Battery Lewis: Difference between revisions

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'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1897-1920) - Battery Lewis was built at [[Fort Stevens]] between Sep 1896 and Apr 1898 and was transferred for service 3,5 Apr 1898. Originally one of three sets of emplacements called West Battery. In 1900 Battery Lewis was renamed for Capt. [[Meriwether Lewis]], of the Lewis & Clark Expedition.
'''{{PAGENAME}}''' (1897-1918) - Battery Lewis was built at [[Fort Stevens]] between Sep 1896 and Apr 1898 and was transferred for service 3,5 Apr 1898. (included [[Battery Walker]] and [[Battery Mishler]]). Originally contained three sets of two gun emplacements that were later given three separate names, [[Battery Walker]], [[Battery Lewis]] and [[Battery Mishler]]. The original Battery Lewis named in S.O. 43, 4 Apr 1900, for Capt. [[Meriwether Lewis]], of the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Deactivated in 1918.
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[[Image:Fort Stevens - 14.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Battery Lewis]]
[[Image:Fort Stevens - 14.jpg|300px|thumb|left|Battery Lewis]]

Revision as of 13:59, 30 July 2009

Battery Lewis (1897-1918) - Battery Lewis was built at Fort Stevens between Sep 1896 and Apr 1898 and was transferred for service 3,5 Apr 1898. (included Battery Walker and Battery Mishler). Originally contained three sets of two gun emplacements that were later given three separate names, Battery Walker, Battery Lewis and Battery Mishler. The original Battery Lewis named in S.O. 43, 4 Apr 1900, for Capt. Meriwether Lewis, of the Lewis & Clark Expedition. Deactivated in 1918.

Battery Lewis
Battery Lewis Control Station


Battery Lewis History

Part of the Harbor Defense of the Columbia.

A concrete Endicott Period battery facing the mouth of the Columbia River with two, 10" M1888MII rifles on disappearing carriages, one M1896 and one M1894. They were removed in 1917 during World War I, shipped to France to help bolster the Allied defenses and were never replaced.

Battery Lewis Armament (edit list)
Empl
No
Caliber
Type
Barrel
Length
Model Serial
No
Manufacturer Carriage Service
Dates
Notes
1 10" Rifle 367.25" M1888MII 11 Bethlehem Disappearing Carriage L.F.,
M1896, #4d, Niles
1897-1918 See note 1
2 10" Rifle 367.25" M1888MII 49 Watervliet Disappearing Carriage L.F.,
M1894, #3a, Kilby
1897-1918 See note 1
Source: Form 1, 30 Jun 1921, RCB, 22 Sep 1903, 31 Dec 1910, 31 Dec 1915, Coast Defense Study Group, Berhow, Mark A. ed, American Seacoast Defenses: A Reference Guide, 2nd Edition, CDSG Press, McLean, VA, 2004, ISBN 0-9748167-0-1, page 122-125, 216
Note 1: Guns transferred to Watervliet 21 Jun 1918, carriage #4 scrapped 26 May 1920 & held for parts, carriage #3 scrapped 26 May 1920, CDSG Gun Card Collection from NARA

Current Status

The battery is in fair condition and open to the public. No guns or carriages are in place.


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Location: On Fort Stevens, Oregon

Maps & Images

Lat: 46.207157 Long: -123.968219

Sources:

Links:


Visited: 18 May 2008, 14 Feb 2008

Battery Lewis Picture Gallery

Click on the picture to see a larger version. Contribute additional pictures - the more the better!