Greetings!
Carronade class (CSA):
The follow-on to the
Brilliant class; the
Carronade class was not only the first turbine-powered Confederate destroyers, but was also more heavily armed and faster than earlier classes – and more equal to US designs. A total of eight were built;
Carronade, Citadel, Crescendo, Castle, Catapult, Cheetah, Crusader, and
Corsair. Hull numbers ran from TD-13 to TD-20.
The
Carronade class was 290 feet long overall, with a 28 foot beam and a nominal draft of 8 feet. They displaced 1,010 tons normal and 1,040 tons full load. Armament consisted of four 3”/50 Mk.III’s in single mounts, fore, port, starboard, and aft and two twin 18” torpedo tubes in centerline swivel mounts ahead and behind the after deckhouse. Sixteen reload torpedoes were carried. Two Wilkerson-Chadwick direct-drive turbines producing a combined 14,300 shaft horsepower were installed and design speed was 27 knots with a range of 4,000 nautical miles. Normal crew complement was 103.
Laid down between 1902 and 1904, the new TBD’s commissioned between 1905 and 1907 and were almost immediately involved in the Western Pacific War with nearly the entire class lost during the conflict;
Citadel was sunk during 1906 at the First Battle of Hawaii,
Carronade, Castle, and
Cheetah during the eight-month Guam Campaign, and
Crescendo, Catapult, and
Crusader in 1908 during the Second Battle of Hawaii. The only survivor;
Corsair, was re-classed as a destroyer (D-20) during her refit in 1921-22 where she also received oil-fired boilers, new guns, hydrophones and depth charge racks. She continued in second-line service with the CSN during the War of the Americas and managed to avoid serious damage until she was sunk at her moorings during the US air raid against Charleston Navy Yard in 1927 and was later broken up on site.
Daring class (CSA):
Designed as larger, more advanced versions of the
Carronade class, the
Daring class was virtually identical in appearance to the earlier ships but were built in larger numbers as part of the switch from a focus on torpedo boats to more destroyers – reflecting the CSN’s experience during the Western Pacific War. Laid down between 1906 and 1907, sixteen
Daring’s were built;
Daring, Dagger, Duster, Deterrent, Domain, Dazzle, Doughty, Drizzle, Duelist, Devastator, Dragon, Dossier, Duchess, Dart, Dominion, and
Dramatic. Hull numbers ran from TD-21 to TD-36.
The
Daring class was 300 feet long overall, with a 29 foot beam and a nominal draft of 10 feet. They displaced 1,075 tons normal and 1,100 tons full load. Armament was identical to that of the
Carronade class save twenty reload torpedoes could be carried. A twin shaft turbine propulsion system was again used with a total output of 18,460 shaft horsepower. Design speed was 29 knots while range remained 4,000 nautical miles. The
Daring’s were the first Confederate destroyers with twin rudders and were very maneuverable for their time. Normal crew complement was 110.
The new ships commissioned between 1909 and 1910 into the peacetime CSN. They proved quite successful and helped hasten the demise of the Confederate torpedo boat. Re-classed as destroyers (D-21 to D-36) in 1921, the
Daring’s were refit during 1922 with oil-burning boilers, 21” torpedo tubes, hydrophones and depth charge racks. The oldest Confederate destroyers still considered front-line units – the
Daring’s were heavily involved in the War of the Americas – losing half their number in the brutal naval battles that characterized this conflict. CSS
Dominion had the dubious distinction of being the first Confederate warship lost during the war – being sunk in 1923 by the light cruiser USS
Lake Superior during the CSN’s withdraw following the initial attacks against US West Coast targets. Several of these ships were lost on commerce raiding missions that marked the first half of the war;
Duster in 1924,
Dazzle and
Devastator in 1925, and
Drizzle in 1926.
Dagger was sunk by the US submarine
L.11 in 1927, and
Doughty and
Duchess during the Battle of Mobile Bay later that year. Following the war – the surviving eight ships continued in second-line service in the limited postwar CS fleet. Funds for refits were limited to more modern ships so the
Daring’s retained their prewar appearance until they were finally retired during 1940. They were scrapped shortly thereafter.
G class (CSA):
The first Confederate torpedo boats of the Twentieth Century, the G class represented a significant change in design over the previous F class. They were intended to be more capable against US torpedo boat destroyers and were in fact based on the prototype
Advent class of torpedo boat destroyers. This led to a curious situation where Confederate torpedo boats came to resemble smaller, less capable destroyers – with the effect of many being lost against more powerful US destroyers during the Western Pacific War. Twenty G class ships;
G.I to
G.XX, were built – commissioning during 1904.
