.
Note the US and Australian flags, this example was printed for the stop in Sydney Australia.
REGISTER OF MEMBERS OF THE SOCIETY OF COLONIAL WARS
SERVICE IN THE ARMY OR NAVY OF THE UNITED STATES DURING THE SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR
RECORD OF THE PATRIOTIC WORK DONE BY THE SOCIETY PUBLISHED BY ORDER OF THE
GENERAL COUNCIL NEW YORK 1899
RHODE ISLAND SOCIET Joseph Ballard Murdock, Lieutenant, U.S.N., U.S.S. Panther
Sail Frigate:
Built at Hartt's Shipyard, Boston, MA.
Launched, 21 October 1797
Commissioned USS Constitution, 22 July 1798, Commodore Samuel Nicholson, in command
Decommissioned and placed in ordinary, circa 1800, at Boston, MA.
Recommissioned, 1803
Decommissioned in November 1807
Recommissioned in August 1809
Decommissioned and placed in ordinary in 1815, at Boston, MA.
Recommissioned in May 1821
Decommissioned in 1830
Recommissioned in 1835
Decommissioned in 1851
Recommissioned in 1852
Decommissioned in 1855
Recommissioned in 1860
Decommissioned in 1871
Recommissioned in July 1877
Decommissioned in 1884
Renamed Old Constitution, 1 December 1917
Name restored, 24 July 1925
Recommissioned, 1 July 1931,
Decommissioned, 8 June 1934
Recommissioned, 24 August 1940
Classified Miscellaneous Unclassified (IX-21), 8 January 1941
Classification IX withdrawn 2 September 1975 by order of the Secretary of the Navy
On 28 October 2009 President Obama signed a law making USS Constitution the nation's "ship of state," in effect, a national flagship.