List of destroyer classes of the United States Navy


The first automotive torpedo was developed in 1866, and the torpedo boat was developed soon after. In 1898, while the Spanish-American War was being fought in the Caribbean and the Pacific, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt wrote that the Spanish torpedo boat destroyers were the only threat to the American navy, and pushed for the acquisition of similar vessels. On 4 May 1898, the US Congress authorized the first sixteen torpedo boat destroyers and twelve seagoing torpedo boats for the United States Navy.
In World War I, the U.S. Navy began mass-producing destroyers, laying 273 keels of the and destroyers. The peacetime years between 1919 and 1941 resulted in many of these flush deck destroyers being laid up. Additionally, treaties regulated destroyer construction. The 1500-ton destroyers built in the 1930s under the treaties had stability problems that limited expansion of their armament in World War II. During World War II, the United States began building larger 2100-ton destroyers with five-gun main batteries, but without stability problems.
The first major warship produced by the U.S. Navy after World War II were "frigates"—the ships were originally designated destroyer leaders but reclassified in 1975 as guided missile cruisers. These grew out of the last all-gun destroyers of the 1950s. In the middle 1970s the s entered service, optimized for anti-submarine warfare. A special class of guided missile destroyers was produced for the Shah of Iran, but due to the Iranian Revolution these ships could not be delivered and were added to the U.S. Navy.
The, introduced in 1991, has been the U.S. Navy's only destroyer class in commission since 2005; construction continued through 2012 and was restarted in 2015. A further class, the, is entering service; the first ship was launched in 2013. The Zumwalt class will number three ships.

Pre–World War I

In 1864, US Navy Lt. William B. Cushing sank the ironclad using a "spar torpedo"—an explosive device mounted on a long pole and detonated underwater. Two years later in Austria, the British engineer Robert Whitehead developed a compressed air "automotive" torpedo; capable of over a distance of. The threat a small, fast, torpedo-delivering ship could pose to the battle line became clear to navies around the world; giving birth to the torpedo boat, including of the United States Navy.
During the Spanish-American War, Assistant Secretary of the Navy Theodore Roosevelt wrote Spanish torpedo boat destroyers were "the only real menace" to the fleet blockading Santiago, and pushed for the acquisition of torpedo boats and torpedo boat destroyers. As President, Theodore Roosevelt continued to pay close attention to naval affairs, including the expansion of the Navy's fleet of destroyers.
In 1898 Congress authorized 16 torpedo boat destroyers, which would join the fleet by 1903. The first torpedo boat destroyers, the, featured two torpedo tubes and two guns, displacing. The subsequent and classes displaced, the reason these classes were nicknamed "flivvers". By the time the United States entered World War I, destroyers displaced and burned oil instead of coal. These "1000 tonners" were armed with eight to twelve torpedo tubes, four /50 caliber guns; and had a complement of approximately 100 officers and men. The 1000 tonners were the through classes, and were also called "broken deckers", due to their high forecastles.
Class nameNumber of ships
First ship laid downLast ship commissionedNotesReferences
1318991902Part of the original 16 "torpedo boat destroyers" authorized by Congress.
318991903Part of the original 16 "torpedo boat destroyers" authorized by Congress.
519081909Known as "flivvers" for their light weight of 740 tons.
2119091912Known as "flivvers" for their light weight of 740 tons.
419121913Known as "broken deckers" for their high forecastles, or "1000 tonners" because of their weight.
419121914Known as "broken deckers" for their high forecastles, or "1000 tonners" because of their weight.
619131915Known as "broken deckers" for their high forecastles, or "1000 tonners" because of their weight.
619141916Known as "broken deckers" for their high forecastles, or "1000 tonners" because of their weight.
619151917Known as "broken deckers" for their high forecastles, or "1000 tonners" because of their weight.

