USS Louisiana BB-19
Louisiana III (BB-19) (Displacement: 16,000; Length: 456'4"; Beam: 76'10"; Draft: 24'6"; Speed: 18 knots; Complement: 827; Armament: 4 12-inch guns, 8 8-inch guns, 12 7-inch guns, 20 3-inch guns, 12 3-pounders, 2 1-pounders, 4 .30 cal. machine guns, 4 21-inch torpedo tubes; Class: Connecticut)
The third Louisiana (BB-19) was laid down on 7 February 1903 by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Newport News, Virginia. She was launched on 27 August 1904, sponsored by Miss Juanita LaLande, and commissioned on 2 June 1906, with Captain Albert R. Couden in command.
Following her shakedown off the New England coast, Louisiana sailed on 15 September for Havana in response to an appeal by Cuban President Estrada Palma for American assistance in suppressing an insurrection. The new battleship carried a peace commission comprised of Secretary of War William H. Taft and Assistant Secretary of State Robert Bacon, which arranged for a provisional government on the island. Louisiana stood by while this government was set up and then returned the commission to Fortress Monroe, Virginia.
Louisiana embarked President Theodore Roosevelt at Piney Point, Maryland, on 8 November for a cruise to Panama to inspect work on the construction of the Panama Canal. Returning, she briefly visited Puerto Rico, where the President studied the administrative structure of the Commonwealth's government, before debarking him at Piney Point on 26 November.
During 1906 and 1907, Louisiana visited New Orleans, Havana, and Norfolk; maneuvered out of Guantanamo Bay; and engaged in battle practice along the New England coast. On 16 December 1907, she departed Hampton Roads as one of the 16 battleships President Theodore Roosevelt sent on a voyage around the world. The cruise of the "Great White Fleet" deterred hostile actions towards the United States by other countries, primarily Japan, raised American prestige as a global naval power, and impressed upon Congress the importance of a strong Navy and a thriving merchant fleet. During the circumnavigation, Louisiana visited Port-of-Spain; Rio de Janeiro; Punta Arenas and Valparaiso, Chile; Callao, Peru; San Diego and San Francisco; Honolulu; Auckland; Sydney; Tokyo; Manila; Amoy, China; Hong Kong; Manila; Colombo; Suez and Port Said; Smyrna; and Gibraltar before returning home on 22 February 1909.
After overhaul and maneuvers, Louisiana joined the 2nd Division of the Atlantic Fleet on 1 November 1910 and sailed for European waters to visit English and French ports before returning to the United States in the spring of 1911. During the summer, she paid formal visits to the north European ports of Copenhagen; Trollhättan, Sweden; Kronstadt, Finland; and Kiel, Germany, and was inspected by the Kings of Denmark and Sweden, the Kaiser, and the Tsar.
Between 6 July 1913 and 24 September 1915, Louisiana made three voyages from east coast ports to Mexican waters. On the first (6 July to 23 December 1913), she stood by to protect American lives and property and to help enforce both the Monroe Doctrine and the arms embargo which had been established to discourage further revolutionary disturbances in Mexico. Her second voyage (14 April to 8 August 1914) came at a time when tension between Mexico and the United States was at its peak during the shelling and occupation of Vera Cruz. Louisiana sailed a third time for Mexican waters to protect American interests again from 17 August to 24 September 1915.
Returning from the Gulf of Mexico, Louisiana was placed in reserve at Norfolk and, until the United States entered World War I, she served as a training ship for midshipmen and naval militiamen on summer cruises.
During World War I, Louisiana was assigned as a gunnery and engineering training ship, cruising off the middle Atlantic coast until 25 September 1918. At that time, she became one of the escorts for a convoy to Halifax. Beginning 24 December, she saw duty as a troop transport, making four voyages to Brest, France, to carry troops back to the United States.
Following her final trip back from Brest, Louisiana reported to the Philadelphia Navy Yard, where she decommissioned on 20 October 1920 and was sold for scrap on 1 November 1923.