The keel of the second
federal ship named NORTH CAROLINA was laid in Newport News, Virginia,
in March 1905. Constructed by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry
Dock Company, she was commissioned at Norfolk, Virginia, on 7
May 1908.
On her first assignment, she participated in an inspection
tour of the Panama Canal in 1909 while it was still under construction.
She then cruised the Mediterranean to protect Americans threatened
by the Turkish Empire and provided a medical relief party to
treat wounded and ill Armenians, victims of massacre.
In the years prior to World War I, she trained, maneuvered,
and performed ceremonial and diplomatic duties in the Atlantic
and Caribbean. It was NORTH CAROLINA that brought home the bodies
of the dead crew of MAINE.
When World War I ignited, she protected Americans in the Near
East, cruising constantly between Jaffa, Beirut, and Alexandria
as a reminder of American might. She returned to Boston for
overhaul in June 1915.
She next entered into the exciting period of her history when
NORTH CAROLINA played a significant role in the development
of naval aviation. She headed for Pensacola, Florida, for her
assignment as a naval air station ship, arriving on 9 September
1915. On 5 November 1915, she launched a scout observation biplane
by catapulting it from a ramp mounted on her deck. The steel
catapult was constructed over the gun turret and fantail, or
rear, of the cruiser. For the pilot, LCDR Henry Mustin, and
the crew, it was a proud day. This marked the first time a ship
launched a plane while under way. Her experimental work paved
the way for use of aircraft on battleships and cruisers.
When America entered World War I, NORTH CAROLINA left Florida
and headed north to escort troop transports plying the Atlantic
between Norfolk and New York. After the war, she brought men
of the American Expeditionary Force home in December 1918 and
July 1919.
Renamed CHARLOTTE on 7 June 1920, so that her name might be
used for a new battleship, she was decommissioned in February
1921. She was sold for scrap on 29 September 1930.