From Bainbridge
to Arleigh Burke--A Century of Destroyers
By EDWARD H. LUNDQUIST
Capt. Edward H. Lundquist, USN (Ret.), is a communications director for
Anteon Corporation's Center for Security, Strategies, and Operations.
A surface warfare officer and public affairs specialist during his Navy
career, he served aboard the destroyer USS Cochrane.
Sailors are on watch today aboard U.S. Navy destroyers underway on the
oceans of the world, just as they have been for the last century.
The destroyer is the ship that a present-day John Paul Jones would appreciate
when he wants to go into "harm's way"--fast, agile, lethal,
and versatile. All U.S. Navy destroyers have shared these characteristics
since the first of its type, the USS Bainbridge (DD 1), led the way 100
years ago. Necessity was again the mother of invention--the Navy needed
a ship able to destroy the deadly steam-powered torpedo boats which, at
the beginning of the 20th century, posed a major threat to their much
larger contemporaries in the surface navies of the world.
Destroyers have been involved in nearly every naval conflict during the
past century. They have been designed for a wide variety of warfare missions,
and have served in virtually every navy of consequence. The capable multimission
destroyer continues to serve with distinction around the world.
It is not just the destroyer's sleek hull form--crowded with weapons
and other instruments of naval warfare--but also the men and women who
crew them that have made the ship so unique. Destroyer Sailors are a special
breed, quick to learn new tasks, self-reliant, adaptable to almost any
situation, and--judging from the Navy's battle histories, ready for action
when "general quarters" is ordered.
Sailors, authors, and pundits would eventually devise their own shorthand
descriptions and pet names for the destroyers as they captured the public's
imagination: Tin cans. Small boys. Greyhounds of the sea.
Over the decades, destroyers have been taking the fight to submarines,
surface ships, aircraft, missiles, and targets ashore. Smaller variants
fought as early warning "pickets" when Japanese kamikazes infested
the skies of the Pacific Ocean during World War II; they also served as
fast amphibious troop transports, and countered mines at sea.
The destroyer is truly a multimission surface combatant, although some
purpose-built classes have been more expert at certain missions than at
others. But perhaps their greatest value to fleet commanders through the
years has been the fact that there have been so many of them--i.e., because
of their relatively small size (and, therefore, relatively low cost) they
can be, and usually have been, built in large numbers. "Quantity,"
Josef Stalin once said, "has a quality all its own."
U.S. shipyards turned out destroyers by the hundreds to meet the German
U-boat threat during World War I, and industry again mass-produced destroyers
and destroyer escorts during World War II. Today's modern Spruance-class
destroyers and Arleigh Burke-class Aegis guided-missile destroyers possess
formidable warfighting capabilities unimaginable to Sailors of those eras.
Purpose-Built Ships
Commissioned in 1902, the Bainbridge was designed to counter the growing
threat posed by the swarms of steam-powered torpedo boats that, taking
advantage of their small size and high speed, were able to streak suddenly
toward larger capital ships in coastal waters and wreak havoc with their
torpedoes. The Bainbridge and her eight sister ships were built as torpedo
boat destroyers. The first several classes of destroyers, in fact, resembled
larger versions of the torpedo boats that they were designed to sink.
The Bainbridge displaced approximately 450 tons and was about 250 feet
long. She was designed to be seaworthy and fast--the steam generated by
her four coal-fired boilers turned three screws to move her through the
water at a speed in excess of 20 knots. She was armed with two 3-inch
guns, two rapid-fire six-pounders, and a pair of 18-inch torpedo tubes.
(Torpedoes were the weapon of choice at that time for attacking enemy
capital ships.)
The success of the first destroyers led to a call for follow-on ships.
As would happen in every subsequent class of destroyers, naval architects
had to balance many competing design factors and performance requirements--the
right mix of weapons, size, speed, range, and crew size.
By 1910, destroyers were being used to protect the more heavily armored
battle fleet from attack. Shifting from coal to fuel oil increased their
endurance, 4-inch guns replaced the 3-inch guns, and 21-inch torpedoes
replaced the earlier 18-inch torpedoes. (Torpedoes were still considered
the destroyer's principal armament for their primary mission.)
These early destroyers proved their value as a scouting force during
the days before the advent of sea-based aviation, striking the right balance
between defensive and offensive capabilities. When World War I began,
the U.S. Navy was building destroyers designed to attain speeds of 30
knots or more while carrying a full weapons load and fueled to capacity.
