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Rainbow

1898-1928

(Submarine Tender No.7: displacement 4,360; length 325'9"; beam 41'1"; draft 17'8";speed 12 knots; complement 55; armament 6 6-pounders, 6 1-pounders)

Norse King -- completed in 1890 at Sunderland, England, by James Laing -- was purchased by the U.S. Navy on 29 June 1898; placed in reduced commission on 18 July 1898, and transferred to the New York Navy Yard for fitting out for service as a distilling and station ship.

Rainbow was commissioned in full on 2 December 1901, Cmdr. Sidney A. Staunton in command, and was assigned to the Asiatic Fleet. En route to the Philippines, she sailed via Gibraltar for the Suez Canal, calling at Palermo, Sicily; Port Said, Egypt; Colombo, Ceylon; and Singapore before arriving at Cavite on 3 April 1902.

Rainbow, as flagship of the Philippine Squadron, remained in the Philippines, with only periodic runs to Hong Kong for repairs, until 1906. Her range was then expanded from an annual circuit among Philippine ports to include visits to various Japanese ports, and in November 1907, a call at Vladivostok with Secretary of War Taft embarked.

Becoming flagship of the 3rd Squadron, Pacific Fleet, in 1908, Rainbow cruised among the Philippine and Japanese Islands and off the coast of China, and, on at least one occasion, December 1908-January 1909, conducted hydrographic surveys. Then, designated tender to the First Torpedo Flotilla, she alternated between the China coast and the Philippines until pressed into service as a transport.

Rainbow departed Cavite on 26 October 1911, en route with an expeditionary force of marines landed at Woosung (31 October-1 November) to help protect American nationals from imminent dangers of the revolutionary turmoil in China. She became the temporary flagship of the Commander-in-Chief, Asiatic Fleet, on 1 November, cruising the China coast to observe conditions that might affect the safety of Americans at Shanghai, Woosung, Nanking, Amoy, Swatow, Tsingtao, and Taku.

Saratoga (Armored Cruiser No. 2) relieved Rainbow as Asiatic Fleet flagship on 10 April 1912, freeing Rainbow  to proceed to Whampoa where she became the flagship of the China Squadron on 13 April. She supported marine expeditionary forces on the China coast until 30 August, when she sailed from Chefoo for repairs at Olongapo, Philippine Islands.

Rainbow shifted from Olongapo to Cavite on 8 October 1912 and served there as temporary flagship for the Commander-in-Chief, Asiatic Fleet (30 October-7 November). She departed Cavite on 7 November 1912, bound by way of Woosung, Shanghai, and the Yangtze River, to Nanking. She arrived at Nanking on 20 November and sailed ten days later to cruise with the American ambassador to the ports of Shanghai, Hong Kong, Swatow, Amoy, and Woosung. She departed Woosung on 28 December, investigating the landing facilities at Lingayen Gulf in the Philippines before being repaired at Olongapo in January 1913.

Rainbow shifted from Olongapo to Cavite 26 January 1913 and remained in the Philippines until 28 March when she again set course for the coast of China. She transferred stores and men to the tug Piscataqua  at Woosung, then served as a station ship at Shanghai until 4 November 1913. After calling at Olongapo, she proceeded to Manila, embarked the Commander-in-Chief for transport to Shanghai, and served there as flagship from 21 December 1913 to 19 January 1914.

Rainbow resumed station ship duty at Cavite on 22 January 1914. She again became temporary flagship of the Commander-in-Chief at Cavite on 1 March 1914 but terminated that duty on 23 March 1914 when she shifted to Olongapo for overhaul, completed on 8 July 1914.

Rainbow departed Manila Bay on 16 July 1914, taking refuge from a storm in Lingayen Gulf the 18th, before proceeding to survey French Frigate Shoals, Territory of Hawaii (7-10 August 1914). She arrived at Honolulu on 12 August, basing there for further survey work off French Frigate Shoals until 14 November 1914. She then set course for San Francisco, Calif., arriving on 24 November 1914 and shifting to the Mare Island Navy Yard, Vallejo, Calif., the following day to prepare for inactivation. She decommissioned at Mare Island on 24 December 1914.

