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  • |issued_by= [[United States Navy]] ...d injury and assist health care professionals in providing medical care to Navy people and their families. They may function as clinical or specialty techn
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  • '''The Sailor's Creed''' is a [[creed]] of the [[United States Navy]], originally developed for the promotion of personal excellence. ...result of this meeting at the Naval War College was the eight point ''The Navy Uniform'', and was later scaled down to a shorter version called The Sailor
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  • |issued_by= [[United States Navy]] ...d injury and assist health care professionals in providing medical care to Navy people and their families. They may function as clinical or specialty techn
    24 KB (3,595 words) - 22:09, 1 July 2010
  • ...dmark|name=USMCBarracksatBeirutAirport|display=inline,title}}<br/>[[United States Marine Corps]] [[barracks]], [[Beirut Airport]] ...s struck separate buildings housing [[Military of the United States|United States]] and [[Military of France|French military forces]]—members of the Multin
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  • '''Hooah''' ({{IPA-en|ˈhuːɑː|pron}}) is a [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] [[battle cry]] used<ref>[http://www.cavhooah.com/hooah.htm ...ce Combat Control Team|Combat Controllers]] or "[[Hooyah]]" among [[United States Air Force Pararescue|Pararescue]]<ref>http://usmilitary.about.com/od/joints
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  • ...cort]] in the [[United States Navy]], which served briefly in the [[United States Coast Guard]]. She was named for Pharmacist's Mate Third Class Kenneth W. D ...commission in reserve at San Diego 10 'April 1954. She was returned to the Navy 16 June 1954, and reclassified '''DER-389''', 7 December 1955. After conver
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  • ...oyer escort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] of the [[United States Navy]], named for [[Ensign]] [[Robert E. Brister]] (1920–1942). ...cessful trans-[[Atlantic]] escort crossings to [[Italy]] and five to the [[United Kingdom]]. On 8 June 1945 she departed [[New York City]] for the [[Pacific
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  • |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} ...|Edsall-class]] [[destroyer escort]] in the service of the [[United States Navy]]. She was named in honor of Lieutenant [[Joseph W. Finch, Jr.]], USNR.
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  • ...dsall''-class destroyer escort]], was the only ship of the [[United States Navy]] to be named for Aviation Machinist Mate First Class [[William Henry Lansi She was transferred to the Coast Guard in June 1952. Upon her return to the Navy in 1954 ''Lansing'' was converted to a radar picket escort ship and given t
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  • ...ER-400)''' was an [[Edsall class destroyer escort]] of the [[United States Navy]]. She was named for [[Joseph Hissem]]. ...anti-submarine and anti-aircraft training on the East Coast of the United States. The ship transported over 500 paratroopers in March 1945, taking them on b
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  • ...ecognition|posthumously awarded]] the [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]] for his actions during the [[Battle of the Co ...17 February 1944, [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[A. A. Hero]] [[United States Navy Reserve|USNR]], in command.
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  • ...395)''' is an {{Sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort}}, the first United States Navy ship so named. This ship was named for Ensign Walter Michael Willis (14 Jan ...the 6th. The destroyer escort underwent post-shakedown availability in the navy yard there over the ensuing week and sailed on 15 February for the Chesapea
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  • ...129)|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for Lieutenant (junior grade) [[Randolph M ''Holder'' decommissioned at [[New York Navy Yard]] 13 September 1944, and was struck from the [[Naval Vessel Register]]
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  • ...cort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for Ensign [[Herbert Hugo Menges]] (a nava ...le off the coast of [[Algiers]] en route to the [[East Coast of the United States|east coast of the U.S.]], was attacked by 30 [[Nazi Germany|German]] [[torp
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  • ...129)|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for Ensign Frederick Curtice Davis (a nava ..., during which her superlative and courageous performance was to win her a Navy Unit Commendation. After providing protection from [[submarine]]s and aircr
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  • |Ship country=United States ...cort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[United States Navy]] during World War II. Named for Rear Admiral Bradley Allen Fiske, she was
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  • ...'' was an {{sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort}} built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. Named for [[Ensign (rank)|Ensign]] [[Robert Lawr ...ander (United States)|Lieutenant Commander]] Kenneth C. Phillips, [[United States Coast Guard|USCG]], in command.
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  • ...provided destroyer escort service against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and convoys. ...arted with [[Task Force]] 64 escorting a convoy bound back to the [[United States]].
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  • ...provided destroyer escort protection against submarine and air attack for Navy vessels and convoys. *{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/h2/hammann-ii.htm}}
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  • ...provided destroyer escort protection against submarine and air attack for Navy vessels and convoys. ...s. Between 28 March 1944 and 7 June 1945, she escorted 10 convoys to the [[United Kingdom]] and, after June 1944, to [[France]].
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  • |Ship honours=4 [[battle stars]] plus a [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]].
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  • |Ship honours=3 Battle stars for [[World War II]] and [[Navy Unit Commendation]] ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. *{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/f1/farquhar-ii.htm}}
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...s were known to be moving westward for a final effort against the [[United States]],'' J. R. Y. Blakely'' again joined an [[escort carrier]] group, and with
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...nese attack on [[Pearl Harbor]], for which he was posthumously awarded the Navy [[Medal of Honor]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...e radio telephony|radio-telephony]] were of marked benefit not only to the Navy but to all seamen. He died 22 July 1932, at his home on [[Bermuda]].
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  • The '''USS ''Huse'' (DE-145)''' was named by the [[U.S. Navy]] in honor of Admiral [[Harry McLaren Pinckney Huse]], who died in 1942. ...[[antisubmarine]] patrol work off [[Gibraltar]] with ships of the [[Royal Navy]].
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  • *{{DANFS|http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/i1/inch.htm}} * [[List of United States Navy ships]]
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...sored by Mrs. Vestie Foster, the mother of three sons in the United States Navy; and commissioned at Orange, Lt. Alden J. Laborde, [[USNR]], in command.
