Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q21975985> ?p ?o }
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- Q21975985 subject Q6372477.
- Q21975985 subject Q8109258.
- Q21975985 subject Q8608908.
- Q21975985 subject Q8624191.
- Q21975985 subject Q8738168.
- Q21975985 subject Q8738701.
- Q21975985 subject Q8739393.
- Q21975985 subject Q8871451.
- Q21975985 subject Q8897115.
- Q21975985 abstract "The second USS Ohio was a ship of the line of the United States Navy. She was designed by Henry Eckford, laid down at Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1817, and launched on 30 May 1820. She went into ordinary and in the ensuing years decayed badly. Refitted for service in 1838, Ohio sailed on 16 October 1838 to join the Mediterranean Squadron under Commodore Isaac Hull. Acting as flagship for two years, she protected commerce and suppressed the slave trade off the African coast. Ohio proved to have excellent performance under sail, repeatedly making more than 12 kn (14 mph; 22 km/h). One of her officers stated, "I never supposed such a ship could be built — a ship possessing in so great a degree all the qualifications of a perfect vessel." In 1840, Ohio returned to Boston where she again went into ordinary. From 1841-1846, Ohio served as receiving ship.To meet the needs of the Mexican-American War, Ohio was recommissioned on 7 December 1846, and sailed on 4 January 1847 for the Gulf of Mexico, arriving off Veracruz on 22 March. Ohio landed 10 guns on 27 March to help in the siege of Veracruz; but the city soon surrendered.Ohio drew too much water for coastal operations in the gulf. However, 336 of her crew participated in the Tuxpan River Expedition. In 1847, the entire distance from the mouth of the river to the town was covered with thick jungle growth. The enemy had constructed three well-positioned forts on bluffs overlooking bends in the river. On 18 April, Commodore. Matthew Perry arrived off the mouth of the river with 15 vessels. At 22:00, light-draft steamers Scourge, Spitfire, and Vixen, each towing a schooner, moved up stream. Bombships Etna, Hecla, and Vesuvius followed closely while 30 surf boats containing 1,500 men brought up the rear. Approaching the town, the squadron came under hot fire from Fort LaPena. Cmdre. Perry ordered Commander Franklin Buchanan to disembark the surf boats and storm the fort. As the landing party swept ashore, the Mexicans abandoned their position. The other two forts fell in a like manner, with only light casualties sustained by the squadron. Men from Ohio retrieved the guns of brig Truxtun which had foundered in a storm near Tuxpan on 16 September 1846. The town was occupied and all military stores destroyed.Following Tuxpan, Ohio sailed from Veracruz and arrived in New York on 9 May. On 26 June, she sailed to bolster the Pacific Squadron, first carrying the U.S. minister to Brazil and operating off the east coast of South America until December. In Valparaíso on 21 January 1848, Cmdre. Thomas ap Catesby Jones took her as the flagship of the Pacific Squadron, intending to blockade the western Mexico ports. Ohio arrived at Mazatlán on 6 May, shortly after the Mexican-American War ended. Jones used the fleet to help transport to Monterey, California, those that had aided the United States in the war, arriving there on 9 October. Ohio then sailed to Sausalito, in San Francisco Bay. Ohio spent the next two years in the Pacific protecting commerce and policing the newly acquired California Territory during the chaotic early months of the gold rush. Scurvy struck the crew in the spring of 1849 in San Francisco Bay so Jones sent Ohio to the Sandwich Islands for fresh food.In 1850, she returned to Boston where she again went into ordinary. In 1851, Ohio became a receiving ship and continued this duty until again placed in ordinary in 1875. Ohio was sold at Boston to J. L. Snow of Rockland, Maine on 27 September 1883. She was burned in the following year, in Greenport Harbor, New York; the remains are still accessible to scuba divers. The wreck is off Fanning Point, in about 20 ft (6.1 m) of water.".
- Q21975985 commissioningDate "1838-10-16".
- Q21975985 length "60.0456".
- Q21975985 shipBeam "16.1544".
- Q21975985 shipDraft "6.76656".
- Q21975985 shipLaunch "1820-05-30".
- Q21975985 status "sold 1883".
- Q21975985 thumbnail Ohio-ship-of-the-line-Currier-Ives.jpeg?width=300.
- Q21975985 type Q207452.
- Q21975985 wikiPageExternalLink ohio-ii.htm.
- Q21975985 wikiPageExternalLink www.ussohio.org.
- Q21975985 wikiPageExternalLink ohio-dat.htm.
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- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8109258.
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- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8608908.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8624191.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8738168.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8738701.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8739393.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8871451.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q8897115.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q891771.
- Q21975985 wikiPageWikiLink Q948252.
- Q21975985 shipCommissioned "--10-16".
- Q21975985 shipFate "sold 1883".
- Q21975985 shipLaunched "1820-05-30".
- Q21975985 shipName "USS Ohio".
- Q21975985 shipType Q207452.
- Q21975985 type Product.
- Q21975985 type MeanOfTransportation.
- Q21975985 type Ship.
- Q21975985 type DesignedArtifact.
- Q21975985 type Thing.
- Q21975985 type Q11446.
- Q21975985 comment "The second USS Ohio was a ship of the line of the United States Navy. She was designed by Henry Eckford, laid down at Brooklyn Navy Yard in 1817, and launched on 30 May 1820. She went into ordinary and in the ensuing years decayed badly. Refitted for service in 1838, Ohio sailed on 16 October 1838 to join the Mediterranean Squadron under Commodore Isaac Hull. Acting as flagship for two years, she protected commerce and suppressed the slave trade off the African coast.".
- Q21975985 label "USS Ohio (1820)".
- Q21975985 depiction Ohio-ship-of-the-line-Currier-Ives.jpeg.
- Q21975985 name "USS Ohio".