USS Dyer (DD-84)

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Career USN Jack
Launched: 13 April 1918
Commissioned: 1 July 1918
Decommissioned: 7 June 1922
Fate: Sold, 8 September 1936
Struck:
General Characteristics
Displacement: 1060 tons
Length: 315 ft 5 in
Beam: 31 ft 8 in
Draft: 8 ft 6 in
Propulsion:
Speed: 35 knots
Complement: 100 officers and enlisted
Armament: 4 4", 12 21" tt.

USS Dyer (DD–84) was a Wickes class destroyer in the United States Navy during the World War I. She was named for Nehemiah Mayo Dyer.

Dyer (DD-84) was launched 13 April 1918 by the Fore River Shipbuilding Company, Quincy, Massachusetts; sponsored by Miss Virginia Blackmur; and commissioned 1 July 1918, Commander F. H. Poteet in command.

Assigned to U.S. patrol squadrons based on Gibraltar, Dyer sailed from New York 9 July 1918 with Assistant Secretary of the Navy F. D. Roosevelt embarked for transportation to Plymouth, England. Arriving 21 July Dyer got underway 5 days later arriving Gibraltar on the 29th. On 4 August she began her service as escort for merchant convoys and Army transports between Gibraltar and Marseilles, France, making nine such voyages until the end of hostilities.

Dyer departed Gibraltar 29 January 1919 for service with U.S. Naval Forces in the eastern Mediterranean, and called at Spalato, Dalmatia; Cattaro, Montenegro, and Brindisi, Italy; Constantinople, Turkey; and Beirut, Lebanon, before arriving at Venice 5 February. Operating from Venice as flagship for the force, Dyer took part in relief activities in the Balkans and Middle East, carried passengers and supplies in the Adriatic and aided in the execution of the terms of the Austrian Armistice until 16 April when she sailed for the United States. Dyer arrived at New York 14 June 1919 with two Members of Congress embarked.

Between 1 October 1919 and 31 October 1920 Dyer was in reserve, in reduced commission. She operated out of Charleston, South Carolina, until 3 April 1922 when she sailed to Philadelphia Navy Yard. Dyer was decommissioned there 7 June 1922 and sold 8 September 1936.

As of 2004, no other ships in the United States Navy have carried this name.

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This article includes text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships.


Wickes-class destroyer

Wickes | Philip | Woolsey | Evans | Little | Kimberly | Sigourney | Gregory | Stringham | Dyer | Colhoun | Stevens | McKee | Robinson | Ringgold | McKean | Harding | Gridley | Fairfax | Taylor | Bell | Stribling | Murray | Israel | Luce | Maury | Lansdale | Mahan | Schley | Champlin | Mugford | Chew | Hazelwood | Williams | Crane | Hart | Ingraham | Ludlow | Rathburne | Talbot | Waters | Dent | Dorsey | Lea | Lamberton | Radford | Montgomery | Breese | Gamble | Ramsay | Tattnall | Badger | Twiggs | Babbitt | DeLong | Jacob Jones | Buchanan | Aaron Ward | Hale | Crowninshield | Tillman | Boggs | Kilty | Kennison | Ward | Claxton | Hamilton | Tarbell | Yarnall | Upshur | Greer | Elliot | Roper | Breckinridge | Barney | Blakeley | Biddle | Du Pont | Bernadou | Ellis | Cole | J. Fred Talbott | Dickerson | Leary | Schenck | Herbert | Palmer | Thatcher | Walker | Crosby | Meredith | Bush | Cowell | Maddox | Foote | Kalk | Burns | Anthony | Sproston | Rizal | MacKenzie | Renshaw | O'Bannon | Hogan | Howard | Stansbury | Hopewell | Thomas | Haraden | Abbot | Bagley

List of destroyers of the United States Navy
List of destroyer classes of the United States Navy
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