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USS DESTROYER SQUADRON WW2

$ 13.17

Availability: 69 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: Used

    Description

    1 Sumner Class
    1 Amesbury Class APD (APD version Buckley)
    1 DE Buckley class
    1 DE Evarts class
    USS Allen M. Sumner (DD-692)
    , was the lead ship of her
    class
    of
    destroyers
    . The ship was named for
    Allen Melancthon Sumner
    , a
    United States Marine Corps
    captain
    , who was killed in action during
    World War I
    USS Amesbury (DE-66/APD-46)
    , a
    Buckley-class
    destroyer escort
    of the
    United States Navy
    , was named in honor of
    Lieutenant (jg)
    Stanton Morgan Amesbury (1916–1942), who was killed in action while flying from the
    aircraft
    carrier Uss Ranger
    The
    Buckley-class destroyer escorts
    were 102
    destroyer escorts
    launched in the
    United States
    in 1943–44. They served in
    World War II
    as
    convoy
    escorts and
    anti-submarine warfare
    ships. The lead ship was
    USS Buckley
    which was launched on 9 January 1943. The ships had
    General Electric
    steam
    turbo-electric transmission
    . The ships were
    prefabricated
    at various factories in the
    United States
    , and the units brought together in the shipyards, where they were welded together on the
    slipways
    .
    Uss Evarts DE 5 After
    anti-submarine warfare
    training and experiments with
    radar
    in
    Chesapeake Bay
    , Evarts began steady service as a convoy escort, during much of which she flew the flag of Commander, Escort Division 5 (CortDiv 5). After five voyages to
    Casablanca
    , she sailed from
    Norfolk, Virginia
    , on 22 April 1944 on her first run to
    Bizerte
    . Two days before reaching that port, her convoy came under heavy attack by enemy
    torpedo bombers
    , and Evarts joined in the protective
    anti-aircraft
    barrage which shot down many of the attackers.
    During the homeward bound passage of this same voyage, on 29 May, Evarts was detached from the convoy to aid the
    escort carrier
    Block Island
    and destroyer escort
    Barr
    , both of whom had been
    torpedoed
    by a
    German
    submarine
    . She arrived at the given position to find Block Island had sunk, but screened Barr, under tow, to safety at Casablanca. A second voyage to Bizerte was uneventful, as were the one to
    Palermo
    and the three to
    Oran
    which followed.
    Completing her convoy escort duties on 11 June 1945, Evarts acted as target in exercises with submarines at
    New London, Connecticut
    , until arriving at
    New York
    on 11 September. There she was decommissioned on 2 October 1945, and was scrapped starting on 12 July 1946.