USS Farragut (DD-1934)
The last of the four pipers were completed in 1924 and it was another ten years
before the Farragut class started completing. The original order for the
Farragut class was placed in 1916 but due to the circumstances of the war and
its aftermath, the lack of finances and all of the four pipers that were laid up
waiting to enter service there was no need for a new class of destroyers. What
the delay did do was to allow BuShips to do a lot of advanced design work for
what was needed in the next generation of destroyers.
The new class was to be built to the 1500 ton limit set by treaty. The design
was finally signed off in 1931 for production and the first units were laid down
in 1931 and completed in 1934. The design was not radical.. The French and
British 1500 tonners had been in service for 4-5 years and would have been
studied by the US Navy to get the best bits of their designs for the Farragut
class.
The main advantages of the new design over the four pipers was thought to be:
So what went wrong? No losses to enemy action, but one goes aground and
becomes a total loss. The other two casualties are lost in hurricane conditions
when they capsized and sank. Like most destroyers of their period they were
designed to the absolute limit and had stability problems from the start. Once
additional equipment started being added stability became worse. To add light AA
guns the ships had to give up their center 5" to maintain some stability.
Eyewitness accounts of the capsizings said that the ships had been different
when they came out of their last refits. Stability and how the ship rolled had
become much worse.
Above: four months after Pearl Harbour the class had already lost the center 5",
being replaced with light AA.
These last two drawings show the class as they were at their last refits. All
the extra topweight from Radar and AA guns has not been alleviated by removing
something, anything. My first thing would be to remove at least one set of
torpedo tubes. By 1944, ship to ship actions were rare and destroyers had little
need of torpedoes.
The five remaining ships did not last long past the end of the war and were
deleted and scrapped 1945-47.
Displacement |
|
Length | 341 ft 3 in (104.01 m) |
Beam | 34 ft 3 in (10.44 m) |
Draft | 16 ft 2 in (4.93 m) |
Installed power |
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Propulsion | 2 shafts |
Speed | 37 knots |
Range | 5,980 nautical miles at 12 knots |
Complement |
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Sensors and processing systems |
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Armament |
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I have not done anything drastic with this class. It is as completed into
the US Navy. What I wanted was a starting point I could work from. The original
treaties that I work with for these scenarios, are the Washington and Geneva
Treaties which are exactly the same, just signed in different countries. My idea
was that the 'Geneva" Treaty would come from the League of Nations and actually
show that it had done good things and not been completely useless. The Farragut
class would be the first and last class of US 1500 ton destroyers. Having waited
so long to start the class meant they only built eight of these ships, which
were suspect from the start. Other countries, that started production of their
1500 ton classes earlier, did not have the same problem as the Farragut class
did. The British A-I type had only 4x4.7" or 4x4.5" and never had any stability
problems.
With the abrogation of the treaties in 1930, the next classes of destroyer for
the US Navy can be slightly bigger and more capable. Not much needed to be
changed to make the next classes better. Armament was fine. Torpedo numbers were
fine. Speed was okay. It was in the size of the ship that could do with
enlargement in displacement and dimensions. The eventual Fletcher class, which
was the culmination of the 5x5" destroyers, were 2100 ton ships compared to the
1500 ton Faraguts, they were 40% bigger. My aim is to increase the size of the
destroyers and their capabilities in steps that culminate in the Fletcher. I
have not mentioned the Porter and Somers classes which were 1850 ton destroyer
leaders. How did they manage to fit into the Treaties 1500 ton limit? There was
a clause in the Treaties that allowed the building of 13 x 1850 ton 'destroyer
leaders'. For the US these were an imperative as the Four Pipers needed a
separate leader as the ships themselves were not really big enough to have a
Captain 'D' and his staff aboard. I change that imperative quite a bit by
building quite a few more Omaha class light cruisers which can act as leaders
for any destroyer class that required one. Onward and upward.
Ship Name | Hull no. | Builder | Laid Down | Launched | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Farragut | DD-348 | Fore River Shipbuilding | 20 September 1932 | 15 March 1934 | 18 June 1934 | 23 October 1945 | Scrapped 1947 |
Dewey | DD-349 | Bath Iron Works | 16 December 1932 | 28 July 1934 | 4 October 1934 | 19 October 1945 | Scrapped 1946 |
Hull | DD-350 | Brooklyn Navy Yard | 7 March 1933 | 31 January 1934 | 11 January 1935 | — | Lost in Typhoon Cobra, 17 December 1944 |
Macdonough | DD-351 | Boston Navy Yard | 15 May 1933 | 22 August 1934 | 15 March 1935 | 22 October 1945 | Scrapped 1946 |
Worden | DD-352 | Puget Sound Navy Yard | 29 December 1932 | 27 October 1934 | 15 January 1935 | — | Grounded near Amchitka, Alaska, 12 January 1943 |
Dale | DD-353 | Brooklyn Navy Yard | 10 February 1934 | 23 January 1935 | 17 June 1935 | 16 October 1945 | Scrapped 1946 |
Monaghan | DD-354 | Boston Navy Yard | 21 November 1933 | 9 January 1935 | 19 April 1935 | — | Lost in Typhoon Cobra, 17 December 1944 |
Aylwin | DD-355 | Philadelphia Navy Yard | 23 September 1933 | 10 July 1934 | 1 March 1935 | 16 October 1945 | Scrapped 1946 |