Battery McKinnon: Difference between revisions
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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1906-1942) - Battery William McKinnon is a concrete [[Endicott Period]] 12" mortar battery located on [[Fort Winfield Scott]], San Francisco County, California. Named in G.O. 20, 25 Jan 1906, after Chaplain [[William D. McKinnon]], [[3rd U.S. Cavalry]], who served with distinction during the [[Spanish-American War]] and the insurrection in the Philippine Islands, and who died 25 Sep 1902. Originally built as mortar pits C & D of [[Battery Stotsenburg]] in 1898, these two pits were re-designated as Battery McKinnon in 1906. Battery deactivated 1942. | {{PageHeader}} | ||
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1906-1942) - Battery William McKinnon is a concrete [[Endicott Period]] 12" mortar battery located on [[Fort Winfield Scott (2)]], San Francisco County, California. Named in G.O. 20, 25 Jan 1906, after Chaplain [[William D. McKinnon]], [[3rd U.S. Cavalry]], who served with distinction during the [[Spanish-American War]] and the insurrection in the Philippine Islands, and who died 25 Sep 1902. Originally built as mortar pits C & D of [[Battery Stotsenburg]] in 1898, these two pits were re-designated as Battery McKinnon in 1906. Battery deactivated 1942. | |||
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<googlemap version="0.9" lat="37.794998" lon="-122.474945" zoom="19" width="500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png"> | <googlemap version="0.9" lat="37.794998" lon="-122.474945" zoom="19" width="-500" height="-500" scale="yes" overview="yes" controls="large" icons="http://www.fortwiki.com/mapicons/icon{label}.png"> | ||
(B) 37.795012, -122.474953 | (B) 37.795012, -122.474953 | ||
[[Battery McKinnon]]<br>(1906-1943) | [[Battery McKinnon]]<br>(1906-1943) | ||
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{{Visited|22 Aug 2009}} | {{Visited|22 Aug 2009}} | ||
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__NOTOC__ | __NOTOC__ | ||
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[[Category:California All]] | [[Category:California All]] | ||
[[Category:California Battery]] | [[Category:California Battery]] | ||
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] | [[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]] | ||
[[Category:Preserved]] | [[Category:Preserved]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:California San Francisco County]] | ||
[[Category:National Historic Site]] | |||
[[Category:Endicott Period Battery]] | [[Category:Endicott Period Battery]] | ||
[[Category:Coastal Battery]] | [[Category:Coastal Battery]] | ||
[[Category:Fort Winfield Scott]] | [[Category:Fort Winfield Scott (2)]] | ||
[[Category:Harbor Defense of San Francisco]] | |||
[[Category:1942 Scrapping]] | [[Category:1942 Scrapping]] |
Latest revision as of 18:12, 7 January 2019
Battery McKinnon (1906-1942) - Battery William McKinnon is a concrete Endicott Period 12" mortar battery located on Fort Winfield Scott (2), San Francisco County, California. Named in G.O. 20, 25 Jan 1906, after Chaplain William D. McKinnon, 3rd U.S. Cavalry, who served with distinction during the Spanish-American War and the insurrection in the Philippine Islands, and who died 25 Sep 1902. Originally built as mortar pits C & D of Battery Stotsenburg in 1898, these two pits were re-designated as Battery McKinnon in 1906. Battery deactivated 1942.
Endicott Period (1890-1910)Part of the Harbor Defense of San Francisco. Battery McKinnon was originally mortar pits C & D of Battery Stotsenburg, each of these two pits were built with 4, 12" M1890MI rifled steel mortars on M1896MI mortar carriages in a concrete battery. These two mortar pits were re-designated as Battery McKinnon in 1906. This was a single level mortar battery with the mortar loading platforms on the same level as the magazines. Shells were brought from the magazines by shot carts. No shell or powder hoist were provided or needed. The concrete magazines were built between the mortar pits and covered with some 20' of earth. Electrical power was furnished from a central power plant and a backup emplacement power plant.
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World War I (1917-1918)The U.S. entry into World War I resulted in a widespread removal of large caliber coastal defense gun tubes for service in Europe. Many of the gun and mortar tubes removed were sent to arsenals for modification and mounting on mobile carriages, both wheeled and railroad. Most of the removed gun tubes never made it to Europe and were either remounted or remained at the arsenals until needed elsewhere. In 1918, four of the mortars from Battery McKinnon were relocated to Battery Howe (2) on Fort Funston. World War II (1941-1945)The mortars of Battery Stotsenburg were obsolete at the beginning of World War II. They were all ordered scrapped 19 Nov 1942 during the first large scale World War II scrap drive. Current StatusNo guns or carriages are in place.
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Links: Visited: 22 Aug 2009 |