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USS Warrington Torpedo Boat Destroyer DD-30

Ordered:
Laid down: 21 June 1909
Launched: 18 June 1910
Commissioned: 20 March 1911
Decommissioned: 31 January 1920
Fate: sold 28 June 1935
Struck: 20 March 1935
General Characteristics
Displacement: 742 tons
Length: 293 ft 10 in (89.6 m)
Beam: 26 ft 1 1/2 in (8 m)
Draught: 9 ft 5 in (2.9 m)
Propulsion: Oil burner
Speed: 30 kt
Complement: 89 officers and enlisted
Armament: 5 x 3" (76 mm), 3 x .30 (7.62 mm) cal. mg., 6 x 18" (457 mm) tt.,

Commanding Officers of USS Warrington DD-30
Thanks to Wolfgang Hechler & Ron Reeves

LT Walter M. Hunt Mar 20 1911 - Dec 16 1912
LCDR William Ancrum Dec 16 1912 - May 16 1913
LCDR Daniel Pratt Mannix ? 1914 - ?
LCDR Isaac Foote Dortch ? 1915 - ?

The first USS Warrington (DD-30) was a modified Paulding-class destroyer in the United States Navy during World War I. She was named for Lewis Warrington.

Warrington was laid down on 21 June 1909 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania by the William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Building Company; launched on 18 June 1910; sponsored by Mrs. Richard Hatton; and commissioned on 20 March 1911, Lieutenant Walter M. Hunt in command.

After fitting out at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Warrington moved on 5 August to the Torpedo Station at Newport, Rhode Island, where she loaded torpedoes in preparation for training with the Atlantic Torpedo Fleet. During most of the fall and early winter, the warship conducted battle drills and practice torpedo firings with the submarines and destroyers of the torpedo fleet. She also joined the cruisers and battleships of the Atlantic Fleet for training in broader combat maneuvers. Those training evolutions took her as far north as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and as far south as Cuba.

On 27 December 1911, the destroyer departed Charleston, South Carolina, in company with the ships of Destroyer Divisions 8 and 9, bound for Hampton Roads. At about 1240 the following morning, the two divisions of destroyers reached the vicinity of the Virginia capes. Suddenly, an unidentified schooner knifed her way through the darkness and mist, struck Warrington aft, and sliced off about 30 feet of her stern. The collision deprived her of all propulsion and forced her to anchor at sea some 17 miles off Cape Hatteras. Sterett (Destroyer No. 27) responded to her distress call first; but, soon, Walke (Destroyer No. 34) and Perkins (Destroyer No. 26) joined the vigil. The three ships struggled through the morning and forenoon watches to pass a towline to their stricken sister, but it was not until the revenue cutter Conondaga arrived at 1300 that the latter ship succeeded in taking Warrington in tow. The revenue cutter towed her into the Norfolk Navy Yard where she was placed in reserve while undergoing repairs which were not completed until 2 December 1912.

Upon her return to active service, Warrington resumed operations with the torpedo forces assigned to the Atlantic Fleet, by then designated the Atlantic Torpedo Flotilla. For a little over four years, she plied the eastern coastal waters of the United States, participating in various gunnery drills and torpedo-firing practices with the torpedo flotilla as well as in fleet maneuvers and battle problems with the assembled Atlantic Fleet. During part of that interlude, the destroyer was based at Newport and worked out of Boston, Massachusetts during the remainder.

When the United States entered World War I on 6 April 1917, Warrington began patrols off Newport to protect the harbor from German submarines. After six weeks of such duty and preparations for service overseas, she stood out of Boston on 21 May, bound for Europe. After a stop at Newfoundland en route, she arrived at Queenstown, on the southern coast of Ireland, on 1 June. There, she began six months of service patrolling the southern approaches to British ports on the Irish Sea and escorting convoys on the final leg of their voyage across the Atlantic to the British Isles. The destroyer operated out of Queenstown until late November 1917 when she was ordered to France.

She reached Brest, her new base of operations, on 29 November and resumed a grueling schedule of patrols and escort missions. Records indicate that she experienced only one apparent brush with a U-boat. On the morning of 31 May 1918, while escorting a convoy along the French coast, she received a distress call from the Navy transport President Lincoln which, earlier that morning, had been torpedoed by U-90 well out to sea. The destroyer parted company with her coastal convoy immediately and raced to rescue the sinking ship's crew. She did not reach the area of the sinking until late that night but succeeded in rescuing 443 survivors just after 2300. Smith (Destroyer No. 17) took on all but one of the remaining 688 survivors of President Lincoln. That single exception, Lieutenant Edouard Isaacs, had the dubious honor of being rescued by U-90. On 1 June, during the voyage back to Brest, Warrington and Smith depth-charged the U-90. Lt. Isaacs, the captured naval officer who later escaped from a German prison camp, reported that the charges shook the submarine severely. However, no evidence of any success appeared on the surface; and the two destroyers, conscious of the importance of landing their human cargo, abandoned the attack and continued on to Brest. They entered that port the following day, disembarked the President Lincoln survivors, and resumed their patrol and escort missions.