The G class was 220 feet long overall with a 17 foot beam and draft of 7.5 feet. They displaced 475 tons normal and 510 tons full load and were armed with a 12-pounder (3”) Mk.II gun forward, and three 6-pounder guns to port, starboard, and aft. Torpedo armament consisted of four single 18” launchers with eight of the “long” Mk.IV or twelve “short” Mk.V torpedoes carried as reloads. Reverting to a twin-shaft arrangement, the G class was powered by four-cylinder quad-expansion engines producing a total of 12,880 horsepower. Design speed was 28.5 knots and range was 3,000 nautical miles. Crew numbered 52.
As previously mentioned, the Western Pacific War was one the CSN would have preferred to avoid as most of its leadership – led by Admiral Arthur – felt they weren’t ready to take on the USN with a realistic chance of victory. Ironically, this situation would be repeated in the years leading up to the War of the Americas – with similarly disastrous results. Like all Confederate torpedo boats, the G class was heavily involved in the Western Pacific War and twelve ships;
G.II, G.IV, G.V, G.VII, G.IX, G.X, G.XII, G.XIII, G.XV, G.XVI, G.XVIII, and
G.XX, were lost. After the war ending the remaining ships were relegated to second-line duties and were eventually decommissioned and scrapped between 1915 and 1916.
H class (CSA):
The follow-on to the G class, the H class torpedo boats continued the design trend started by the earlier class – as lighter, weaker “destroyers”. Sixteen;
H.I to
H.XVI, were built – all were in commission by the end of 1905.
The H class was 260 feet long overall with a 20 foot beam and draft of 8 feet. They displaced 595 tons normal and 647 tons full load and were armed with two 3”/50 Mk.III guns mounted fore and aft with two twin centerline 18” torpedo launchers. The H class was the first Confederate warships – along with the
Carronade class – to be powered by steam turbines. Both classes used British Parsons units built under license by the firm of Wilkerson-Chadwick. Two direct-drive engines producing a total of 13,790 shaft horsepower gave a design speed of 29 knots while range remained 3,000 nautical miles. Crew numbered 68.
The class was cursed with bad luck outside the losses suffered during wartime. In 1905, mere weeks after commissioning,
H.III broke up during a violent storm off Florida, while seven years later,
H.VIII capsized during a typhoon off the Philippines with the lost of her entire crew. During the Western Pacific War ten of the class;
H.I, H.IV, H.VI, H.VII, H.X, H.XI, H.XII, H.XIV, H.XV, and
H.XVI, were sunk – most during the climatic Second Battle of Hawaii. Following the armistice, the four surviving ships entered the mothball fleet moored in Galveston. Why the slightly older G class ships remained in (limited) active service over the more advanced H class ships is something of a mystery today, but regardless, the ships remained in ordinary only until 1915 when they were quietly decommissioned and within a year, scrapped.
J class (CSA):
Although not originally designed as such, the changing nature of naval warfare surrounding the Western Pacific War would ensure that the J class would be the last torpedo boats built for the CSN (the proposed follow-on “K” class didn’t even pass the initial design review). A total of twenty-six J class ships were built – designated
J.I to
J.XXVI – with all in service by the end 1907.
The J class was 280 feet long overall with a 23 foot beam and draft of 8 feet. They displaced 670 tons normal and 720 tons full load and were armed with four 3”/50 Mk.III guns, located fore, port, starboard, and aft along with two twin centerline 18” torpedo launchers and sixteen reloads. The J class was propelled by two Wilkerson-Chadwick direct-drive turbines producing a total of 16,210 shaft horsepower – delivering a design speed of 30 knots making the J class the fastest ships in the CSN at that time. Range remained 3,000 nautical miles while crew complement increased to 75.
In many respects, the J class represented a step backward design wise. Although slightly faster and better armed, the J class was otherwise similar to the H class and also proved to be structurally suspect due to its long narrow hull. Several of the ships lost in combat were destroyed by hull failure amidships after hits from medium or even light caliber explosive shells and at least four which survived the war had hulls so badly warped by near misses they were immediately declared total losses and scrapped. Fourteen ships of this class;
J.IV, J.VI, J.VII, J.IX, J.XI, J.XII, J.XIV, J.XV, J.XVII, J.XIX, J.XXII, J.XXIII, J.XXV, and
J.XXVI, were lost during the Western Pacific War while the eight ships still on active duty postwar were retained primarily as training vessels. They were withdrawn from service beginning in 1918 with the last active ships decommissioned by the end of 1919.
Next up: Early Confederate submarines
Cheers!
Stealthjester