Vince McCullough wrote:
As for red decks -- nope. All of my reading says that torpedo boats and destroyers both had decks the same color as their hulls -- green until 1912, then grey.
Vince
Vince,
I agree with you that the available evidence indicates that the weather decks of these vessels were generally painted to match the hulls, but I wonder if there may have been exceptions?
Marcus Goodrich, who served as an enlisted man aboard USS Chauncey (DD-3) in the Philippines prior to World War One, wrote a novel about a fictional Bainbridge class DD. His descriptions of the destroyer’s paint colors may provide some interesting insights. In his novel, “Delilah”, he remarks that the bulkheads and overhead of the wardroom interior, “... were painted in a very light, creamy green” and the deck was “shellacked a deep red” (page 74). He describes the quarterdeck between the after conning tower and the stern as, “...shaded, ordinarily, by a smart, well-cut awning; and its steel deck area was hansomely covered with red shellac” (page 7).
While the descriptions are of a fictional DD in a novel, the author was an eyewitness to the real version of what he describes...
Tim