Greetings!
US destroyers 1901-1910:
Edmondson class (US):
The
Edmondson class was basically an enlarged
Henley class design with a heavier gun armament and more powerful engines. Nine ships were built in this class;
Edmondson, Conroy, Hallett, Walston, Parkhurst, Hirsch, Stewart, Ryder, and
Whitmore. Hull numbers ran from TBD-31 to TBD-39.
The
Edmondson class was 278 feet overall, with a beam of 25 feet and a nominal draft of 8 feet. They displaced 1,020 tons normal and 1,090 tons full load. Main armament was three 3”/50 Mk.4’s all mounted on the centerline and a 6-pounder to port and starboard. Torpedo armament was two twin centerline swivel mounts for Mk.11 18” torpedoes – twelve reloads were carried. These were the last US destroyers with reciprocating engines – two five-cylinder quad expansion units producing 15,310 horsepower gave a design speed of 27 knots. Range was 3,500 nautical miles. Crew numbered 103.
Commissioned between 1902 and 1904, the new destroyers served mainly in the Pacific. Re-classed as destroyers (DD-31 to DD-39) in the fleet-wide reorganization of 1920, they would go on to suffer serious wartime losses - with
Conroy, Hirsch, Stewart and
Whitmore lost in the Western Pacific War and
Edmondson, Hallett, and
Ryder lost during the War of the Americas. Postwar the two survivors of this class served in the peacetime navy until the fall of 1933, when they were retired.
Duvall class (US):
The first turbine-powered destroyers built for the USN, the
Duvall class was based on the previous
Edmondson class design – with a longer hull allowing two additional boilers necessary to supply steam to the more powerful engines while larger coal bunkers increased range. Nine
Duvall’s were built;
Duvall, Hough, Naylor, Sherrill, Rhinehart, Dubose, Rosenthal, Lentz, and
Redd. Hull numbers ran from TBD-40 to TBD-48.
The
Duvall class was 283 feet overall, with a beam of 28 feet and a nominal draft of 8 feet. They displaced 1,080 tons normal and 1,110 tons full load. Main armament was four 3”/50 Mk.4’s mounted one forward, one aft and one each to port and starboard. Torpedo armament remained two twin 18” centerline swivel mounts with twelve reloads carried. Two Avondale direct-drive steam turbines rated at 18,250 shaft horsepower total drove these ships to a design speed of 28 knots while range increased to 4,000 nautical miles. Crew increased to 108.
All nine members of this class entered service during 1905 and were widely deployed during the Western Pacific War losing
Duvall, Naylor, Dubose, Rosenthal, and
Lentz. Re-classed as destroyers (DD-40 to DD-48) in 1920 the surviving ships served during the War of the Americas, but without the loss of a single ship as they spent the war as convoy escorts – although
Hough, Sherrill, and
Redd were all damaged on separate occasions by Confederate submarines and surface raiders. After the war ended in 1927, the four remaining ships remained on active duty until 1935, when they were decommissioned and scrapped.
Lockwood class (US):
The next class of destroyers to enter service with the USN was in many ways a progenitor of all US destroyers through the end of the War of the Americas. Although the
Lockwood class (named for Lieutenant Clarence Lockwood – who was instrumental in rescuing survivors from the USS
Condor when she was sunk in a collision in 1899) carried the same armament and was only slightly faster than the
Duvall class – its hull was completely redesigned from the keel up – over twenty feet longer and three feet wider, with a raised forecastle and better hydrodynamics which also allowed better internal compartmentalization and machinery arrangement. Twelve of these ships would be built in all;
Lockwood, Theisen, Hotchkiss, Witkowski, Rahn, Hollander, Lowrey, McClelland, Parnell, Denson, Albrecht, and
Kimbrough. Hull numbers were TBD-49 to TBD-60.
The
Lockwood class was 308 feet long overall, with a 31 foot beam and a nominal draft of 8 feet. They displaced 1,090 tons normal and 1,190 tons full load. Armament was identical to the
Duvall class save that sixteen reload torpedoes could be carried. Two direct-drive turbines rated at 19,030 shaft horsepower propelled these ships to 29 knots and gave a range of 4,500 nautical miles on 220 tons of coal. Normal crew complement was 115.
Laid down between 1905 and 1906, and commissioned between 1908 and 1909, the new class entered service just as the Western Pacific War was winding down and saw no combat. Like all earlier classes of TBD’s, the
Lockwood’s were re-classed as destroyers in 1920 (hull numbers DD-49 to DD-60), and were refit with oil-fired boilers, hydrophones and depth-charge racks shortly before the outbreak of the War of the Americas. During that conflict three;
Theisen, McClelland, and
Albrecht were all sunk by Confederate submarines either while on convoy duty or when escorting other warships and several of their sisterships were damaged to varying degrees. After the war five surviving ships;
Lockwood, Rahn, Parnell, Denson, and
Kimbrough were transferred to the Peruvian Navy in 1930 and saw considerable action in the Peru-Chilean War of 1932-1934. Meanwhile, the four members of this innovative class still in USN service were finally retired in 1936.
Next up: Early US submarines.
Cheers!
Stealthjester