Battery Murphy (1)

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Battery Murphy (1) (1900-1945) - Battery Murphy was constructed at Fort Columbia between April of 1899 and June of 1900. The battery was transfered for service on June 29, 1900 for a total cost of $58,623.82. Battery Murphy is named after Captain William C. Murphy, who was killed at the Philippines on August 14, 1900 during the Spanish-American War.

Battery Murphy 2008
Ammunition Hoist Battery Murphy 2008


Battery Murphy (1) History

Battery Murphy would be the longest active Endicott Period battery at Fort Columbia, providing 45 years of continuous active military service in the Harbor Defense Project. The battery was in three wars before finally being deactivated on August 24th, 1945. The battery was armed with two 6-inch disappearing rifles. Though the guns never fired in anger during combat, it fired thousand of shells in practice drills throughout its service.

Battery Murphy Armament (edit list)
Empl
No
Caliber
Type
Barrel
Length
Model Serial
No
Manufacturer Carriage Service
Dates
Notes
1 6" Rifle 277.85" M1897MI 15 Watervliet Disappearing Carriage, M1898,
#9, Watervliet
1900-1945
2 6" Rifle 277.85" M1897MI 24 Watervliet Disappearing Carriage, M1898,
#10, Watervliet
1900-1945
Source: RCW Form 1, 30 Jun 1921, CDSG


Battery Murphy Plan


Current Status

The battery is in excellent shape and open to the public. There is a project to restore the Hodges shell hoists and wiring the battery with lights, though none of these projects seem to be started yet.


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Location: Fort Columbia, Washington

Maps & Images

Lat: 46.251685 Long: -123.921238

Sources:

Links:


Visited: 16 Feb 2008, 22 Mar 2008, 27 Aug 2008

Battery Murphy (1) Picture Gallery

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