World War I

Prior to entering World War I in 1917, the United States began producing destroyers to a new design with a continuous sheer strake, collectively referred to as "flush deckers". Six prototypes of the were dissimilar: three had three stacks; two of these also had three screws. The others of this and the 267 ships of the mass-production and classes that followed all had two screws. As built, they also had four stacks, which gave rise to the nicknames "four stackers" or "four pipers".
Eleven shipyards participated in their construction, which peaked in 1917 and 1918. By the time of the Armistice of 11 November 1918, keels for 177 ships had been laid and 41 had joined the fleet. Though the remaining ships were not needed in peacetime, the building program continued and by the end of May 1921, all but four of the 273 flush-deckers had been placed in commission. The final two did not follow until August 1922.
While the flush-deckers' freeboard fore and aft were designed to match preceding classes, the new ships differed in other respects. The waist guns were moved to a platform amidships, the galley beneath them; and a bulwark added between the galley and the bridge.
The standard displacement of the flush deck destroyers was, the length approximately, the beam measured approximately, and the draft approximately. A typical flush deck destroyer had a normal crew of 105 officers and men, and was armed with four 4-inch deck guns, one 3-inch anti-aircraft gun, 12 torpedo tubes, two stern-mounted depth charge racks, along with.50-caliber machine guns and small arms. The mass-produced classes also had four boilers providing steam to a pair of steam turbines, each of which drove a screw at a combined for a top speed of about. Destroyers quickly acquired the anti-submarine warfare mission against U-boats in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, being equipped with depth charge racks, hydrophones, and eventually Y-gun depth charge throwers. However, it was very difficult to successfully attack a U-boat with World War I technology, and US anti-submarine forces only scored two kills in that war.
Class nameNumber of ships
First ship laid downLast ship commissionedNotesReferences
619161920Called flush deckers due to lack of raised forecastle.
11119171921Called flush deckers due to lack of raised forecastle. Sometimes, Wickes class destroyers are split into four categories: Wickes class, 38 ships; Little class, 52 ships; Lamberton class, 11 ships; and Tattnall class, 10 ships.
15619181922Called flush deckers due to lack of raised forecastle.

Between the World Wars

After the end of World War I, there was little need for the destroyers built, so many were laid up, and fourteen had their torpedo tubes removed and were converted to minesweepers. On 8 September 1923, seven of the ships ran aground off the coast of California in the U.S. Navy's worst ever peacetime disaster.
In 1922, the Washington Naval Treaty was signed by the United States, the British Empire, the Empire of Japan, France, and Italy. The treaty called for a freeze in the size and composition of the world's major navies, including the U.S. Navy, which ceased production of large capital ships and destroyers. The London Naval Treaty, a 1930 agreement between the same parties, established total destroyer tonnage limits for the navies. The treaty also defined two categories: destroyer and destroyer leader; along with the maximum tonnage of each category, and the allowable ratio of one category to another.
In the London Naval Treaty, destroyers were established as "surface vessels of war the Standard Displacement of which does not exceed 1,850 tons and with a gun not above 5.1 inch caliber", as published in Ship’s Data for U.S. Naval Vessels. The “total completed tonnage not to be exceeded on December 31, 1936” was 150,000 S.D., but “not more than 16% of the allowed tonnage... shall be employed in vessels over 1,500 tons S.D.”. The new, higher limits rendered the existing flush-deckers obsolete, and the General Board soon moved to replace them. Since Japan was considered a probable adversary and was building destroyers through the 1920s, the General Board replaced the four-stackers with ships that could carry large quantities of fuel, ammunition, and supplies as needed to conduct operations across the vast Pacific Ocean.
The U.S. Navy resumed destroyer construction in 1932 with the. For the next seven years, the United States Navy constructed "1500 tonners", or "goldplaters". The goldplaters earned this name because of the "over-lavish facilities", which drew comment from seasoned destroyermen. The armament of the Farragut and Mahan class destroyers initially included five 5 inch dual purpose guns, a number later reduced to four due to stability problems and a desire for a larger torpedo armament. With the introduction of the dual purpose main guns, destroyers acquired an anti-aircraft mission. The 1500-ton,,,, and classes, the 1570-ton, and the 1850-ton and destroyer leaders were all laid down in quick succession following the original goldplaters.
The and es were similar in design to the Sims class, but had two stacks and a "split" or echeloned powerplant for extra endurance against torpedo attacks.
Class nameNumber of ships
First ship laid downLast ship commissionedNotesReferences
819321935Known as "1500 tonners" due to their weight, or "goldplaters" due to the luxury as compared to previous classes.
819331937The first of the 1850-ton "leaders".
1819341937The first 1500 tonners with high-pressure high-temperature propulsion machinery. The last two ships of the Mahan class are sometimes considered the Dunlap class.
419351938Repeat 1500 tonners built by Bethlehem Steel.
819351937Repeat 1500 tonners similar to the Mahan class.
519351939Repeat 1850-ton leaders modified from the Porter-class design.
1019361939The last 1500 tonners.
1219371940The first U.S. Navy destroyer class unconstrained by treaty limitations.
6619381943A "split powerplant" modification of the Sims class. Gleaves class was originally divided into the and classes.
3019381943Bethlehem design similar to and built concurrent with the Gleaves class.