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  • ...p honours=5 [[battle stars]] plus the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...ly with five [[battle stars]] and the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...Mate First Class [[Minor Butler Poole]] who was posthumously awarded the [[Navy Cross]] for extraordinary heroism and courageous devotion to duty while in
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. She was named in honor of [[Albert D. Sturtevant]] who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] posthumously during [[World War I]] when he, a pilot, was shot down
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. She was named in honor of [[Fred Kenneth Moore]] who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] for his brave actions when, at [[Pearl Harbor]] on 7 December 1941,
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. She was named in honor of [[United States Navy]] Chief Watertender and [[Croats|Croatian]] [[Peter Tomich]] who received t
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...[Shakedown (testing)|shakedown]] cruise along the East Coast of the United States and on 14 November joined a [[convoy]] and steamed as escort from [[Norfolk
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. She was named in honor of [[Rear Admiral (United States)|Rear Admiral]] [[John Drake Sloat]] (1781&ndash;1867). She was laid down
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...d in honor of Admiral [[Thomas Snowden]] (1857-1930) who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] during [[World War I]]. She was laid down on 7 December 1942 by [[
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...ber. The escorts picked up convoy GUS-24 there and headed for the [[United States]] on 15 December 1943 and arrived safely at New York on 3 January 1944.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...[[Charles Swasey]] who was wounded during an engagement with [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] forces near [[Donaldsville, Louisiana]], on 4 Octo
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |Ship fate=transferred to [[Mexican Navy]], 1 October 1973
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...e far-flung Navy, and ''Howard D. Crow'' recommissioned 6 July 1951 with a Navy crew. After shakedown training she reported to [[Key West, Florida]], as [
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. She was named in honor of [[Robert Lee Pettit]] who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] posthumously. She was laid down 6 February 1943 by the [[Brown Ship
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...daring rescue, and two other officers and six enlisted men received the [[Navy and Marine Corps Medal]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...nor of [[Edward Robert Sellstrom]], a Naval aviator, who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] for his superb marksmanship in shooting down attacking [[Empire of
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...o.org/hyperwar/USN/USN-Chron/| title = The official chronology of the U.S. Navy in World War II | chapter = Chapter V: 1943 | chapterurl = http://www.ibibl
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...aration for the assaults on southern France. After returning to the United States 16 July, the escort ship made one more cruise to Naples during the summer.
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  • ...recommissioned at Long Beach, Calif., 23 October 1956. She served in the Navy until she was transferred on 25 September 1971 to South Vietnam. The Vietn ...l on 29 April 1975, and was captured by North Vietnamese forces. The U.S. Navy wrote her off as “Transferred to Vietnam, 30 April 1975.” The communi
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...he convoy safely to Derry 26 April, and returned in convoy to the [[United States]] where she arrived New York 12 May. During the next year ''Joyce'' conduct
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war, she was converted to a [[radar picket]] ...rt mission to the [[Mediterranean]], and 10 crossings between the [[United States]] and the [[British Isles]]. On her third voyage, [[USS Gaudy (DE-764)]] an
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...Fleet]] at Orange, Texas. She was struck from the [[Naval Vessel Register|Navy List]] on 2 January 1971 and was sold for scrap on 22 August 1973.
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  • ...or Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war she was converted and served the Navy as a weather ship and then as a radar picket ship. ...nner’s Mate Third Class [[Harry James Lowe]], Jr., who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] posthumously for his brave actions in the [[Solomon Islands]]. The
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post war, she served in various capacities before ...d out with the latest electronic equipment, manned for the first time by a Navy crew and reclassified DER–322, ''Newell'' recommissioned at Long Beach 20
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. She returned home proudly at war’s end with thre ...ngs. In 1961 she was moved to [[Orange, Texas]]. She was struck from the [[Navy List]] on 2 January 1971 and sold for scrapping 30 January 1974.
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  • |Ship namesake=[[George Irvin Falgout]] (1922-1942), [[Navy Cross]] recipient |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. Post-war, she was loaned to the [[U.S. Coast Guard ...final Mediterranean cruise 31 August, ''Koiner'' commenced escort duty for United Kingdom-bound ships. From 20 September 1944 to 1 May 1945, the destroyer es
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  • ...air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. Post-war, she served the U.S. Navy in other tasks, including that of a [[radar picket]] ship. ...was [[torpedo]]ed and badly damaged. The ship's return trip to the United States was uneventful, and she arrived at [[New York]] on 11 May.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war, she provided [[radar picket]] duty servi ...oy Orestus Hale, Jr.]] who earned the [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]] for his valiant actions during the [[Battle o
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...named in honor of Lieutenant [[Martin H. Ray, Jr.]], who was awarded the [[Navy Cross]] posthumously for his heroic actions during the last stages of the [
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  • ...she performed other tasks with the [[U.S. Coast Guard]] and with the U.S. Navy as a [[radar picket]] ship. ...during the remainder of the war in Europe, escorted seven convoys to the [[United Kingdom]] and [[France]].
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  • ...vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war, she performed additional duties for the Navy, including those of a [[radar picket]] ship and a safety and support ship f ...oyd Jones Mills]] who was awarded the [[Distinguished Flying Cross (United States)|Distinguished Flying Cross]] posthumously for his brave actions in the [[A
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  • ...k for Navy [[Watercraft|vessels]] and [[convoys]]. Post-war she served the Navy as a [[radar picket]] ship. ...ander (United States)|Lieutenant Commander]] E. A. Coffin of the [[United States Coast Guard]] in command.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...]. From January 1945 to late May she escorted convoys between the [[United States]], [[France]], and [[Great Britain]]. That April, ''Richey'' rescued 32 men
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war she was called up again for duty, this ti Assigned to the vital duty of escorting [[convoys]] between the [[United States]] and the [[Mediterranean]], ''Calcaterra'' made eight round trips between
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war she continued an active life, serving wit ...July 1954, when the Coast Guard decommissioned her and returned her to the Navy.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...the [[Atlantic Reserve Fleet]]. On 2 April 1971 she was struck from the [[Navy list]], and, on 30 September 1974, she was sold for scrapping.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...s attacked numerous submarine contacts while cruising between the [[United States]] and the [[Azores]]; and, after a brief rest in [[North Africa]]n ports, t
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...returned to the [[United States]] with Convoy GUS (Gibraltar to the United States) 33 and arrived at [[New York City]] on 3 April.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...as decommissioned 21 June 1946. On 1 August 1973 she was struck from the [[Navy list]] and, on 19 November 1974, she was sunk as target off [[Florida]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...t [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]]. On 1 July 1972 she was struck from the [[Navy list]], and she was sold 1 November 1973, and scrapped.
