Hull Number: DE-143
Launch Date: 03/14/1943
Commissioned Date: 08/25/1943
Call Sign: NQDA
Class: EDSALL
EDSALL Class
Namesake: BRADLEY ALLEN FISKE
BRADLEY ALLEN FISKE
Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships, June 2019
Bradley Allen Fiske was born in Lyons, New York, on 13 June 1854 to Rev. William A. and Susan (Bradley) Fiske. Despite spending much of his youth in New York, he later moved with his family to Ohio. It was from that state that he was appointed to the U.S. Naval Academy in 1870. He graduated from the Academy in 1874 and received his commission as an ensign in July 1875.
During his first assignments he served as an officer on board the steam sloops-of-war Pensacola and Plymouth, in the Pacific; and later the paddle steamer Powhatan in the Atlantic. He promoted to the rank of master in 1881 and the following year in 1882, he married Mrs. Josephine (Harper) Fiske, a union that produced a daughter, Caroline Harper Fiske, in 1885.
Fiske had training ship duty on the sloop-of-war Saratoga and the wooden steam frigate Minnesota. He served on board the steam sloop Brooklyn until being assigned to the Bureau of Ordnance in Washington D.C., in 1886. Fiske was promoted to the rank of lieutenant in 1887. He remained in his position with the Bureau of Ordnance until 1888 supervising the installation of weaponry on the protected cruiser Atlanta, one of the Navy’s first modern steel warships. From 1888 to 1890 he participated in the trials of the experimental dynamite gun cruiser Vesuvius and was later put directly in charge of installing electric lighting in the recently commissioned protected cruiser Philadelphia (Cruiser No. 4). It was during this period that Fiske continued to hone his skills as a naval inventor producing numerous innovations in electrical and gun-control systems.
Fiske remained heavily involved with the Bureau of Ordnance, serving in the protected cruiser San Francisco (Cruiser No. 5), as well as Yorktown (Gunboat No. 1), and Petrel (Gunboat No. 2). While serving as the navigator in Petrel during the Spanish-American War (1898) he used one of his inventions, called a Standimeter Range Finder, to communicate the ranges of enemy ships to American gunners, an implement which was employed to great effect during the Battle of Manila Bay on 1 May 1898.
With the close of the war, Fiske remained stationed on the Asiatic Station assigned to the double-turreted Monadnock (Monitor No. 3). He was promoted to the rank of lieutenant commander in 1899. Leaving the Philippines, he served as the Inspector of Ordnance after which, he became the executive officer for, first Yorktown, and later Massachusetts (Battleship No. 2). He was promoted to the rank of commander in 1903 and subsequently assumed command of the single-turreted “New Navy” monitor Arkansas (Monitor No. 7); and later the cruisers Minneapolis (Cruiser No. 13) and Tennessee (Armored Cruiser No. 10). Following a stint of recruiting duty he was promoted to the rank of captain in 1907 and then assumed a position as the Captain of the Yard, at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Pa.; after which he attended the Naval War College.
In August 1911, Fiske was promoted to the rank of rear admiral and thereafter commanded three divisions of the Atlantic Fleet, as well as served as the Secretary of the Navy’s Aid for Inspections. In February 1913, he was appointed to be the Aide for Operations, a position which later evolved into that of the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO), thanks in part to Fiske, who proved very influential in the creation of that office. In fact, Fisk resigned in 1915 as a result of ongoing policy disputes with department officials over the need for a naval general staff—he was reconciled with the Navy following the creation of that office later in the year. Following this episode Fiske went to the Naval War College for a year of study and then in June 1916, at the age of 62, he retired from the naval service.
Fiske had an undeniably distinguished career as a naval officer both at sea and on land. However, perhaps his greatest contribution to the U.S. Navy was his several technological innovations in electric and gun-control systems. Perhaps most notable was his development of gun-turret motors, an electric range finder, a naval telescope mount with sight, electric ammunition hoists, a radio system for torpedo control, and electric control systems to keep naval batteries aimed at their targets while firing continuously. In addition to these innovations Fiske was an outspoken proponent of the groundbreaking possibilities of naval aviation. In 1919, Fiske published an autobiography, From Midshipman to Rear-Admiral.
Rear Adm. Fiske died in New York City on 6 April 1942 at the age of 87 and was buried, along with his wife Josephine (1858-1919), at Arlington National Cemetery.