![]() She had four triple-tube 21-inch torpedo mounts (two mounts per side) with 12 Mark 8 torpedoes (no reloads). She had one 3-inch/23-caliber anti-aircraft gun. She was armed with four single 4-inch/50 -caliber guns (one forward, one amidships starboard, one amidships port, and one aft). She had two geared turbines with twin shafts and screws, capable of a very respectable 35 knots. (I will cover the Battle of Vailele, Samoa, in the third installment of “Battles You’ve Never Heard Of” later this spring.)Įdsall was 1,190 tons and 314 feet in length. Edsall, Lansdale and Monaghan would have multiple ships named in their honor. Monaghan refused to leave Lansdale, and both were killed by pursuing Samoan natives. Edsall was laid down in September 1919 and commissioned on 26 November 1920.Įdsall was named after Seaman Norman Eckley Edsall, of the protected cruiser Philadelphia (C-4), who was killed in an ambush by Samoan warriors on 1 April 1899 while attempting to carry badly wounded Lieutenant Philip Van Horne Lansdale to safety. However, none of the Clemson-class destroyers were completed in time to participate in the war for which they were built. ![]() ![]() Navy history until the Fletcher-class destroyers in World War II. It was the largest shipbuilding program in U.S. USS Edsall (DD-219) was one of 156 Clemson-class “flush deck” (or “four-piper”) destroyers authorized in 1917 and designed as battle fleet escorts to counter the German torpedo boat threat in World War I. ![]()
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