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  • ...escort|''Edsall'' class]] [[destroyer escort]], the second [[United States Navy]] ship so named. ...31 December 1943; [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[R.W. Luther]] [[United States Navy Reserve|USNR]], in command.<ref>[http://www.desausa.org/images2/history_of_
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  • ...escort|''Edsall'' class]] [[destroyer escort]], the first [[United States Navy]] ship so named. This ship was named for [[Lieutenant Junior Grade]] [[Davi ...' was placed out of commission in reserve, attached to the [[United States Navy reserve fleets|Florida Group, U.S. Atlantic Fleet at Green Cove, Florida]],
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  • ...ted Casablanca with GUS-33 for the return voyage and put into the New York Navy Yard on the 23d for availability. ...'' next got underway on 12 April, with the other ships of CortDiv 45 and a Navy-manned destroyer escort division, to screen the 102 merchantmen of convoy U
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  • ...in the [[Mediterranean]] and the [[United Kingdom]] and back to the United States. Here is a list of the ETO convoys: ...exercises out of [[New London]]. During June 1944, she was assigned to the Navy Fleet Sound School.
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  • ...oyer escort|''Edsall''-class]] [[destroyer escort]] in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...26 October 1942. Private First Class Daniel was posthumously awarded the [[Navy Cross]] for his heroism in refusing to leave his gunnery station although w
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  • |Ship honours=7 [[battle stars]] and the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...oudly with seven battle stars and the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]].
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  • ...of [[destroyer escort]] in the [[United States Navy]]. She was the second Navy ship named in honor of Seaman [[Norman Edsall]] (1873–1899). *{{DANFS|http://history.navy.mil/danfs/e2/edsall-i.htm}}
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  • ...escort|''Edsall'' class]] [[destroyer escort]], the first [[United States Navy]] ship so named. This ship was named for Chief Water Tender [[Oscar V. Pete ...ssioned]] 29 September 1943, Lieutenant Commander Richard F. Rea, [[United States Coast Guard|USCG]], in command.
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  • |Ship fate=Escaped to the Philippines and transferred to their Navy, 5 April 1976 ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. ...ning off [[Bermuda]] until 31 October when she arrived at the [[Charleston Navy Yard]]. After [[antisubmarine]] warfare exercises while based at [[Quonset
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoy]]s. She was named in honor of [[Navy Cross]] winner [[Douglas Legate Howard]]. She was launched 24 January 1943
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  • ...-386)''' was an [[Edsall-class]] [[destroyer escort]] built for the [[U.S. Navy]] during [[World War II]]. On 23 December, 1943 she departed for the U. S. Navy Yard in Charleston, South Carolina for post-shakedown repairs.
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  • ...escort|''Edsall'' class]] [[destroyer escort]], the third [[United States Navy]] ship so named. This ship was named for [[Rear Admiral]] [[Charles Stewart ...sioned on 31 May 1943, [[Lieutenant Commander]] [[B. C. Turner]], [[United States Naval Reserve|USNR]], in command.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...ust a few days later on December 1 1942 and was posthumously awarded the [[Navy Cross]] for his valiant efforts during the [[Battle of Tassafaronga]].
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...1944, the hunter-killer group, aided by a [[Canadian]] [[corvette]] and [[United Kingdom|British]] aircraft, sank [[U-575]] on the 23rd of March. With some
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ''J. Richard Ward'' underwent modernization at [[Boston Navy Yard]] preparatory to transfer to the Pacific Fleet. She sailed 28 June 194
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  • {{For|United States Navy ships named ''Willard Keith''|USS Willard Keith}} ...E-241)''' was an {{sclass|Edsall|destroyer escort}} of the [[United States Navy]] named in honor of Ellis Judson Keith, Jr., who was killed in action on 11
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. ...e from [[New York]] before undergoing repairs and upkeep at the [[New York Navy Yard]] in early September.
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  • ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]]. Post-war she was assigned additional duties, inclu ...[Bizerte]], [[Tunisia]]. She then escorted a return convoy to the [[United States]], subsequently escorting two more convoys to Bizerte.
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  • |Ship honours=3 Battle Stars plus the [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...vided destroyer escort protection against [[submarine]] and air attack for Navy vessels and [[convoys]].
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  • |Ship honours=5 [[battle stars]] and a [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]] ...udly with five [[battle stars]] and a [[Presidential Unit Citation (United States)|Presidential Unit Citation]].
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  • ...nam}}<br>{{navy|Philippines}}<br>{{navy|Tunisia}}<br>{{navy|Vietnam}}<br>{{navy|Mexico}} ...n which all the ships originally ordered were completed as [[United States Navy]] Destroyer Escorts.<ref>U.S. Destroyers, an illustrated design history by
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  • {{otheruses4|the United States Navy ship|other meanings|Chincoteague}} |Ship caption=USS ''Chincoteague'' (AVP-24) off the [[United States West Coast]] in mid-1945 after an [[wikt:overhaul|overhaul]].