Their relatively inexpensive and uncomplicated design allowed a large
number of ships to be built quickly in what later would be known as "series
construction." Destroyers became the most effective escort for open-ocean
convoys carrying much-needed supplies to U.S. allies in Europe.
The Great War
When the United States entered World War I, it faced a severe shortage
of smaller ships suitable for antisubmarine warfare (ASW). The Navy ordered
111 "four-stack" destroyers of the Wickes class and 156 ships
of the Clemson class to protect its convoys from German U-boats. These
"flushdeck" 1,100-ton destroyers were built with several variations
in armament, fuel capacity, propulsion, and hull form. Many of the destroyers
ordered or laid down during World War I were not finished by the armistice
of 11 November 1918. Some were completed after war's end, but not all.
In any event, almost all of the 1,100-tonners soon found themselves in
"mothballs" after the conflict.
New motor torpedo boats continued to evolve in speed, and in combat capabilities,
during the years prior to World War II. However, enemy submarines and
long-range aircraft were by that time emerging as much greater threats
to warships and merchant ships alike. Following the fall of France in
July 1940, the United States faced the grim prospect that Nazi Germany
might also soon defeat Great Britain as well and, partly for that reason,
transferred 50 of its then-obsolete World War I-era flushdeck destroyers
to the Royal Navy in exchange for 99-year leases of several British bases
in the Western Hemisphere.
These "four-pipers," as they also were called, were rugged
seaworthy vessels, and they were in plentiful supply. Many were recommissioned
into the U.S. Navy for coastal patrol or Atlantic convoy escort duty--most
of them fitted with such weapons and then-transformational "high-tech"
systems as new 3-inch/50-caliber guns, sonar, high-frequency radio-detection
gear, and depth-charge racks and "Y-gun" depth-charge throwers.
Dozens of other World War I destroyers saw service during World War II
after being converted to serve as light minelayers, high-speed minesweepers,
seaplane tenders, and high-speed transports.
A Two-Ocean War
Despite the severe funding restrictions of the Depression era, the Navy
had not been standing still--but had, in fact, developed several new classes
of destroyers significantly more capable than their predecessors. Months
before Germany's declaration of war on the United States following the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941, these ships were already
hard at work escorting Atlantic convoys bound for Great Britain as part
of the greatly increased Anglo-American military cooperation developed
by two "former naval persons"--U.S. President Franklin Delano
Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston S. Churchill. When the United
States entered the war, the Navy was poised to begin construction of even
more capable destroyers--much larger and more heavily armed than their
World War I and prewar predecessors.
The destroyer USS Fletcher (DD 445), commissioned in June 1942, displaced
2,700 tons when combat-loaded, and was fitted with a four-boiler propulsion
plant that developed 60,000 shaft horsepower and delivered 36.5 knots.
The Fletcher-class ships mounted five 5-inch/38-caliber guns in single
mounts that could be used against shore, air, or surface targets, three
twin 40mm Bofors heavy antiaircraft (AA) gun mounts, and a varying mix
of 20mm Oerlikon automatic AA guns.
True to their destroyer heritage, the Fletchers also were equipped with
two banks of five 21-inch torpedo tubes. Where ships of the Wickes and
Clemson classes were manned by crews numbering about 100 officers and
men, though, the 365-foot Fletcher-class ships had a complement of 365
men. These much bigger destroyers were well suited for combat in the great
ocean expanses of the Pacific War and the long-range
island-hopping campaign that would prove the key to victory over Imperial
Japan.
U.S. wartime construction included the mass production of 175 Fletcher-class
ships, as well as 70 Allen M. Sumner-class and 93 Gearing-class destroyers.
Yet, for a Navy fighting a two-ocean war, the versatile destroyers were
still in short supply--a repetition of the Navy's experience during World
War I. More antisubmarine escorts were needed, a problem that led to the
design of the destroyer escort--the ubiquitous "DE": a smaller,
slower, and more specialized ship that, like the original destroyers,
could be built both quickly and in large numbers. Because they were not
intended to steam in company with the fleet's fast carriers or modern
battleships, the DEs were fitted with smaller and less powerful engineering
plants and carried fewer weapons. They also required only about half the
crew of a Fletcher-class destroyer--183 officers and men.
The U.S. industrial capacity to produce steam-turbine engines and associated
reduction gears was committed primarily to larger ships, so most DEs were
equipped with diesel engines and turboelectric plants; the somewhat similar
frigates, or PFs, built during the war (to a British design) were fitted
with reciprocating steam plants. The Navy had to look beyond traditional
U.S. shipyards to build the DEs and for that reason turned to other, smaller
shipyards, including several on the Great Lakes and along the nation's
inland waterways.
