Yes, I would've suspected the .30cal guns were their old original Lewis guns. How the MGs were numbered is a bit strange, since it appears the .30cal were separate from the .50cal. mounts.
I dbl-chkd various docs, and if PEARY lacked her 3"/23cal "Poole gun" then she was most likely the only Asiatic fleet fourpiper that did. Action reports, memoirs, etc. show that just about all of the other ships used their 3" at some time or another during the opening mos. of the war. I find it hard to believe anybody was taking guns off those old, anemic ships in 1941 when an imminent war was apparent to everybody out there. So, wonder why was the 3" removed, or inoperable, on PEARY prior to her yard overhaul in late 1941?
I find reports of the 3" being used by FORD, PARROTT, POPE, PAUL JONES, WHIPPLE, ALDEN, J. D. EDWARDS, EDSALL, PILLSBURY, and STEWART. Haven't looked for anything by BARKER & BULMER, but no reason to doubt they had theirs still.
But, I sure agree that the PacFlt, as noted, was another matter entirely.
The sole meaningful upgrade that the DesRon 29 fourpipers got AFAIK was the Q sound gear. Other than minor upgrades to their radio equipment & adding whatever MGs they could scrounge, they were basically stock 1918-1920 model ships. Fortunately, Cramp & Sons of Philadelphia built very rugged CLEMSONs. Thank goodness for that & their Parsons turbines, which performed better than others (Westinghouse, G.E., Curtis) by an average of ~ 1.11 to 1.50 knots at Full Power.
Additionally, the navy had considered upgrading the flushdeckers' armament as far back as 1922--when Holloway Frost wrote a fine evaluation of them, vis-a-vis their more powerful contemporaries, and made several useful suggestions...none of which were ever undertaken. His paper was shelved in 1924 due to budgetary restrictions, and forgotten. Then, two decades later, when a few of the fourpipers were converted to high speed transports, minelayers/sweeper, etc., some of those very upgrades appeared.
Model building note: if one were to make a pre-war fourpiper, and also include awnings, the Asiatic Fleet tincans marked themselves with large American flags atop their awnings whenever operating along the China coast--much like AUGUSTA did atop her turrets (although they were painted) right up until her departure for CONUS in November 1940.
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