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  • |Ship country=United States ...Tham Ngu Lao'' (HQ-15)]] 1972-1975<br/>Has served as [[Vietnamese People's Navy]] patrol vessel [[PRVSN Pham Ngu Lao (HQ-01)|PRVSN ''Pham Ngu Lao'' (HQ-01)
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  • |Ship struck=September 26, 1966 from [[Navy List]] ...2)|RVNS ''Tran Quang Khai'' (HQ-02)]] 1971-1975<br/>Served as [[Philippine Navy]] patrol vessel [[BRP Diego Silang (PF-9)|BRP ''Diego Silang'' (PF-9)]] 197
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Loaned to [[United States Coast Guard]] 16 September 1948<br/>Permanently transferred to Coast Guard
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  • ...oan'' (HQ-06)]] 1971-1975<br/>Cannibalized for spare parts by [[Philippine Navy]] without entering service '''USS ''Cook Inlet'' (AVP-36)''' was a [[United States Navy]] [[Barnegat class small seaplane tender|''Barnegat''-class]] small [[seapl
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  • ...lloch'' (WAVP-386)]], later WHEC-386, 1946-1972<br/>Served as [[Philippine Navy]] [[frigate]] [[BRP Gregorio del Pilar (PF-8)|BRP ''Gregorio del Pilar'' (P ...</ref> was a [[South Vietnam]]ese [[frigate]] of the [[Republic of Vietnam Navy]] in commission from 1972 to 1975. She and her six sister ships were the la
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Transferred to [[United States Coast Guard]] 27 May 1946
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  • ...ibalized for spare parts in Philippines without ever entering [[Philippine Navy]] service '''USS ''Yakutat'' (AVP-32)''' was a [[United States Navy]] [[Barnegat class small seaplane tender|''Barnegat''-class]] small [[seapl
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • |Ship builder=[[Puget Sound Navy Yard]], [[Bremerton, Washington|Bremerton]], [[Washington (state)|Washingto ...p fate=Loaned to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 19 April 1949<br/>Returned to [[U.S. Navy]] March 1969<br/>Sunk as target 15 May 1969
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  • ...WHEC-372) sometime between the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships and her [[Ship d |Ship country=United States
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  • ...''Humboldt'' (AVP-21) on 23 August 1943 after modification at the [[Boston Navy Yard]], during which she received a third 5-[[inch]] (127-[[millimeter]]) 3 |Ship flag={{USN flag|1945}} [[Image:US_Naval Jack 46 stars.svg|48px|Union Navy Jack]]
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • ...time between 1949 and the U.S. Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Loaned to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 4 May 1949<br/>Returned to U.S. Navy 2 September 1967<br/>Sunk as target 9 January 1968
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  • ...E-377) sometime before the Coast Guard{{'}}s 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship flag={{USN flag|1945}} [[Image:US_Naval Jack 46 stars.svg|48px|Union Navy Jack]] |Ship struck=26 September 1966 (from [[Navy List]])
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  • ...sometime between 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship notes=Served as U.S. [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|Coast Guard cutter]] [[USCGC Half Moon (WAVP-378)|USCGC
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  • |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} ...to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 14 September 1948<br/>Permanently transferred from Navy to Coast Guard 26 September 1966
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  • ...U.S. Coast Guard]] 14 September 1948<br/>Permanently transferred from U.S. Navy to Coast Guard 26 September 1966<br/>Sunk as [[artificial reef]] after deco |Ship notes=Served as [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|Coast Guard cutter]] [[USCGC Unimak (WAVP-379)|USCGC ''U
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  • ...etime between 1949 and the Coast Guard{{'s}} 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships.. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Loaned to [[United States Coast Guard]] 17 September 1948<br/>Transferred outright to Coast Guard 26
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  • ...ommissioning]] in 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] marking on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship builder=[[Puget Sound Navy Yard]], [[Bremerton, Washington|Bremerton]], [[Washington (state)|Washingto ...e=Transferred to [[U.S. Coast Guard]] 10 July 1946<br/>Transferred to U.S. Navy and sunk as target 1968
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  • ..., WAGW-387) sometime after the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Transferred to [[United States Coast Guard]] 27 May 1946
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}}
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  • ...sometime between 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing stripe"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • ...le Rock'' (AVP-35)]] 1944-1946<br/>Served as [[U.S. Coast Guard]] [[United States Coast Guard Cutter|cutter]] [[USCGC Castle Rock (WAVP-383)|USCGC ''Castle R ...ring service. She her other three sister ships were the largest Philippine Navy ships of their time.
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  • ...sometime between 1949 and the Coast Guard's 1967 adoption of the [[United States Coast Guard#Symbols|"racing strip"]] markings on its ships. |Ship country=United States
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  • |Ship fate=Returned to the US Navy, 19 December 1951 |Ship fate=Turned over to the [[United States Coast Guard]]
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  • |Ship country=US Navy ...| author = [[Naval History & Heritage Command]] | url = http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/w1/wainwright-i.htm | title = Wainwright | short = on | accessdat
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  • |Ship country=US Navy ...| author = [[Naval History & Heritage Command]] | url = http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/p10/porter-ii.htm | title = Porter | short = on | accessdate = 23
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship namesake=Named after navy Captain [[John Shaw (navy)|John Shaw]].
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  • '''USS ''Big Horn'' (AO-45/IX-207)''' was a [[Q-ship]] of the [[United States Navy]] named for the [[Bighorn River]] of [[Wyoming]] and [[Montana]]. ...& Drydock Corp. and operated by the Gulf Oil Corporation. Acquired by the Navy on 31 March 1942, she was renamed ''Big Horn'' and given the [[hull designa
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  • |Ship complement=US Navy 282; US Coast Guard 16 officers, 8 CPOs, 164 enlisted men, 1 Public Health ...(AK-123)''' was an {{sclass|Crater|cargo ship}} commissioned by the [[U.S. Navy]] for service in [[World War II]]. She was responsible for delivering troop
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  • ...icade'' (ACM-3)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...West Virginia]], by the Marietta Manufacturing Co. She was acquired by the Navy on 7 April 1944, renamed ''Barricade'', and commissioned the same day, Lt.
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  • ...stion'' (ACM-6)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...Virginia]], by the Marietta Manufacturing Co. — and was acquired by the Navy from the [[U.S. Army]] on 4 January 1945; renamed ''Bastion''; converted to
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  • |Ship builder=United Engineering Co., [[San Francisco]], [[California]] |Ship fate= Loaned to the [[United States Coast Guard]], 30 September 1980
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  • |Ship flag={{USN flag|2004}} {{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} |Ship fate=On loan to the United States Coast Guard
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  • |Ship flag= [[Image:US_Naval Jack 46 stars.svg|48px|Union Navy Jack]] {{USN flag|1942}} |Ship acquired= by the Navy in 1941
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] ([[United States Navy|Navy]]) |Ship fate=Transferred to <br/>[[United States Coast Guard]]
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  • |Ship flag= [[Image:US_Naval Jack 46 stars.svg|48px|Union Navy Jack]] {{USN flag|1942}} ...onomoy'' (AG-40)''' was a commercial [[cargo ship]] acquired by the [[U.S. Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She was outfitted with guns and [[depth charge]]
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  • ...uctor'' (ACM-7)''' was a {{sclass|Chimo|minelayer}} in the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...45; renamed ''Obstructor'', 19 January 1945; converted at the [[Charleston Navy Yard]]; and commissioned 1 April 1945, Lt. Sammie Smith in command.
