Chester-class cruiser
The three Chester-class cruisers were the first United States Navy vessels to be designed and designated as fast "scout cruisers" for fleet reconnaissance. They had high speed but little armor or armament. They were authorized in January 1904, ordered in fiscal year 1905, and completed in 1908. In 1920 all scout cruisers were redesignated as "light cruisers".
Birmingham was the first ship in the world to launch an airplane, in 1910 with pilot Eugene Ely, who also performed the first landing on a ship the following year, on. The class patrolled the Caribbean prior to World War I, sometimes supporting military interventions, with Chester playing a key role at the start of the United States occupation of Veracruz in 1914. The ships escorted convoys in World War I. The class was decommissioned 1921-1923 and sold for scrap to comply with the limits of the London Naval Treaty in 1930.
Design and construction
Ship type
The three Chesters were the US Navy's only ships to be commissioned with the "scout cruiser" designation, and were characterized by high speed and little armor or armament. They were also the last cruisers of any type built for the US Navy until the first cruisers were laid down in 1917. The first three Omaha-class ships were also designated "scout cruisers" when ordered, but before any were launched the Navy revised its classification system and they and the Chesters became "light cruisers".Armament
The as-built armament included two 5"/50 caliber gun|/50 caliber Mark 6 guns, six /50 caliber rapid fire guns, and two 21 inch torpedo tubes. The original design featured a uniform gun armament of twelve 3-inch guns, which was supported by the Navy's General Board as simplifying fire control and echoing the uniform main and secondary armaments of dreadnought battleships. However, two 5-inch guns were substituted for six of the 3-inch guns, apparently to enable the scout cruisers to fight foreign light cruisers. Notably, for the first time in US cruiser design smaller caliber weapons were not fitted.Armor
The armor of these ships was very light. A belt extended above the waterline in the engine and generator room area, above the waterline in the boiler room area, and below the waterline for its entire length. There was no protective deck, only a deck above the steering gear.Engineering
The three ships had different propulsion plants so they could be compared: Chester was the first major combatant in the USN to receive steam turbine propulsion of the Parsons type, Salem received Curtis turbines, and Birmingham traditional triple-expansion engines. The design speed was for the triple-expansion ship and up to for the turbine ships.Chester had twelve coal-fired Normand boilers and Parsons direct-drive steam turbines totaling on four shafts. She made on trials at an estimated.
Birmingham had twelve coal-fired Fore River boilers supplying steam to two four-cylinder vertical triple-expansion engines totaling on two shafts. She made on trials at.
Salem had twelve coal-fired Fore River boilers and Curtis direct-drive steam turbines totaling on two shafts. She made on trials at.
Normal coal capacity was 475 tons, which could be increased to 1,400 tons.
Refits
All three ships were refitted in 1917 to prepare for service in World War I. Salem had her main engines replaced with a General Electric geared steam turbine installation due to high coal consumption. All three received an armament upgrade, with four new /51 caliber guns, two 3-inch/50 caliber single-purpose guns, and two 3-inch/50 caliber anti-aircraft guns. The torpedo tubes were retained.Ships in class
The three ships of the Chester class were:Ship | Shipyard | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Fate |
Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine | 25 September 1905 | 26 June 1907 | 25 April 1908 | 10 June 1921 | Renamed York 10 July 1928, sold for scrap 13 May 1930 | |
Fore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts | 14 August 1905 | 29 May 1907 | 11 April 1908 | 1 December 1923 | Sold for scrap 13 May 1930 | |
Fore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts | 28 August 1905 | 27 July 1907 | 1 August 1908 | 16 August 1921 | Sold for scrap 11 February 1930 |
On 17 July 1920 these ships were reclassified with the new hull numbers CL-1 through CL-3. On 10 July 1928 Chester was renamed York to free the name for.