From: DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN NAVAL FIGHTING SHIPS, Vol. III, pp. 415-16.

Idaho

BB-24

 
displacement. 13,000 n. 
length. 382' 
beam. 77' 
draft. 24'8" 
speed. 17 k. 
complement. 744 
armament. 4 12", 8 8", 8 7", 12 3", 2 21" tt. 
class. Mississippi

The second Idaho (BB-24) was launched by William Cramp & Son's, Philadelphia, 9 December 1905; sponsored by Miss Louise Gooding, daughter of the Governor of Idaho; and commissioned at Philadelphia Navy Yard 1 April 1908, Captain S. W. B. Dieh l in command.

The new battleship conducted a shakedown cruise to Cuba April-May 1908, and after a visit to Panama returned to Philadelphia for alterations. The ship took part in the giant naval review in Hampton Roads 22 February 1909 celebrating the return of the G reat White Fleet from its around the world cruise. In March she returned to the Caribbean for maneuvers, continuing to take part in training operations until October 1910. Idaho sailed 29 October for exercises in British and French waters, and u pon her return participated in gunnery exercises in Chesapeake Bay 19 to 28 March 1911.

Idaho sailed from Philadelphia 4 May 1911 for a cruise up the Mississippi River to Louisiana ports. She then steamed to the east coast of Florida for battleship maneuvers, and continued to operate off the coast and in the Caribbean until enteri ng the reserve at Philadelphia 27 October 1918. There she remained until 9 May 1914, when the ship sailed to the Mediterranean with midshipmen for at sea training. After visiting various

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ports in North Africa and Italy and carrying out a rigorous training program, Idaho arrived Villefranche 17 July 1914, transferred her crew to Maine, and decommissioned 30 July. She was turned over to the government of Greece, whom she s erved as coastal defense ship Kilkis until being sunk in Salamis harbor by German aircraft in April 1941.