- USS Sterett (DD-27)
The first USS "Sterett" (DD-27) was a modified Sclass|Paulding|destroyer in the
United States Navy duringWorld War I . She was named forAndrew Sterett ."Sterett" was laid down on
22 March 1909 atQuincy, Massachusetts , by theFore River Shipbuilding Company . Sponsored by Miss Dorothy Rosalie Sterett Gittings, the destroyer was launched on12 May 1910 and commissioned on15 December 1910 atBoston, Massachusetts , LieutenantRobert L. Berry in command.Each year until 1913, she operated along the east coast out of Boston from April to December and, from January to April, participated in training and battle exercises out of Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba . Though placed in reserve on5 November 1913 , she continued duty with the torpedo fleet. On20 January 1914 , she sailed fromCharleston, South Carolina , and reachedNew Orleans, Louisiana , on2 March , after stops atCape Canaveral ,Miami , andKey West, Florida ; and atMobile, Alabama . The following day, she joined the newly-createdReserve Torpedo Flotilla , operating in theGulf of Mexico out ofGalveston, Texas . In June, she returned to the Atlantic seaboard, this time based atNorfolk, Virginia , and resumed coastal patrols andCaribbean exercises. "Sterett's" complement was reduced on5 January 1916 and, throughout that spring, she operated almost exclusively in the Caribbean.On
1 June 1916 , she was a part of the fleet which landed and supported the Marines atMonte Cristi, Dominican Republic , and marched to Santiago to restore order and to protect lives and property. Soon thereafter, "Sterett" returned to Norfolk and resumed operations along the east coast. On1 January 1917 , she entered theMississippi , stopped at New Orleans, and steamed up river toVicksburg, Mississippi . She reentered the gulf and patrolled the Texas coast until she was shifted to Key West on18 March . From there, the destroyer ranged as far as theCuba n coast.In April 1917, the United States entered World War I; and, by
9 June , "Sterett" was inQueenstown, Ireland . Throughout the remainder of the war, she operated from Queenstown to meet convoys and conduct them to eitherBerehaven, Ireland , or to Devonport, England. At these points, British and French destroyers assumed responsibility for the last leg of the voyage. A little less than a year after her arrival at Queenstown, on31 May 1918 , "Sterett" was herding a convoy toward the rendezvous point when she came upon a surfacedU-boat . As "Sterett" closed, the submarine rapidly submerged. "Sterett" began dropping depth charges furiously; and air bubbles and oil soon appeared on the surface, indicating damage to the German raider.After exhausting her supply of depth charges, "Sterett" pursued the enemy by the U-boat's wake of bubbles and trail of oil, hoping to force her to exhaust her batteries and air supply. She continued the pursuit through the night, guided in the darkness only by the fumes of the sub's leaking oil. Finally, at dawn, the destroyer's persistence was rewarded. She sighted the U-boat on the surface about convert|1000|yd|m|-3 ahead. "Sterett" sliced through the waves at top speed seeking to ram the submarine; but the U-boat countered by swinging hard to port. "Sterett" passed within 20 feet of the submarine and, as the U-boat attempted to dive, brought her guns to bear. However, without sufficient time to bracket their adversary, "Sterett's" gunners watched helplessly as the submarine slid beneath the surface and escaped. For their dogged determination, the officers and men of "Sterett" received the commendation of the Commander-in-Chief, Coast of Ireland.
The year 1918 brought with it an all-out effort on the part of the
Central Powers to bring the war to a successful conclusion. TheGerman Navy increased the intensity of its submarine operations in order to free Germany from the Allies' ever-tightening blockade. In response to this thrust, "Sterett" maintained a grueling schedule of convoy duty-a week or more at sea followed by a day or two in port. One of her new techniques, the use of airborne surveillance, presaged modern hunter-killer antisubmarine warfare.The
Allies prevailed, however; and theArmistice , signed on11 November 1918 , brought an end to "Sterett's" strenuous duty; and, by3 January 1919 , she was back in the United States at Charleston. From there, she moved toPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania where she was decommissioned on9 December 1919 . On9 March 1935 , after a little more than 15 years of inactivity, "Sterett" was struck from the Navy list. On28 June , she was sold for scrapping toM. Black and Company of Norfolk, Virginia.ee also
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List of United States Navy destroyers
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