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Being ready is not what matters. What matters is winning after you get there. -- Lieutenant General V.H. Krulak |
Montana Class (BB-67 through BB-71), 1941 Building Program(404 total words in this text)(1733 Reads) Completion of the Montana class would have given the late 1940s U.S. Navy a total of seventeen new battleships, a considerable advantage over any other nation, or probable combination of nations. The Montanas also would have been the only American ships to come close to equalling the massive Japanese Yamato. However, World War II's urgent requirements for more aircraft carriers, amphibious and anti-submarine vessels resulted in suspension of the Montanas in May 1942, before any of their keels had been laid. In July 1943, when it was clear that the battleship was no longer the dominant element of sea power, their construction was cancelled. The Montana class would have consisted of five ships, to be constructed at three Navy Yards: Montana (BB-67), to be built at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, Pennsylvania; Ohio (BB-68), to be built at the Philadelphia Navy Yard; Maine (BB-69), to be built at the New York Navy Yard, Brooklyn, New York; New Hampshire (BB-70), to be built at the New York Navy Yard; and Louisiana (BB-71), to be built at the Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Virginia. Montana class design characteristics: Displacement: 60,500 tons (standard); 70,965 tons (full load) Dimensions: 921' 3" (length overall); 121' 2" (maximum beam) Powerplant: 172,000 horsepower steam turbines, producing a 28 knot maximum speed Armament (Main Battery): Twelve 16"/50 guns in four triple turrets Armament (Secondary Battery): Twenty 5"/54 guns in ten twin mountings (ten guns on each side of the ship) |
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This Day in History
1738:
English parliament declares war on Spain.
1800: The USS Essex becomes first U.S. Navy vessel to pass the Cape of Good Hope. 1814: The HMS Phoebe and Cherub capture the USS Essex off Valparaiso, Chile. 1854: Britain and France declare war on Russia. 1862: Union forces stop the Confederate invasion of New Mexico territory when they turn the Rebels back at Glorieta Pass. 1864: A group of Copperheads attack Federal soldiers in Charleston, Illinois. Five are killed and twenty wounded. 1917: The Womens Army Auxiliary Corps (WAAC) is founded, Great Britains first official service women. 1939: The Spanish Civil War ends as Madrid falls to Francisco Franco. 1941: Andrew Browne Cunningham, Admiral of the British Fleet, commands the British Royal Navys destruction of three major Italian battleships and two destroyers in the Battle of Cape Matapan in the Mediterranean. 1942: A British ship, the HMS Capbeltown, a Lend-Lease American destroyer, which was specifically rammed into a German occupied dry-dock in France, explodes, knocking the area out of action for the German battleship Tirpitz. |