THE AWKWARD "EAGLES"
A curious boat that we undertook to furnish during the war was a cross between a destroyer and a submarine-chaser. After the submarine had been driven out to sea its greatest foe was undoubtedly the destroyer, and frantic efforts were made to turn out as many destroyers as possible. But it takes time to build destroyers and so a new type of boat was designed, to be turned out quickly in large numbers. A hundred and ten "Eagles" (as these boats are called) were ordered, but the armistice was signed before any of them were put into service; and it is just as well that such was the case, for in their construction everything was sacrificed to speed of production. As a consequence they are very ugly boats, with none of the fine lines of a destroyer, and they roll badly, even when the sea is comparatively peaceful. They are five-hundred-ton boats designed to make eighteen knots, which would not have been fast enough to cope with U-boats, because the latter could make as high a speed as that themselves, when traveling on the surface, and the two 4-inch guns of the Eagles would have been far outranged by the 5.9-inch guns of the larger U-boats.