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  • |Ship flag= [[Image:US_Naval Jack 46 stars.svg|48px|Union Navy Jack]] {{USN flag|1899}} |Ship acquired= by the USS Navy, 29 December 1941
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] |Ship fate=Transferred to the [[United States Coast Guard]]
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  • ...p|''Diver''-class]] [[rescue and salvage ship]] commissioned by the [[U.S. Navy]] for service in [[World War II]]. She was responsible for coming to the ai ...ry 1960 ''Escape'' got underway to assist in [[Project Mercury]], a United States space-flight program. She continued to give essential support to the fleet
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |Ship fate= Transferred to [[Mexican Navy]], 24 November 1947
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  • ...suited to ocean-station duty. In fact, an assessment made by the [[United States Coast Guard|Coast Guard]] on the suitability of these vessels for Coast Gua [[Category:Seaplane tenders of the United States Navy]]
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  • ...n_pablo.htm) and "Associated Ship Building, Inc.," (see http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/r8/rockaway.htm).</ref> [[Seattle, Washington]] (4 ships) The '''''Barnegat'' class''' was a large class of [[United States Navy]] small [[seaplane tender]]s built during [[World War II]]. Thirty were com
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Pacific Fleet|US Pacific Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1943-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1943-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |partof=[[United States Fleet Forces Command|US Atlantic Fleet]] (1944-1945)
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} ...aving been returned to U.S. custody. Because of the [[Cold War]], the U.S. Navy was unaware of this fate and the vessel remained on the American [[Naval Ve
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  • |Ship country=[[United States]] |Ship flag={{shipboxflag|United States|coast guard}} {{USN flag|1967}}
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  • ...(PCH-1)''' was a ''High Point''-class patrol craft of the [[United States Navy]], and was launched August 17, 1962 by [[J. M. Martinac Shipbuilding Corpor ...raft designed to evaluate the performance of this kind of craft for the US Navy. She has three submerged foils containing propulsion nacelles and propeller
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  • |Ship country=United States ...sides. The ''Tucumcari'' was one of two prototype boats contracted by the Navy for the purpose of evaluating the latest hydrofoil technology. The second b
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  • |Ship country=United States |Ship fate=Loaned to [[Turkish Navy]] 28 February 1973<br />Sold to [[Turkey]] June 1987<br />Deleted 2000
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  • ...GM-84/PG-84)''' was an {{sclass|Asheville|gunboat}} acquired by the [[U.S. Navy]] for the task of high speed patrolling in shallow waterways. The third ship to be named ''Asheville'' by the Navy, ''PGM-84'' was laid down on 15 April 1964 at [[Tacoma, Washington]], by th
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  • ...GM-85/PG-85)''' was an {{sclass|Asheville|gunboat}} acquired by the [[U.S. Navy]] for the task of high speed patrolling in shallow waterways. ''Gallup'' was decommissioned 31 January 1977 and struck from the [[Navy List]] on 9 October 1984. She was eventually scrapped in [[2007]].
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  • ...//www.hazegray.org/worldnav/usa/decom.htm | title = World Navies Today: US Navy Vessels Decommissioned Since 1980 | date = 2003-03-10 | publisher = Haze Gr ...ictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships]] | publisher = [[United States Navy]] }}</ref> The keel of ''Tacoma'' was laid 24 July 1967 at the Tacoma Boatb
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  • ...4)''' was an {{sclass|Asheville|gunboat}} of the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]] and the second ship to be named [[Chehalis]]. ''Chehalis'' was launched 8 *[http://www.nvr.navy.mil/nvrships/details/PG94.htm Naval Vessel Register - PG-94]
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  • ...GM-89/PG-89)''' was an {{sclass|Asheville|gunboat}} acquired by the [[U.S. Navy]] for the task of high speed patrolling in shallow waterways. The second ship to be named ''Marathon'' by the Navy, ''PGM-89'', a motor [[gunboat]], was laid down 21 June 1966 by Tacoma Boat
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} ...''' was a {{sclass|PC-461|submarine chaser}} built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She was later renamed '''''Patchogue'' (PC-586)'
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} ...''' was a {{sclass|PC-461|submarine chaser}} built for the [[United States Navy]] during [[World War II]]. She was later renamed '''''Antigo'' (PC-470)'''
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |Ship fate= 19 May 1954, transferred to [[Republic of China Navy]]
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  • |Ship country={{nowrap|United States}} |Ship fate=Transferred to [[Indonesian Navy]], 25 October 1958
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  • ...inch Armstrong gun|110-pounder]] (7 inches /180 mm) heavy gun. The [[Royal Navy]] used all these guns and all except the 20-pounder saw service in [[New Ze ...ught iron]] coils which kept the central tube under compression<ref>Holley states that [[Daniel Treadwell]] first patented the concept of a central steel tub
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  • ...e end of the war, 4 examples of this gun were captured to sent to [[United States Military Academy|West Point]]. The West Point Museum retained one gun. Ot ...ne Gun, Volume 1, George M. Chinn, [[Bureau of Ordnance]], [[United States Navy]], 1951, No ISBN.
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  • |origin= [[United Kingdom]] |used_by=[[Imperial Japanese Navy]]<br>{{UK}}
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • |used_by=[[United States Navy]]<br>[[Royal Hellenic Navy]] ...ufacturer=[[Washington Navy Yard|U.S. Naval Gun Factory]]<ref name=history.navy.mil/>
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  • ...US [[naval gun]] designed in 1910 as the main armament for the [[Argentine Navy]]’s dreadnought [[battleship]]s of the ''[[Rivadavia class battleship|Riv The previous 12" gun, manufactured for the U.S. Navy, was the Mark 7 version, which had been designed and installed in the 1912
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • |origin=United States |used_by=[[United States Navy]]
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  • The '''203mm/50 Modèle 1924''' was a medium [[naval gun]] of the [[French Navy]]. *[[8"/55 caliber gun]] United States equivalent
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  • ...ame=navweaps>{{cite web | last = DiGiulian | first = Tony | title = United States of America 12"/50 Mark 8 | url = http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNUS_12-50 ...vweaps/><ref>{{cite web | last = DiGiulian | first = Tony | title = United States of America 16"/50 (40.6 cm) Mark 7 | url = http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/
    4 KB (633 words) - 22:19, 1 July 2010
  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • The '''16"/50 caliber Mark 7 - United States Naval Gun''' is the main armament of the [[Iowa class battleship|''Iowa''-c ...url = http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNUS_16-50_mk7.htm | title = United States of America 16"/50 (40.6 cm) Mark 7 | accessdate = 2007-02-25 | year = 2006
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  • ...nd was the most common light anti-aircraft cannon used by the German army, navy and air force.]] --> ...http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/arm/arm27.htm National Museum of the United States Air Force]-->
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= US Navy
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} |used_by= [[US Navy]]
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  • |used_by=<small>{{flagicon|United States|size=22px}} United States<br>{{UK}}<br>{{flagicon|Canada|size=22px}} Canada ...ted States]] [[destroyers]] through [[World War I]] and the 1920s. United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile {{convert|4|in|c
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  • |origin= United States ...Navy, South Vietnamese Navy, and every navy that bought surplus WWII, U.S. Navy warships
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= US Navy, US Coast Guard, Royal Navy
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= US Navy and Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force.