In addition to their indispensable service as convoy escorts, destroyers
joined new hunter-killer teams composed of land-based aircraft, escort
carriers, and surface warships organized to seek out and destroy German
U-boats in the North and South Atlantic. In the Pacific, the destroyers
and their smaller cousins slugged it out ship to ship with their Japanese
foes in a protracted campaign that culminated with the epic naval battle
of Leyte Gulf in 1944.
Antiair protection, important at the outbreak of World War II, became
a paramount combat capability as the war progressed, especially when Japanese
pilots became desperate to the point of suicide. Destroyers and escorts
were fitted with additional 40-mm and 20-mm guns as fast as they could
be produced and installed. The furious and concentrated barrage of impact-
and proximity-fuzed shells that a surface formation could put in the sky
exacted a heavy toll of attackers; nevertheless, the kamikaze pilots often
overwhelmed defending U.S. ships and aircraft--with devastating results.
Naval gunfire support for U.S. Army and Marine Corps amphibious landings--which
ranged across the globe from North Africa to Sicily, Anzio, and Normandy
in Europe to Guadalcanal, Tarawa, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa in the Pacific--often
spelled the difference between life and death for U.S. and allied ground
forces. For many imperiled soldiers and Marines, the sight of a destroyer
pulling to within a few hundred yards of a contested beach to add its
firepower to the fight was one that would last a lifetime.
Destroyers again proved their worth during the Korean War--and on the
numerous other occasions when the Cold War flashed hot.
In addition to the destroyer force's new weapons for traditional missions,
there were new sensors, particularly advanced sonar and radar systems,
which made destroyers the indispensable eyes and ears of the fleet. These
innovations would shape the next generation of destroyer designs.
The postwar threats posed by high-speed aircraft, missiles, and fast
submarines called for new tactics, systems, and weapons--and new ships
specifically designed to carry those systems and weapons and employ them
with maximum effectiveness.
The Missile Age
New carrier task forces, formed into so-called hunter-killer (HUK) groups,
continued to evolve, capitalizing on their earlier successes in the U-boat
war. Destroyers armed with new longer-range sonars, more effective and
more lethal ASW torpedoes, and forward-throwing depth-charge projectors
soon became integral components of the HUKs--specially outfitted to find
and attack enemy submarines. To attack an enemy submarine from standoff
range required launching a torpedo into the water far from the prey. The
antisubmarine rocket, or ASROC, could boost a torpedo (or nuclear-armed
depth bomb) to a range of five miles, about the maximum range of the new
SQS-23 sonars then entering service with the fleet. A Drone Antisubmarine
Helicopter (DASH) also was developed to carry a torpedo to even greater
ranges.
The Navy experimented with the concept of a destroyer leader (DL) to
serve as a flagship for HUK groups. The first was the USS Norfolk (DL
1), based on a light-cruiser hull and the first to mount the ASROC system.
Ships of the Mitscher (DL 2) class that followed were slated to receive
two new weapons--the "Weapon Able" (later Alpha) ASW launcher
and the 3-inch/70-caliber gun--to counter the threat from diesel submarines
and subsonic aircraft. As the Navy worked to perfect these new systems,
enemy threats evolved, and so did the weapons to counter them. The Mitscher-class
ships eventually were fitted with the 3-inch/50-caliber and 5-inch/54-caliber
guns that became fleet standards.
The Forrest Sherman class of ASW destroyers joined the fleet in the mid-1950s,
built with weight-saving aluminum superstructures. They eventually received
ASW upgrades or guided-missile conversions and served into the 1980s,
when the last 18 ships in the class were decommissioned.
To shoot down enemy aircraft, the Navy developed three new antiair warfare
(AAW) missile systems during the Cold War: Talos, Terrier, and Tartar.
The Talos and Terrier were too large to be carried by destroyers. However,
the Navy found that the Tartar (direct predecessor of the modern medium-range
Standard missile) system was a good fit for the ship and began building
new guided-
missile destroyers (DDGs) that were fast enough to keep up with the carrier
task forces. The result was the 23 ships of the Charles F. Adams (DDG
2) class.
