As a 1,630-tonner authorized in 1938, known at the time to shipmates as a 
Livermore-class ship, the specifications for 
Meredith reflected the  characteristics of all 
Gleaves-class ships built at 
Boston Navy Yard: 
DATA 
Name: United States Ship Meredith
Type: Destroyer
Namesake: Marine Sgt. Jonathan Meredith
Navy Classification: DD 434
Class: DD 423, Gleaves, also Livermore
Builder: Boston Navy Yard, Charlestown, Massachusetts
Keel laid: 1 June 1939
Launched: 24 April 1940
Commissioned: 1 March 1941
Lost: 15 October 1942 
 
 
	Length Overall: 348' 3"
	Extreme Beam: 36' 3"
	Normal Displacement: 1,630 long tons
	Draft: Mean: 13' 5"
	Designed Complement: Officers, 11; Enlisted, 201
	Designed Shaft Horsepower: 51,000
	Designed Speed: 35 knots
	Screws: Two
	Rudder: One
	Stacks: Two 
As commissioned, Meredith’s armament was typical for a mid-1941 Livermore-class destroyer armed as follows:. 
Click on any image to view it in more detail. 
 
 
Above: Meredith in 1941 as built, with five 5-inch guns, 0.50 cal secondary armament. Below: Meredith as modified, with four 5-inch guns, 20mm secondary armament. 
 
	Primary: 5 x 5-inch/38 cal. in five single mounts, gunhouses on Nos. 1, 2 and 5.
	Short-range anti-aircraft: 6 x 0.50 cal. machine guns
	Torpedo Tubes: 10 x 21-inch in two quintuple mount
	ASW: 2 racks for 600-lb. charges; 4 “K”-guns for 300-lb. charges 
Her electronics were typical of the period just before SG (surface search) radar became available: 
	Radar: SC (air search) and Mk 37 (fire control)
	Sonar: QC 
In common with other destroyers of 
DesDiv 22, her No. 3 5-inch gun was removed to reduce topweight and 20mm single Oerlikon replaced her 0.50 cal. machine guns as follows: 
 
	Primary: 4 x 5-inch/38 cal. in four single mounts
	Short-range anti-aircraft: 6 x 20mm single Oerlikon
	Torpedo Tubes: 10 x 21-inch in two quintuple mount
	ASW: 2 racks for 600-lb. charges; 4 “K”-guns for 300-lb. charges