Hull Number: DD-183
Launch Date: 07/04/1918
Commissioned Date: 06/07/1919
Decommissioned Date: 09/24/1940
Call Sign: NEXZ
Class: LAMBERTON
LAMBERTON Class
Data for USS Lamberton (DD-119) as of 1921
Length Overall: 314' 4 1/2"
Beam: 31' 8"
Draft: 9' 3 5/8"
Standard Displacement: 1,213 tons
Full Load Displacement: 1,306 tons
Armament:
Four 4″/50 caliber guns
One 3″/23 caliber anti-aircraft gun
Four 21″ triple torpedo tubes
Complement:
8 Officers
8 Chief Petty Officers
106 Enlisted
Propulsion:
4 Boilers
2 Curtis Turbines: 25,000 horsepower
Highest speed on trials: 33.4 knots
Namesake: JONATHAN HARADEN
JONATHAN HARADEN
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, February 2016
Jonathan Haraden was born in Gouchester, Mass., 11 November 1744, and joined the Massachusetts State Navy in July 1776 as First Lieutenant of the sloop Tyrannicide. Sailing with her for 2 years, he captured many prizes, and rose to command her in 1777. In 1778, Haraden left the state navy for a career as a privateersman, commanding General Pickering. He simultaneously engaged three British privateers off New Jersey in October 1779, and captured a 22-gun sloop in the Bay of Biscay. When British privateer Achilles, of three times his force, attempted to recapture his prize a few days later, Haraden fought a fierce action at close quarters for 3 hours, forcing the larger ship to sheer off. Captured briefly by Admiral Rodney in the West Indies in 1781, Haraden escaped and sailed privateer Julius Caesar in 1782. In June of that year fought off two British vessels of equal force at the same time. His health declined steadily after the close of the War for Independence, and he died at Salem, Mass., 23 November 1803.
Disposition:
Transferred to England 09/24/1940 and retransferred on the same date to Canada as HMCS COLUMBIA (I-49). Sold 1946 and scrapped.