Missile systems require large magazines and air-search radars, as well
as more capable fire-control systems. The Charles F. Adams-class DDGs,
fitted with a pair of 5-inch/54-caliber guns and a Tartar missile system,
were built to counter the air threat. Other destroyer defensive systems
also were developed, including the Basic Point Defense Missile System
(BPDMS), the NATO Sea Sparrow AAW missile, and the rapid-fire Vulcan Phalanx
Close-In Weapons System (CIWS).
Faced with continuing reliability problems with its Terrier missile system
during the 1960s, the Navy took the first steps toward the development
of the potent Aegis weapon system and its Standard missile.
The nuclear-powered guided-missile destroyer leader USS Bainbridge (DLGN
25), commissioned in 1962 and reclassified in 1975 as a guided-missile
cruiser (CGN 25), was the first--and only--nuclear-powered destroyer.
She served for nearly 34 years, and posed a truly formidable threat to
enemy targets--namely, the 80 Terrier (later Standard) missiles she carried.
She also was armed with four twin-mount 3-inch/50-caliber guns, Harpoon
antiship cruise missiles, ASROC, and antisubmarine
torpedoes.
Postwar destroyer escorts (all DEs were reclassified as frigates in 1975)
began with ships of the USS Dealey (DE-1006) class. These ASW escorts
were suitable for convoy duty, but lacked the speed needed for fleet operations.
The still-numerous World War II destroyers, upgraded through the Fleet
Rehabilitation and Modernization (FRAM) program, were better suited for
ASW work.
Cold War building programs saw the design and construction of numerous
destroyer and related classes. Two ships of the Bronstein (DE 1037) class,
the smallest ships built with the large SQS-26 bow-mounted sonar, also
carried ASROC, a twin 3-inch/50-caliber gun mount forward, and a DASH
deck and hangar aft.
Their successor was the Garcia (DE 1040) class, planned to be more than
60 ships. In fact, just 10 were built. The
Garcia-class ships were fitted with two 5-inch/38-caliber guns, ASROC,
torpedoes, and a DASH deck. Six additional Garcia-class ships were built
with a missile launcher in place of the after 5-inch/38-caliber mount
and were classified as the USS Brooke (DEG-1) class--they were the Navy's
first guided-missile escort ships.
An additional Garcia-class derivative, the USS Glover (AGDE-1, later
FF-1098), was built with an experimental propulsion system and was used
as a test ship for advanced ASW procedures and tactics. All of the Garcia-class
ships were equipped with pressure-fired boilers, designed to produce more
horsepower for the weight and volume of their engineering plants.
The first of an eventual 46 ships of the Knox-class (FF 1052) frigates
entered service in 1969. These 4,200-ton ships--powered by a 1,200-pound
steam plant, with two boilers and one screw--could attain 28 knots, fast
enough for operations with a carrier task force (if barely, at times).
The ships were valued for their ASW capabilities in the screen. The Knox-class
ships could support convoys and amphibious task forces, and were among
the first ships in the destroyer force to deploy with helicopters embarked--the
Kaman SH-2D "Seasprite," built as part of a new program aimed
at providing the Navy's surface combatants with a multimission aviation
platform.
Called LAMPS, for Light Airborne Multi-Purpose System, the upgraded Seasprites
soon proved their worth conducting ASW, antisurface warfare, and utility
missions. Sikorsky-built SH-60 Seahawk helicopters continue to perform
the same roles today from the destroyer's small flight deck.
Just as the destroyer's weapons and sensors continued to be improved
as the Cold War progressed, engineers turned to new propulsion systems,
notably the gas-turbine engine. "Marinized" jet aircraft engines
proved to be reliable, powerful, and responsive. Four GE-built LM2500
gas turbines powered the USS Spruance (DD 963), commissioned in 1975--the
first of the Navy's gas-
turbine-powered destroyer-type ships. Gas turbines also power ships of
the Ticonderoga (CG 47), Kidd (DDG 993), and Arleigh Burke (DDG 51) classes.
The Spruance-class destroyer was designed with "room for growth"
so that new sensors, systems, and weapons could readily be added at a
later date; the Department of Defense now sees fit to call this concept
"spiral development." The four guided-missile destroyers of
the Kidd class, built for Iran (but never delivered), were formidably
upgraded with high-performance AAW systems, including Mk26 twin-rail launchers
for Standard missiles fore and aft, the new Mk45 5-inch/54-caliber gun
forward and aft, and a hangar for two SH-60B Seahawk helicopters.
Some ships of the Spruance class were later fitted with Tomahawk cruise-missile
launchers; other hulls were fitted with vertical launch systems (VLSs)
that give them a massive strike capability for power-projection missions.
