.jpg) USS Terry in builders' trials |
| Career | |
|---|---|
| Ordered: | |
| Laid down: | 8 February 1909 |
| Launched: | 21 August 1909 |
| Commissioned (USN): | 18 October 1910 |
| Decommissioned (USN): | 13 November 1919 |
| Commissioned (USCG): | 30 June 1925 |
| Decommissioned (USCG): | 12 August 1930 |
| Fate: | sold 2 May 1934 |
| Struck: | 28 June 1934 |
| General characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 887 (full) tons |
| Length: | 293 ft 10 in (89.6 m) |
| Beam: | 26 ft 1½ (8 m) |
| Draught: | 10 ft 11 in (3.3 m) |
| Propulsion: | Oil burner |
| Speed: | 30.24 knots (56 km/h) |
| Range: | |
| Complement: | 89 officers and enlisted |
| Armament: | 5 × 3" (76 mm), 2 × .30 (7.62 mm) cal. machine guns, 6 × 18" (457 mm) torpedo tubes |
| Aircraft: | |
| Motto: | |
The first 'USS ''Terry'' (DD-25)' was a modified
''Paulding''-class destroyer in the
United States Navy during
World War I, and later in the
United States Coast Guard, designated 'CG-19'. She was named for
Edward Terry.
''Terry'' was laid down on
8 February 1909 at
Newport News, Virginia, by the
Newport News Shipbuilding Company; launched on
21 August 1909; sponsored by Mrs. George Henry Rock; and commissioned on
18 October 1910, Lieutenant Commander
Martin E. Trench in command.
Following trials off the east coast, ''Terry'' joined the
Atlantic Fleet Torpedo Flotilla in winter operations in
Cuban waters. She conducted both torpedo exercises with the flotilla and general maneuvers with the Fleet as a whole. The routine of winter maneuvers in the
Caribbean alternated with spring and summer operations along the
New England coast continued until November 1913, when the torpedo boat destroyer arrived at
Charleston, South Carolina, for overhaul.
Soon after entering the
navy yard there, ''Terry'' was placed in reserve. Though still in reserve after her overhaul was completed, ''Terry'' continued to be active. During 1914, she cruised the coast of
Florida; and, by February 1915, she was back in Cuban waters for winter maneuvers. That summer, ''Terry'' steamed as far north as
Newport, Rhode Island, to conduct another round of torpedo exercises. Upon completion of the mission, she returned to her base at Charleston.
By
1 January 1916, the torpedo boat destroyer was operating with a reduced complement destroyer division. On the 31st, she cruised with units of the Atlantic Fleet to
Key West, Florida. In May, she steamed from there to
Santo Domingo. On
10 June, while maneuvering in the inner harbor at
Puerto Plata, she struck a reef and settled until the greater part of the main deck was submerged. On the 13th, under the supervision of the commanding officer of
''Sacramento'', ''Terry's'' officers and men joined the staff of a wrecking company in salvage operations. The warship was refloated on
26 July, temporarily repaired by
7 July, and returned to the Charleston Navy Yard on
15 July.
America's entry into World War I saw ''Terry'' undergoing extensive repairs at Charleston. Upon completion of the yard work, she began duty patrolling along the Atlantic coast and escorting merchantmen bound for
Europe. In January 1918, ''Terry'' put to sea for operations with the destroyer force based at
Queenstown, Ireland. There, she escorted convoys through the
submarine-infested waters surrounding the
British Isles. Her tour of duty at Queenstown was a relatively peaceful, though rigorous, one. While she never sighted a
German U-boat nor engaged in combat operations, on one voyage she escorted a convoy which lost one ship to a submarine. On another occasion, on
19 March 1918, she assisted
''Manley'' (Destroyer No. 74) with casualties after that destroyer was damaged by an accidental depth charge explosion.
In December 1918, ''Terry'' returned to the United States; and, after 11 months of extremely limited service, she was decommissioned at the Philadelphia Navy Yard on
13 November 1919.
She remained there until she was transferred to the Coast Guard on
7 June 1924. Based in
New York, she served as part of the
Rum Patrol.
She served in the Coast Guard until
18 October 1930, when she was returned to the Navy and restored on the Navy list in a decommissioned status, listed as a "vessel to be disposed of by sale or salvage." On
2 May 1934, ''Terry'' was sold for scrapping. Her name was struck from the Navy list on
28 June 1934.
See also
★ See
USS ''Terry'' for other ships of this name.
★
List of United States Navy destroyers
External links
★
''Mare Island Navy Yard'' - 1928.
Elbridge Ayer Burbank pencil sketch.