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Somers-class destroyer
USSSomersDD381
USS Somers (DD-381)
Class overview
Name: Somers class destroyer
Builders: Federal Shipbuilding
Bath Iron Works
Operators: US flag 48 stars United States
Preceded by: Bagley-class destroyer
Succeeded by: Benham-class destroyer
Built: 1935–1939
In commission: 1937–1945
Completed: 5
Lost: 1
Retired: 4
General characteristics
Type: Destroyer
Displacement: 1,850 tons (standard)
2130 tons (full)
Length: 381 ft (116 m)
Beam: 36 ft 2 in (11.02 m)
Draught: 10 ft 4 in (3.15 m)
Propulsion: 4 Boilers
2 General Electric Turbines
52,000 horsepower
Speed: 36.0 knots
Complement: 16 Officers
278 Enlisted
Armament:
Notes:
  • Weapon configuration varied greatly from ship to ship during the war.
  • The Somers-class destroyer was a class of 1850-ton United States Navy destroyer based on the Porter-class. They were answers to the large destroyers that the Japanese navy was building at the time, and were initially intended to be leaders for destroyer flotillas. This class featured controversial (for the time) high-temperature air-encased boilers derived from the ones installed in the modernized New Mexico (BB-40). Despite the added weight, it permitted use of only a single smoke stack for the engines, allowing for a third centerline torpedo tube mount. Even so, they were still over-weight and top heavy.

    The first two ships were laid down at Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Company in Kearny, New Jersey in 1935, the following three in 1936 by Bath Iron Works Corporation of Bath, Maine.

    The ships were commissioned between 1937 and 1939 and served during World War II. Warrington foundered in a hurricane in the Caribbean in 1944. The others survived the war to be scrapped in 1946.

    Ships in class[]

    See also[]

    External links[]



    All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
    The original article can be found at Somers-class destroyer and the edit history here.
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