USS Roe
Skip to main content

USS Roe

1910 Paulding-class destroyer


Country of Registry
United States
Commissioning Date
September 17, 1910
Manufacturer
Newport News Shipbuilding
Operator
United States Navy
Vessel Type
destroyer, Paulding-class destroyer
Decommissioning Date
December 01, 1919
Pennant Number
DD-24
Aliases
DD-24

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

USS Roe (DD-24) was a Paulding-class destroyer constructed for the United States Navy, representing early 20th-century naval design. Laid down on 18 January 1909 by Newport News Shipbuilding Company in Virginia, she was launched on 24 July 1909 and commissioned into service on 17 September 1910. The vessel measured approximately 314 feet in length, with a beam of around 30 feet and a displacement close to 925 tons. Her armament included torpedo tubes and guns typical of her class, designed for patrol and escort duties. Initially, USS Roe operated along the Atlantic coast, engaging in exercises and maneuvers primarily in the Norfolk, Virginia, area, as well as in the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean, and off New England. Her activities included training, fleet maneuvers, and reserve status rotations. By late 1914, she was mainly in reserve, with periods of active duty. With the advent of World War I, Roe was placed in full commission in March 1917 and assigned to the Patrol Force. Her early wartime duties involved assisting U.S. Treasury and Labor officials in Wilmington, North Carolina, to prevent the escape or destruction of German merchant vessels. Following the U.S. entry into the war, Roe was tasked with anti-submarine patrols and escort duties from Newport, Rhode Island, and later from Brest, France. Under the command of Captain William A. Hodgman, she conducted coastal patrols and convoy escort missions for approximately a year, contributing to Allied maritime security. After returning to the United States in late 1918, USS Roe was decommissioned at Charleston in July 1919 and placed in reserve. She was later designated DD-24 in 1920 and transferred to the U.S. Coast Guard, where she served from 1924 to 1930 as part of the Rum Patrol based in Stapleton, New York, enforcing Prohibition-era regulations. She was returned to the Navy and berthed at League Island before being sold for scrap on 2 May 1934, following the stipulations of the London Naval Treaty. USS Roe's service exemplifies the transitional role of early destroyers in U.S. naval history, from pre-World War I operations through wartime patrols and later maritime law enforcement.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

7 ship citations (3 free) in 7 resources

Roe (CG-18), USN destroyer Subscribe to view
Roe (DD 24) Subscribe to view
Roe (DD-24) Subscribe to view
Roe (Destroyer No. 24)
Book Civil and Merchant Vessel Encounters with United States Navy Ships, 1800-2000
Author Greg H. Williams
Published McFarland & Co., Jefferson, NC,
ISBN 0786411554, 9780786411559
Page 363
Roe, U.S. torpedo boat destroyer (1910)
Journal American Neptune (1941-1990; Vols. 1-50)
Published Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Mass.,
ISSN 0003-0155
Pages XXII, 142