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= US Navy and other navies.
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  • |origin= [[United States]] ...ww.navy.mil/navydata/fact_display.asp?cid=2100&tid=575&ct=2 | title=The US Navy -- Fact File | date=2008-01-15}}</ref>
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  • The 57 Mk3 has been adopted by the [[United States Navy]] and [[United States Coast Guard]] as the [[Mk 110 57 mm gun]].
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  • |used_by=<small>{{flagicon|United States|size=22px}} United States ...ight cruiser]]s and [[submarine]] cruisers built during the 1920s. United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile 6 inches (15 cm)
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  • ...n armament for all medium and large class warships built for the [[Italian Navy]] in that decade. Currently, the gun remains in service with Italy's [[Cass ...tes Navy]] (USN) warships from that war also. In the mid-1950s the Italian Navy began planning and funding a program of modernization, in which many of tho
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  • |used_by=[[United States Navy]] |manufacturer=[[United Defense|FMC]]
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  • |used_by=<small>{{flagicon|United States|size=22px}} United States ...tes Navy]] [[heavy cruiser]]s and two early [[aircraft carriers]]. United States naval gun terminology indicates the gun fired a projectile 8 inches (20 cm)
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  • ...b | title=BAE Systems Delivers First Piece of Production Hardware for U.S. Navy's Advanced Gun System | publisher=BAE Systems | year=2010 | url=http://www. ...y of vessels equipped with the weapon, especially in areas in which the US Navy exercises absolute sea supremacy.
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  • ...''Pom-Poms'']] from [[Vickers]] as anti-aircraft guns in 1922. However the Navy eventually soured on the Pom-Pom and approached Bofors about the developmen ...lly reluctant, as the Swedish Navy was a fairly small market, but when the Navy agreed to pay for the development of a prototype, a contract was signed in
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  • |variants=m/45, m/45B, m/45C, m/45D, m/45S, Port Said, Akaba, US Navy modification (no official designation) with silencer. [[Smith & Wesson]] made an unlicensed close copy on the request of the US Navy, designated the [[Smith & Wesson M76]];<ref>[http://world.guns.ru/smg/smg85
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  • ...me [[anti-tank]] role as the [[United States Army|US Army]] [[Bazooka]], [[United Kingdom|British]] [[PIAT]] and [[Germany|German]] [[Panzerschreck]]. Unlike ...itish Special Air Service]], [[United States Special Forces]] and [[United States Army Rangers]] use M3s in the [[bunker]]-busting and anti-vehicle roles, wh
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  • A '''close-in weapon system (CIWS)''' is a [[Navy|naval]] shipboard [[point-defense]] weapon for detecting and destroying inc * [[United States]] [[Raytheon]] [[Phalanx CIWS|Phalanx]] system
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  • |origin= United States |used_by= United States Navy
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  • ...characteristic.<ref name="tucker">{{cite book|title=Arming the Fleet, U.S. Navy Ordnance in the Muzzle-loading Era|last=Tucker|first=Spencer|date=1989|publ ...l in a reasonably flat trajectory {{Harv |Gardiner|1992| p=154}}. The U.S. Navy followed suit adopting the 8-inch, 63 cwt. Paixhans-style [[Shell (projecti
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  • |origin={{flagcountry|United States}} ...[[Gatling gun]]-style rotary cannon. The GAU-12/U is used by the [[United States]], Italy and Spain, which mount the weapon in their fighter jets such as th
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  • ...ref name=Greeley1872>{{cite book |title=The Great Industries of the United States |last=Greeley |first=Horace |authorlink=Horace Greeley |coauthors=Leon Case ...Peru-Chile [[War of the Pacific]]. Gatling guns were used by the Peruvian navy and army, especially in the "Battle of Tacna" (May 1880) and the "Battle of
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  • The '''Hedgehog''' was an [[anti-submarine weapon]] developed by the [[Royal Navy]] during [[World War II]], that was deployed on [[convoy]] escort [[warship ...ht, Gerhard. ''Weyer's Warship of the World 1969''. (Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Institute Press, 1969), pp.325-328 & 340</ref>
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  • |origin={{flagcountry|United Kingdom}} |used_by=United Kingdom, [[Commonwealth of Nations|Commonwealth]] & [[United States]]
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  • | origin = [[United States]] #*Used by the U. S. Navy in their Mk38 naval weapon system.
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  • |origin= {{flag|United States}} ...e War]] <br>[[Falklands War]] <br>[[South African Border War]]<br>[[United States invasion of Panama]] <br>[[Gulf War]] <br>[[Somali Civil War]] <br>[[Operat
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  • |origin= [[United States]] |used_by=[[United States]]
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  • |origin= [[United States]] |used_by= [[United States]]/[[NATO]]
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  • The Bliss-Leavitt '''Mark 13 torpedo''' was the [[U.S. Navy]]'s most common [[aerial torpedo]] of [[World War II]]. It was designed wit #{{Note|afmuseum}} National Museum of the United States Air Force. [http://web.archive.org/web/20060709192711/http://www.wpafb.af.m
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  • |origin= [[United States]] The '''Mark 14 torpedo''' was the [[United States Navy]]'s standard submarine-launched anti-ship [[torpedo]] of [[World War II]].
