Victory Destroyer Plant Explained

The Victory Destroyer Plant was a United States Naval Shipbuilding yard operational from 1918 to 1920 in Quincy, Massachusetts. It was then reused as a civil airport, and later Naval Air Station Squantum. It was owned by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, and was constructed in order to relieve destroyer construction at the nearby Fore River Shipyard.[1] Still later in the late 1920s it was used to build yachts by the firm Lamb & O'Connell. One of these yachts, the US10 Tipler III, a 30-square-meter racing yacht, participated in the 1929 International Races sponsored by the Corinthian Yacht Club of Marblehead.

Ships Constructed

Hull no.Ship nameCommissionedDecommissionedFateService notes
DD261Delphy30 November 191826 October 1923Wreckedin the Honda Point disaster 8 September 1923
DD262McDermut27 March 191922 May 1929ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[2]
DD263Laub17 March 19198 October 1940TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement[3]
DD264McLanahan5 April 19198 October 1940TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD265Edwards24 April 19198 October 1940TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD266Greene9 May 191923 November 1945Wreckedin a typhoon, struck 1945
DD267Ballard5 June 19195 December 1945Scrapped1946
DD268Shubrick3 July 191926 November 1940TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD269Bailey27 June 191926 November 1940TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD270Thornton15 July 19192 May 1945AbandonedDonated to Ryukyu Islands 1957
DD271Morris21 July 191915 June 1922Scrapped1936
DD272Tingey25 July 191924 May 1922Scrapped1936
DD273Swasey8 August 191910 June 1922TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD274Meade8 September 191918 December 1939TransferredDestroyers for Bases Agreement
DD275Sinclair8 October 19191 June 1929Scrapped1935
DD276McCawley22 September 19191 April 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[4]
DD277Moody10 December 19192 June 1930SoldSold to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1931 for making of World War I film Hell Below. DD-277 was made up to look like a German World War I destroyer and was sunk in 1933 by studio demolitions.
DD278Henshaw10 December 191911 March 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty
DD279Meyer17 December 191915 May 1929ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[5]
DD280Doyen17 December 191925 February 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[6]
DD281Sharkey28 November 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[7]
DD282Toucey9 December 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[8]
DD283Breck1 December 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[9]
DD284Isherwood4 December 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[10]
DD285Case8 December 191922 October 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[11]
DD286Lardner10 December 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[12]
DD287Putnam18 December 191921 September 1929Soldconverted to banana boat Teapa[13]
DD288Worden24 February 19201 May 1930Soldconverted to banana boat Tabasco
DD289Flusser25 February 19201 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[14]
DD290Dale16 February 19201 May 1930Soldconverted to banana boat Masaya
DD291Converse28 April 19201 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[15]
DD292Reid3 December 19191 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[16]
DD293Billingsley1 March 19201 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[17]
DD294Charles Ausburn23 March 19201 May 1930ScrappedLondon Naval Treaty[18]
DD295Osborne17 May 19201 May 1930Soldconverted to banana boat Matagalpa

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Destroyer History Foundation. Destroyer History Foundation. 2013.
  2. Web site: McDermut . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  3. Book: Blair, Clay. Hitler's U-Boat War:The Hunters 1939–1942. 1996. Random House. New York. 0-394-58839-8. 743&744.
  4. Web site: McCawley . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  5. Web site: Meyer . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  6. Web site: Doyen . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  7. Web site: Sharkey . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  8. Web site: Toucey . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  9. Web site: Breck . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  10. Web site: Isherwood . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  11. Web site: Case . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  12. Web site: Lardner . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  13. Web site: The Saga of SS Masaya . Don . Fetterly . Pacific Wrecks . 5 January 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131023000923/http://www.pacificwrecks.com/ships/usn/SS_masaya/index.html . 23 October 2013 . dead .
  14. Web site: Flusser . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  15. Web site: Converse . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  16. Web site: Reid . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  17. Web site: Billingsley . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .
  18. Web site: Charles Ausburn(e) . DANFS . United States Navy . 5 January 2014 .