The Arquebuse class was designed as a faster version of the preceding . The ships had an overall length of 56.58sp=usNaNsp=us,[1] a beam of 6.3m (20.7feet), and a maximum draft of 3.2m (10.5feet).[2] They normally displaced 307sp=usNaNsp=us and at deep load. The two vertical triple-expansion steam engines each drove one propeller shaft using steam provided by two du Temple Guyot or Normand boilers. The engines were designed to produce a total of 6300ihp[1] for a designed speed of 28kn,[3] all the ships exceeded their contracted speed during their sea trials, although Mousqueton was the slowest ship of her class at .[1] They carried enough coal to give them a range of 2300nmi at .[2] Their crew consisted of four officers and fifty-eight enlisted men.[1]
The main armament of the Arquebuse-class ships consisted of a single 65mm gun forward of the bridge and six 47adj=onNaNadj=on Hotchkiss guns in single mounts, three on each broadside. They were fitted with two single rotating mounts for 381mm torpedo tubes on the centerline, one between the funnels and the other on the stern.[1]
Mosqueton (Musketoon) was ordered from Schneider et Cie on 29 May 1901 and the ship was laid down later that year at its shipyard in Chalons-sur-Saône. She was launched on 4 November 1902 and conducted her sea trials from September 1903 to May 1904. The ship was commissioned (French: armée definitif) after their completion and was assigned to the Mediterranean Squadron.[4]
On 7 July 1914, Mousqueton collided with and sank the in the Mediterranean Sea off Toulon, France. Calypsos entire crew of 26 was rescued.[5]
When the First World War began in August 1914, Mousqueton was a leader (French: divisionnaire) in the 2nd Submarine and Destroyer Flotilla (French: 2<sup>e</sup> escadrille sous-marins et torpilleurs) of the 1st Naval Army (French: 1<sup>ère</sup> Armée navale),[6] based at Bizerte, French Tunisia.[4]
According to a British report of 5 June, Mousqueton and the destroyers and were assigned to patrol the area around Cape Matapan, Greece.[7]