Rainbow was placed in commission, in reserve, at Mare Island on 29 January 1916. She shifted to the U.S. Naval Training Station, Yerba Buena Island, on 4 February 1916, then served as a receiving ship there until 14 December 1917. She then entered the Mare Island Navy Yard to fit out for service as a tender to the 6th Division, Submarine Force, Atlantic Fleet. That work was completed by 2 April 1918 when Rainbow departed Mare Island to tend submarines L-6 (Submarine No. 45) and L-7 (Submarine No. 46) at Yerba Buena Island, California City, and San Pedro, Calif. On 3 May, she departed San Pedro for the eastern seaboard in company with L-6 and L-7., ultimately arriving at Charleston with the L-boats on 9 June and proceeded independently on the 21st for the Philadelphia Navy Yard, arriving on 24 June.

Rainbow overhauled in the Philadelphia Navy Yard until 20 October 1918, then tended the O-boats of Submarine Division 10 at Newport, R.I.; Bridgeport, Conn.; and Tompkinsville, N.Y. The tender sailed from Tompkinsville in company with Submarine Division 10, bound by way of Hampton Roads, Va., to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, arriving 7 January 1919.

Rainbow tended Submarine Division 10 at Guantanamo until 10 March 1919; then cruised to Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, V.I., where the O-boats carried out daily practice on the target range until 16 April. After calling at San Juan, P.R., the tender and her boats returned to New York on 1 May.

Rainbow continued as a tender to Submarine Division 10 at Cold Spring Inlet, Cape May, N.J., from 14 May to 22 September 1919. She then sailed to Charleston, S.C., where she remained in commission, in reserve, until 13 February 1920. She entered the Boston Navy Yard on 18 February 1920 for overhaul and was placed in full commission there on 1 July 1920 to serve as a tender to Submarine Division 12.

Given the identification number AS-7 on 17 July 1920, Rainbow departed the Boston Navy Yard on 28 October 1920, made a brief call at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, N.H., then reached Newport on 6 November 1921 to commence tending the S-boats of Submarine Division 12. The submarine division shifted base to New York on 19 November and sailed the 30th bound by way of Key West, Guantanamo Bay, the Panama Canal and ports of Mexico, to San Diego, Calif., arriving on 9 February 1921.

Rainbow tended Submarine Division 12 on the California coast until 6 April 1921, then set course from San Francisco with the S-boats of Division 12 for Honolulu, arriving on 17 April. Tending operations in Hawaiian waters continued until 12 November when she set course with the S-boats for Apra Harbor, Guam (27-30 November), thence to Cavite, arriving there on 6 December.

Upon arrival at Cavite, Rainbow became the flagship of Submarine Flotilla 3 (later designated Submarine Division), Asiatic Fleet. She also served as tender to Submarine Division 12 and sometimes assisted the minesweeper Finch (AM-9) in tending the boats of Submarine Division 18. Except for a visit to Hong Kong (11-31 October 1921), she remained in the Philippines until 23 April 1923. She then sailed with the Submarine Divisions of the Asiatic Fleet and tender Finch to serve along the China Coast at Shanghai, Chefoo, Chinwangtao, Woosung, and Amoy.

Rainbow returned to Olongapo from the coast of China on 10 September 1923, serving there and at Cavite until 24 June 1924. She again sailed from Cavite on that date in company with Finch and the S-boats of Divisions 12 and 18 to serve at Tsingtao, Chefoo, and Amoy until 20 September. She returned to Olongapo on 23 September and sailed on 28 October for return to the western seaboard of the United States. She called at Sorsogon Bay, Luzon (29 September-3 October); Apra Harbor, Guam (6-17 November); Pearl Harbor (7-19 December); and reached the Mare Island Navy Yard on 31 December.

Rainbow departed San Diego on 2 February 1925 to land marine reinforcements at Corinto, Nicaragua (11-12 February), then proceeded by way of the Panama Canal, Guantanamo Bay, and Hampton Roads to the Philadelphia Navy Yard, arriving there on 10 March. She decommissioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on 11 July 1925.

Rainbow remained inactive in the Philadelphia Navy Yard until her name was stricken from the List of Naval Vessels on 26 June 1928. She was then sold for scrapping on 13 September 1928 to the Boston Iron Works, Baltimore, Md.

14 September 2005

Published: Tue Jan 12 11:31:33 EST 2016