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  • ...//www.geocities.com/Pentagon/1592/ustorp1.htm Milford, Frederick J. "U. S. Navy Torpedoes. Part One: Torpedoes through the thirties."] The Submarine Review ...//www.geocities.com/Pentagon/1592/ustorp2.htm Milford, Frederick J. "U. S. Navy Torpedoes. Part Two: The great torpedo scandal, 1941-43."] ''The Submarine
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  • Each gun (called a "rifle" in the Navy) could hurl a {{convert|150|lb|sing=on}} projectile {{convert|13|mi}} again [[Category:Naval weapons of the United States]]
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  • The '''Mark 18 torpedo''' was an electric torpedo used by the [[US Navy]] during [[World War II]]. ...st J. King]], to prod BuOrd into building an electric torpedo for the U.S. Navy's own submarines. BuOrd told NTS to get the Mark 2 in shape, or drop it in
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  • ...arines out of a total of 204 fired. The torpedo was also supplied to the [[United Kingdom|British]] and [[Canada|Canadian]] forces. The US Navy began studies into an air dropped anti-submarine torpedo in the autumn of 1
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  • ...ce submarines, the '''Mark 46 [[torpedo]]''' is the backbone of the [[U.S. Navy]]'s lightweight [[Anti-submarine warfare|ASW]] torpedo inventory, and is th ...mas, Vincent C. ''The Almanac of Seapower 1987'' Navy League of the United States (1987) ISBN 0-9610724-8-2 pp.190-191</ref>
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  • | origin = [[United States]] ...Switzerland|Swiss Army]], [[Royal Navy]], [[United States Navy]], [[United States Marine Corps]]
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  • | origin = {{Flagcountry|United States}} | used_by = US Navy
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  • |origin= {{Flag|United States}} [[Image:US Navy 030317-D-3645W-057 U.S. Navy reservists assigned to Naval Construction Force Support Unit Three and Nava
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  • | origin = {{Flagcountry|United States}} | used_by = [[US Navy]]
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  • ...ing the [[World War II|Second World War]] by the [[United States Navy|U.S. Navy]]{{Fact|date=October 2008}} and the [[U.S. Coast Guard]].<ref name=uscg> ...begun in 1941 as a replacement for ''[[Hedgehog (weapon)|Hedgehog]]'', a [[United Kingdom|British]]-made projector, which was the first ahead-throwing [[anti
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  • ...n as the [[MG FF]], firing 20x80RB ammunition. And the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], after evaluating all three guns, ordered developments of the FF and FFL ...then later the [[Fall of France]] in June 1940 only 109 guns reached the [[United Kingdom]]. All Oerlikon guns imported from Switzerland in 1940 were mounted
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  • ;{{SIN}} : [[Republic of Singapore Navy]] *[[Oaxaca class]] [[OPV (naval)|Offshore Patrol Vessel]](Mexican Navy)
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  • The gun was invented by [[Robert Parker Parrott]], a [[United States Military Academy|West Point]] graduate. He resigned from the service in 183 ...came in two bore sizes: 2.9 inch (74 mm) and 3.0-in (76 mm). [[Confederate States Army|Confederate]] forces used both bore sizes during the war, which added
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  • | origin = United States ...isplay.asp?cid=2100&tid=800&ct=2 |title=The US Navy - Fact File |publisher=Navy.mil |date=2009-11-09 |accessdate=2010-04-13}}</ref>
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  • |origin= [[United Kingdom]] ...strong Whitworth]], [[Elswick, Tyne and Wear|Elswick]] and used on [[Royal Navy]] warships. In British service, "12 pounder" was a rounded reference to the
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  • ...={{flagicon|United Kingdom}} [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|United Kingdom]] |used_by=[[Royal Navy]]
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  • |origin= {{flag|United Kingdom}} ...War Memorial Committee|accessdate=2008-08-28}}</ref>, was an early 37 mm [[United Kingdom|British]] [[autocannon]]. It was used by several countries initiall
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  • | used_by = Royal Navy ...ch Mark I gun''' was the heaviest [[dual-purpose gun]] used by the [[Royal Navy]] . Although it was a less than completely successful design<ref>[http://ww
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  • |origin= [[United Kingdom]]<br>license-produced in [[Japan]] |used_by=[[Royal Navy]]<br>[[Imperial Japanese Navy]]<br>{{CHL}}<br>{{ITA}}<br>{{ARG}}
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  • |origin= [[United Kingdom]] |used_by=[[Royal Navy]]<br>Australian Colonies
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  • ...re powerful version with the same purpose. According to the United States Navy, <blockquote> ...ge and kill assessment functions<ref>[[U.S. Navy]] Fact File ''[http://www.navy.mil/navydata/fact_display.asp?cid=2100&tid=800&ct=2 Phalanx Close-In Weapon
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  • ...DNANCE AND GUNNERY, VOLUME 2 FIRE CONTROL, NAVPERS 10798-A|publisher =U.S. Navy, Bureau of Naval Personnel|date =1958 edition|location =Washington 25, D.C. *The director system of fire control was pioneered by British [[Royal Navy]] in 1912. All guns on a single ship were laid from a central position plac
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  • ...914 long bayonet. The second minor bayonet was the very long bladed m/1915 navy bayonet with the edge facing upwards. ...re unknown. Possibly only 100 or less. Several have shown up in the United States and one known in the Netherlands.
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  • ...e Great All-Out Battle" tactic of luring [[United States of America|United States]] [[battleships]] into a major action at sea.<ref>
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  • |used_by= [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] The '''Type 91''' was an [[aerial torpedo]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] which was designed to be launched from an aircraft. It was used in the [[
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  • ...rpedo, recovered from Point Cruz, [[Guadalcanal]], on display outside U.S. Navy headquarters in [[Washington, D.C.]], during [[World War II]]. | used_by = {{navy|Empire of Japan}}
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  • * NAC is undergoing [[clinical trial]]s in the [[United States]] for the treatment of [[obsessive-compulsive disorder]].<ref>[http://clini ...y Science Conference, Orlando, Florida. AD Number: ADA433105</ref> and US Navy <ref>{{citation needed|date=December 2008}}</ref>
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  • ...pread in the [[United States]], the [[Food and Drug Administration (United States)|U.S. Food and Drug Administration]] (FDA) has not approved albendazole for ...albendazole distributed in Africa <!-- secondary: with the help of the US Navy-->]]
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  • :''For the Royal Navy ships, see [[HMS Bryony|HMS ''Bryony'']].'' The [[Royal Navy]] named two ships [[HMS Bryony|HMS ''Bryony'']] after the plant.
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  • ..., including Australia, Canada, France, New Zealand, Poland, and the United States. Following the end of the conflict, the Oxford continued to achieve export ...June 1938, p. 631.</ref> On 19 June 1937, the first prototype Oxford, ''[[United Kingdom military aircraft serials|L4534]]'', conducted its [[maiden flight|
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  • #Army and Navy - 10 ...ast 5% were from the rest of the world which included 12 from the [[United States]], 9 from [[Germany]], and 6 from [[New Zealand]].
