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HMS Badger | ... of becoming the first U-boat casualty of World War I when she was rammed by | on 29 October 1914. Her hull was badly damaged, but she survived and was r ... |
DDG 96 | ... troyer/cruiser (CGN-25), and a contemporary Arleigh Burke-class destroyer ( | ). Bainbridge Island, Washington is named after Commodore Bainbridge, as w ... |
USS Davis | ... e the area under her own power. The Liberty was later met by the destroyers | and USS Massey, and the cruiser USS Little Rock. Medical personnel were tr ... |
Flottentorpedoboot | ... be inadequate in combat, and the result was a "fleet torpedo boat" class ( | ), which were significantly larger, up to 1,700 tons, being in fact small ... |
DD-1 | ... ed USS Bainbridge in his honor, including the U.S. Navy's first destroyer ( | ), a unique nuclear-powered destroyer/cruiser (CGN-25), and a contemporary ... |
HMS Whelp | ... the ship to slip away unnoticed. In 1944, he moved on to the new destroyer, | , where he saw service with the British Pacific Fleet in the 27th Destroye ... |
Amagiri | ... yed afloat for 12 hours after she was cut in half by the Japanese destroyer | . PT-323 (Elco) was cut in half by a kamikaze aircraft on December 10, 194 ... |
USS Edson (DD-946) | ... l Ship Museum is working through the Naval Sea Systems Command to bring the | to Bay City as a museum ship; the Navy is expected to make a decision in t ... |
USS Massey | ... er her own power. The Liberty was later met by the destroyers USS Davis and | , and the cruiser USS Little Rock. Medical personnel were transferred to t ... |
Fletcher class destroyer | ... bsidiary of Waterman Steamship Corporation, focused on building freighters, | s, and minesweepers |
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Canadian Iroquois class | The next series of major naval vessels were the four | helicopter carrying destroyers first commissioned in 1972. They used 2 ft- ... |
HMS Edinburgh | ... ter warfare officer in 702 Naval Air Squadron, RNAS Portland, as well as on | as an Officer of the Watch and Assistant Navigating Officer until 1989, in ... |
HMS Nestor | ... the valorious conduct of Commander The Hon. Edward Bingham whilst on board | while fighting in the Battle of Jutland in July 1916 for which he received ... |
USS Douglas H. Fox (DD-779) | When the American fleet arrives, the destroyer, | , is shown from stock footage and recognizable by the large numbers 779 pa ... |
Elbing-class torpedo boat | ... iser HMS Charybdis was sunk off Brittany by a torpedo salvo launched by the | s T23 and T27 |
Korean Destroyer Experimental (KDX) program | ... sed array radar. The ROK Navy is undertaking several shipbuilding projects: | , Frigate Experimental (FFX), Landing Platform Experimental (LPX), Patrol ... |
Destructor | ... hreat. In mid-1880s there were developed torpedo gunboats, like the Spanish | , but they were considered too slow to catch torpedo boats because of the ... |
large destroyer | ... panish Civil War (1936–39). Two coastal battleships, one heavy cruiser, one | and half a dozen submarines and auxiliary vessels were lost in the course ... |
HMS Hereward | ... of Belgium had done during World War I. She fled The Hague, and she boarded | , a British destroyer which was to take her south; however, after she was ... |
Clemson-class | USS Thompson (DD-305), a | destroyer of the U.S. Navy named in honor of Secretary of the Navy Richard ... |
HMS Hereward | ... very closely linked. Nevertheless, in 1940, King George VI sent the warship | , to rescue Wilhelmina, her family and her Government and bring them to sa ... |