Prior to 1917 the US navy had neglected serious construction of the ocean going destroyer, with their two distinct fleets the 68 built was inadequate and the new type would become an instantly recognisable production.
The flush deckers had arrived.
This revolutionary type were rapidly put into production with 267 built numbered DD75 - 347, less 200-205 cancelled, comprising 6 Caldwell, 111 Wickes, 156 Clemson -150 with 6 cancelled - with the 4 distinctive stacks / pipes / funnels in virtually all just as in previous US destroyers. All built in 4 years, were contemporaries of the RN's V /W classes which retained the raised forecastle, synonymous with the destroyer World wide including the previous US detroyers.
Between the wars 1918 - 1939 the fortunes of all the flush deckers took 2 principal paths. Half saw extensive between war service in the 20's with 50 being culled in 1930/31 most in the big Boston metals purchase at $5789 each including the entire Union IW build with dodgy Yarrow boilers, a further 35 went mid 30's due to Washington fallout.
Virtually all the rest had been mothballed in assorted reserves including Branch DD197, our HMS Beverley from 1940...
https://www.history.navy.mil/content/hi ... nch-i.html
this reliable link tells the full history of Branch later Beverley, with full and all credits to the author and link. Her story from mobilisation (yes) in september 1939 is intriguing, far from idle and 2 years before Pearl Harbour. At this time the US navy had approx 170 flush deckers remaining, 77 DD and DMS (high speed minesweepers) instantly commissioned, a further 32 would convert to APD high speed transports, 14 AVD seaplane tenders and 18 DMS plus numerous other lesser conversions.
The RN and Canada got a further 50, i understand all were amongst the Atlantic coast ships, this is Beverley post refit and modernisation august 1941 in Belfast, new bridge with type 271 radar in lantern, 1 x triple tubes, 20mm oerlikons and hedgehog ahead of bridge and the familiar 3 funnels cut down about 3 feet. Only original weapon is her forward 4" single.
This is her appearance when sunk in fog at 0340 11 april 1943 escorting convoy ON176, a single torpedo port side between the boiler rooms and she rapidly succumbed, the corvette Clover recovered 7, 2 dead, 1 duly died and 4 survivors.
151 officers and men were lost in Beverley that fateful night.