Many of the Spruances performed ably in this capacity during the 1991
Operation Desert Storm strikes against Iraq--and, later, in 1999, against
NATO targets in Serbia and Kosovo. Geopolitical discussions of "Tomahawk
diplomacy" soon came into vogue--signaling the surface Navy's ability
to strike targets quickly, and with unprecedented precision, hundreds
of miles from the sea.
The development of the Aegis combat system, with its large phased-array
radar, brought a new dimension to the destroyer's ability to track and
engage multiple aircraft and missile targets. Instead of designing a new
cruiser hull for Aegis, the Navy built the Ticonderoga-class CGs upon
the proven Spruance hull form. USS Ticonderoga, the name ship of the class,
is the same length as the Spruance, but has a greater displacement and
requires a larger crew.
The first of the Oliver Hazard Perry (FFG 7) class of guided-missile
frigates entered service in 1977. The last--USS Ingraham (FFG 61)--was
commissioned in 1989. Although the Perry-class frigates possess only half
the overall propulsion capability of contemporary destroyers, their LM2500
gas turbines deliver enough power for them to operate with carrier battle
groups. They carry both a Standard missile system and a 76mm gun. There
are 35 FFGs in the fleet today, including eight in the Naval Reserve Force.
As Navy shipbuilding funds continue to fall, the FFG 7s are being phased
out of the fleet, and no new frigate design is currently proposed as a
replacement.
The post-Cold War destroyer force performed yeoman service in the many
new missions that came its way with the end of the Soviet Union's challenge
at sea--maritime intercept operations (MIOs) in the Persian Gulf and Arabian
Sea, counterdrug operations, and strike and air-defense missions performed
during national and coalition military operations in the war against international
terrorism.
It is noteworthy that the Aegis weapons system--developed at the height
of the Cold War--continues to set impressive standards of performance
as the Navy pursues new capabilities in its sea-based ballistic-missile
defense program. On 25 January 2002, the guided-missile cruiser USS Lake
Erie launched a Standard missile-3 (equipped with a kinetic warhead) that
intercepted an Aries target missile launched from the Pacific Missile
Test Range; the ship scored a similar success in a second intercept on
13 June. In each test, the Standard missile acquired, tracked, and diverted
toward the target missile to destroy it in the exoatmosphere.
Destroyers for Today--And Tomorrow
The Navy's new class of front-line guided-missile destroyers, the Arleigh
Burke DDG 51, is named for the famed World War II destroyerman who later
became chief of naval operations (and was the only CNO to serve in that
post for six years). The warfighting capabilities of the class have continued
to improve steadily, and impressively, since the lead ship was commissioned
in 1991.
Today's "Flight IIA" Arleigh Burke-class ships, beginning with
the Oscar Austin (DDG 79), represent a significant upgrade over the earlier
Burkes with the addition of a pair of helicopter hangars, an improved
VLS with 64 missile cells, a mine-avoidance system added to the ship's
SQQ-89 sonar, blast-hardened bulkheads, and a fiber-optic data multiplex
system. Other improvements are planned to enable the ships of this versatile
class to take advantage of new weapons and command-and-control systems.
As older Spruance-class hulls are decommissioned, the potent and technologically
advanced Arleigh Burke-class DDGs will serve as the mainstay of the Navy's
destroyer force well into the early decades of the 21st century.
It is instructive to note that the Navy is turning the pages of history
back to retrieve a lesson from the destroyer's creation 100 years ago.
With the next -generation DD(X) destroyer program now paving the way for
a family of multimission destroyers and cruisers for the 21st century,
conceptual work is underway to design a new class of ship with a narrowly
focused mission--the littoral combat ship (LCS). The LCS, configured with
tailored mission modules, will be able to counter enemy small boats, diesel
submarines, and mines in coastal waters while protected by the capacious
defensive umbrella of the larger multimission destroyers and cruisers
that form the larger elements of the DD(X) "family of ships."
The evolution of the U.S. Navy's destroyer has in a sense, therefore,
come full circle during the past 100 years. From its narrowly focused
mission of 1902, today's sophisticated ships offer multimission combat
capabilities that would likely defy the imaginations of the "Tin-Can"
Sailors of yesteryear.
There is no question that tomorrow's destroyer force will be equipped
with even more potent technological marvels. What will always continue
to really define the destroyer Navy, however, are the Sailors who crew
these greyhounds of the sea--those predominantly young men and women who,
like John Paul Jones, are ready to take their ships into harm's way, to
fight, and to win. *
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