torpedo-boat destroyer
Noun: A torpedo-boat destroyer is a historical type of small, fast warship. Its primary purpose was to defend larger ships in a fleet by hunting and destroying smaller, faster torpedo boats, which posed a significant threat with their torpedoes. This class of vessel was the direct predecessor and evolutionary step that led to the development of the modern destroyer.
The term is used specifically in a historical naval context to describe late 19th and early 20th-century warships. * The admiral deployed the torpedo-boat destroyer to screen the battleships from enemy attack craft. * Naval technology evolved rapidly from the torpedo-boat destroyer to the more versatile destroyer used in both World Wars.
- The concept is often discussed in military history to illustrate the "action-reaction" cycle in naval arms development: the invention of the torpedo boat led directly to the creation of the torpedo-boat destroyer to counter it.
- Destroyer (noun): The modern, more general-purpose warship that evolved from the torpedo-boat destroyer. It is larger and carries a wider array of weapons for anti-air, anti-submarine, and surface warfare.
- Torpedo boat (noun): The small, fast attack craft that the torpedo-boat destroyer was designed to counter.
- Destroyer (in its earliest historical context)
- Torpedo-boat catcher (an earlier, less common term for similar vessels)
This term has a very specific, historical meaning. It is not used in contemporary naval parlance except when referring to historical ships or the evolution of destroyer-class vessels. It should not be confused with modern ship classifications.
- small destroyer that was the forerunner of modern destroyers; designed to destroy torpedo boats