Through the end of the war, Warrington operated out of Brest, patrolling against enemy submarines. However, the threat posed by the U-boats diminished considerably after the failure of Germany's last offensive in July and an Allied offensive had made their bases on the Belgian coast untenable. Late in October, Germany discontinued unrestricted submarine warfare and, early in November, sued for peace.

The armistice was concluded on 11 November 1918, but Warrington continued to serve in European waters until the spring of 1919. On 22 March, she stood out of Brest in the screen of a convoy of subchasers and tugs. After visiting the Azores and delivering her charges safely at Bermuda, the warship headed for Philadelphia.

She reached the Delaware capes early in May and remained in the navy yard at League Island until decommissioned on 31 January 1920. Warrington lay at Philadelphia in reserve until 1935. On 20 March 1935, her name was struck from the Navy list. She was sold to M. Black & Company, Norfolk, Virginia, on 28 June 1935 for scrapping in accordance with the terms of the London Treaty for the Limitation and Reduction of Naval Armaments.



Click here for the USS Warrington DD-383 Crew list.

USS Warrington (i) (DD 383)

Destroyer of the Somers class

USS Warrington shortly before her loss

  • Navy: The US Navy
  • Type: Destroyer
  • Class: Somers
  • Pennant: DD 383
  • Built by: Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. (Kearny, New Jersey, U.S.A.) Ordered:
  • Laid down: 10 Oct, 1935
  • Launched: 15 May, 1937
  • Commissioned: 9 Feb, 1938
  • Lost: 13 Sep, 1944

    History: USS Warrington was caught in a violent storm in the Atlantic going to Trinidad. 130 knot winds brought the ship to a standstill while waves pounded her hull to pieces.
    Sea water flooded the engine room, cutting off all power and damaging the steering mechanism.
    She took a list to starboard and rolled over, sinking stern first, bringing down 248 men.
    Only 73 men were found, 248 men were lost.

    These three men lost their lives in that storm.


    >

    USS Warrington (DD 843)
    Destroyer of the Gearing class

    The first of these modified Sumner-class destroyers was Gearing (DD-710).
    In the late 1950s many of these Gearing class destroyers underwent extensive modernization overhauls, known as FRAM I, which was designed to shift them from more of an AA platform to an ASW platform.

    Specifications as built

    Displacement: 2,616 tons standard;
    3,460 tons full load

  • Length: 390.5 ft(119 m)
  • Beam: 40.9 ft(12.5 m)
  • Draught: 14.3 ft(4.4 m)
  • Propulsion: 2 shaft; General Electric steam turbines; 4 boilers; 60,000 shp
  • Speed: 36.8 knots
  • Range: 4,500 nm at 20 knots

    USS Warrington (DD-843)
    Career Ordered:
    Laid down: May 14, 1945
    Launched: September 27, 1945
    Commissioned: December 20, 1945
    Decommissioned: September 30, 1972
    Fate: Sold to Taiwan for cannibalization and scrapping
    Struck: July 17, 1972

    The USS Warrington (DD 843) was a U.S. Navy Gearing-class destroyer that was commissioned just after World War II and fought in the Vietnam War.

    DD 843 was the third U.S. warship named after Commodore Warrington, following DD-30 and DD-383.

    The ship was laid down in September 1945 and christened four months later by Katherine Taft Chubb Sheehan, a lineal descendant of Lewis Warrington.

    The ship was was stationed in Providence, Rhode Island ,but later changed her homeport to Newport, Rhode Island. During August and September 1958, the Warrington was part of Navy Task Force 88, (TF-88), which participated in Operation Argus's very-high-altitude nuclear tests.

    In July 1972, the Warrington struck what was determined to be a wayward U.S. mine, though rumors persist that the ship had ventured into a restricted area known to contain munitions dumped from aircraft carriers. The damage was so extensive that the Navy decided to decommission the obsolete vessel rather than spend money on repairs. The ship was struck from from the Navy's active list on July 17, 1972. History of Uss Warrington
    Classic photos of the Warrington


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