World War II

On 7 December 1941, the day the United States entered World War II, the United States Navy had 100 destroyers seven years old or newer. This number included 27 and destroyers. However, none were equipped with torpedoes comparable to the Type 93 torpedoes of the Imperial Japanese Navy, and only destroyer leaders had more than four main guns—inferior to the six guns on a Japanese destroyer.
In 1940, fifty "flush deckers" were transferred to the British Royal Navy and the Royal Canadian Navy under the Destroyers for Bases Agreement. Other "flush deckers" were converted as high speed transports, minesweepers, seaplane tenders, and other roles, while some were retained as destroyers. Most remaining in US service were rearmed with varying numbers of 3 inch dual purpose guns.
After World War II broke out across Europe in 1939, the United States Navy began sketches for a five-gun ship— on an enlarged hull. Introduced in 1942, the 175 "2100 tonners". became the U.S. Navy's signature destroyer in the Pacific War. By the end of World War II, the U.S. Navy had also commissioned 112 six-gun destroyers derived from the Fletcher design; 67 2200 tonners and 45 2250 tonners. The Allen M. Sumner class' hull was slightly wider than the Fletcher class', while the Gearing-class design was a lengthened version of the Allen M. Sumners. By 1945, as the threat from kamikazes increased and the threat from the Japanese surface fleet decreased, torpedoes and guns were partially removed from most US destroyers in favor of light anti-aircraft guns. Destroyers had acquired the hazardous radar picket mission by this time. Collectively, these destroyer designs are sometimes regarded as the most successful of World War II.
Class nameNumber of ships
First ship laid downLast ship commissionedNotesReferences
17519411944The U.S. Navy's first large destroyers and the most numerous of the wartime classes.
5819431946A six-gun derivative of the Fletcher design. 70 ships were originally laid down as Allen M. Sumner class, but 12 were completed as fast minelayers.
9819441952"Long hull" versions of the Allen M. Sumner class.

Cold War and beyond

The first major warship the U.S. Navy constructed after World War II was an all-weather, anti-submarine hunter-killer, designated "destroyer leader", but referred to as a "frigate". The majority of these carried long-range surface-to-air missiles to escort carrier and amphibious task forces, and were designated "guided missile destroyer leaders", some nuclear-powered. In 1975, the twelve remaining - and ships were reclassified as guided missile destroyers, and the other classes were reclassified as guided missile cruisers.
Derived from the Fletcher concept, the all-gun destroyer was the successor to the,, and classes. The following added a short-range SAM launcher on an enlarged hull and were classified as DDGs.
The was designed to serve as all-weather anti-submarine escorts for aircraft carrier task forces, as their anti-air missile complement was only sufficient for point defense. The Spruance-class destroyers were the first ships in the United States Navy powered with gas turbines—four marine turboshaft engines driving two shafts with reversible-pitch propellers. The 31 Spruance-class ships began service in September 1975 through the 1990s, when 24 members of the class were upgraded with vertical launching systems, and the last was decommissioned in 2005. The was based on the Spruance class, but designed as more advanced multi-purpose ships with a significant SAM armament, intended for the Iranian Navy. In 1979, a revolution took place in Iran; the Shah was dethroned but instead of cancelling the four ships, they were acquired by the U.S. Navy, where they were nicknamed the "Ayatollah" or "dead Admiral" class.
The, the lead ship of the, was the first destroyer named after a living person—World War II Admiral Arleigh Burke. At her commissioning, USS Arleigh Burke was extolled as the most powerful surface warship ever built. Arleigh Burke is one-third longer and correspondingly heavier than the Fletcher-class destroyers of the squadron Burke commanded in World War II; but about the same complement. The Arleigh Burke-class destroyers were based around the "Aegis" Combat System, like the larger s. The Arleigh Burke class was introduced in four "flights": Flight I, consisting of Arleigh Burke; Flight IA composed of 20 ships; Flight II, composed of 7 ships; and Flight IIA, composed of 34 ships. The Arleigh Burke class became the U.S. Navy's only active destroyer class when the last member of the Spruance class was decommissioned in 2005.
destroyer production was limited to three ships due to burgeoning costs. Including research, the program costs reached $22.5 billion for the three ships. The first was commissioned in 2016 and the last is scheduled to be commissioned in 2019.
Class nameNumber of ships
First ship laid downLast ship commissionedNotesReferences
Norfolk119491953First major US warship after World War II. Classified as "Destroyer Leader" the ship was decommisioned before the smaller destroyer leaders were reclassified as destroyers and the larger as cruisers by the United States Navy 1975 ship reclassification
419491954Originally designated as destroyers, the ships would have been the first post war 'standard' destroyers but they were reclassified as "destroyer leader". The first two ship were later once again reclassified as guided missile destroyers by the United States Navy 1975 ship reclassification.
1819531959Derived from the Fletcher concept.
1019561961Originally designated "destroyer leader". The Farragut class of the Cold War was also called the Coontz class.
2319571964Guided missile derivative of the Forrest Sherman class.
3119721983First United States Navy ship to use gas turbines.
419781982The Kidd class was based upon the Spruance class but designed as more advanced multi-purpose vessels, originally intended for the Iranian Navy.
66 1988Ships still being built. Lead ship was first destroyer to be named after living man.
32008Ships still being built