Hull Number: DE-101
Launch Date: 07/08/1943
Commissioned Date: 11/12/1943
Decommissioned Date: 03/10/1945
Call Sign: NZDW
Class: CANNON
CANNON Class
Namesake: PHILIP ROUNSEVILLE ALGER
PHILIP ROUNSEVILLE ALGER
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, April 2016
Philip Rounsevile Alger was born on 29 September 1859, in Boston, Mass. He entered the Naval Academy in 1876 and graduated four years later at the head of his class. His first cruise, in Richmond, took him to the Pacific station and to China. In 1882, Alger was ordered to the Bureau of Ordnance, Washington, D.C. This assignment exposed him for the first time to the field in which he was to later win marked distinction.
Following duty in European waters on board Pensacola from 1885 to 1889, Alger returned to the Bureau of Ordnance. On 10 November 1890, he resigned his commission as a line officer ensign to accept an appointment as a professor of mathematics with an equivalent rank of lieutenant. One year later, he was named head of the department of mechanics at the Naval Academy. In ensuing years, Alger was closely involved in the great advances made in naval ordnance which were made as the United States established its “New Navy.”
In 1903, Alger accepted the position of secretary and treasurer of the United States Naval Institute, an office that entailed the editing of the institute’s Proceedings. The following year, Alger was appointed to a special board to advise the Bureau of Ordnance in developing and test ordnance material.
Alger’s extensive writing on ordnance included two books, Exterior Ballistics (1904) and The Elastic Strength of Guns (1906), which came to be regarded as standards in their fields. His work entitled Hydromechanics (1902) was used as a textbook at the Naval Academy and other institutions of higher learning. Alger also penned numerous articles on a wide range of technical subjects. Alger died at Annapolis, Md., on 23 February 1912.
Disposition:
Loaned to the Brazilian Navy. Stricken 20 July 1953, and title to the ship was transferred outright to the government of Brazil.