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  • ...ouvier's Law Dictionary''' is a book with a long tradition in the [[United States]] legal community. The first edition was written by [[John Bouvier]]. ...lmost wholly from customs, court decisions, and [[statute]]s of the United States.
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  • ...in preserving wooden vessels against rot. The largest user was the [[Royal Navy]]. Demand for tar declined with the advent of iron and steel ships. ...to heal "even those cut in twain through their midriff". A Finnish proverb states that ''if [[sauna]], [[vodka]] and tar won't help, the disease is fatal.''.
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  • ...'t'' is in Celsius and ''d'' is the specific gravity at 15 °C.<ref>United States Bureau of Standards, "Thermal Properties of Petroleum Products". Miscellan ...bon dioxide and other gases or chemicals into the reservoir. In the United States, primary production methods account for less than 40% of the oil produced o
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  • ...ons exposed to DU."<ref name="Hindin" /> The [[World Health Organization]] states that no consistent risk of reproductive, developmental, or carcinogenic ef ...e/faq16.cfm How much depleted uranium hexafluoride is stored in the United States]</ref><ref>[http://web.ead.anl.gov/uranium/documents/index.cfm Depleted UF<
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  • ...sing Liquids and Superinsulation Aerogel Materials|journal=[[United States Navy Experimental Diving Unit]] Technical Report|volume=NEDU-05-02|year=2005|url
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  • ...sumers of pulses. [[Canada]], [[Myanmar]], [[Australia]] and the [[United States]] are significant exporters, and are India's most significant suppliers, in #* [[Kidney bean]], [[haricot bean]], [[pinto bean]], [[navy bean]] (''Phaseolus vulgaris'')
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  • ...leloading]] rifles and pistols in FFFG granulation size. [[Quarter (United States coin)|Coin]] (diameter 24 mm) for comparison.]] ...ore, short pistols and most commonly for priming [[flintlock]]s). In the [[United Kingdom]], the gunpowder grains are categorised by mesh size: the BSS [[Mes
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  • ...ose communities are concentrated in the center and south of the country in states such as [[Mexico State]], [[Oaxaca]] and [[Chiapas]]. The textile industry ...ic fragments in Mexico have been found in the arid north of the country in states such as [[Coahuila]], [[Chihuahua]] and [[Durango]] and date to approximate
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  • In the [[United States|U.S.]], entry into permit-required confined spaces must comply with regulat ...confined space without the use of a [[respirator]]. In the [[United States Navy]], that person is the designated shipboard [[gas-free engineer]]. Certifica
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  • .... These concerns have led to an inquiry in the US [[Congress of the United States|congress]].<ref>{{cite journal In the [[United States|U.S.]], guidance for the use of protective eyewear, and other elements of s
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  • ...add the street address-->[[Fairfax,_VA|Fairfax, Virginia]] <br /> [[United States|U.S.]] The U.S. Navy's [[Human Factors Analysis and Classification System]] (HFACS) was selected
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  • ...s acronym is NAVOSH, and it is responsible for safety practices within the Navy. ...nt SECNAV for Safety in order to enhance the warfighting capability of the Navy and Marine Corps, preserve resources and improve combat readiness by preven
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  • ===United States=== ...ty rules and navigation aids, under the Aeronautics Branch of the [[United States Department of Commerce|Department of Commerce]].
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  • '''Porter-Cable''' is an [[United States|American]] company that manufactures [[power tools]]. The company is known [[File:US Navy 090718-N-4928B-058 Hospital Corpsman 1st Class Edward Hourican, assigned to
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  • location = [[Moline, Illinois]], [[United States|U.S.]]<ref>[http://www.deere.com/en_US/deerecom/contactus/index.html Deere ...lly known by its brand name '''John Deere''' ({{nyse|DE}}), is an [[United States|American]] [[corporation]] based in [[Moline, Illinois]], and the leading m
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  • ...nea]]; [[German battleship Bismarck]] as well as two ships of the Imperial Navy (''[[Kaiserliche Marine]]''); [[Bismarck, North Dakota]] ...[[George IV of the United Kingdom|King George IV]] and [[William IV of the United Kingdom|King William IV]]), commander of British forces in [[City of Halifa
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  • This is a list of places in the [[United States|United States of America]] which are named after people. The etymology is generally refer ...engineer, soldier, and topographer with the United States [[Dragoon#United States|Dragoons]])
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  • ...ries, but remain legal under federal law in the USA and Canada. Several US states have made it illegal under state law. ; United Kingdom: Spice was legal in the United Kingdom until December 2009, when it was classified as a [[Class B drug#Cla
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  • ...yrup is still available in small quantities without a prescription in some states, but requires a signature and ID to purchase, similar to modern rules for s
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  • {{sync|List of terrorist incidents in the United States}} {{sync|List of assassinated people#United States}}
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  • ...|TNT]] on the ''Johnson Barge No.17'', all awaiting eventual shipment to [[United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland|Britain]] and [[France]]. Jersey City' [[Category:1916 in the United States]]
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  • |image = United States Capitol - west front.jpg |title = 1983 United States Senate bombing
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  • | location = [[The Dalles, Oregon|The Dalles]], [[Oregon]], United States ...e first, and single largest [[bioterrorism|bioterrorist]] attack in United States history.<ref name="healthexperts" /><ref name="lewis">{{cite web | last =Le
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  • ...Texas Governor]] [[John Connally]] in the [[Presidential state car (United States)|presidential limousine]], minutes before his assassination. ...]''', the [[list of US Presidents|thirty-fifth]] [[President of the United States]], took place on Friday, November&nbsp;22, 1963, in [[Dallas]], [[Texas]],
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  • .... [[Image:US Customs and Border Protection officers.jpg|thumb|250px|United States Customs and Border Protection officers]] | author = United Nations Special Rapporteur on extrajudicial executions
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  • |publisher=[[United Nations]] *'''1989'''. [[United States of America|United States]]: premeditated, politically motivated violence perpetrated against noncomb
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  • ...Thousands of others fled to Belgium, England, Italy, Spain and the United States. In 1872, stringent laws were passed that ruled out all possibilities of or ...tion with him, his registered membership in the [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican Party]], and never having belonged to an anarchist organization
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  • |international = [[Saudi Arabia]], [[Pakistan]], [[United Arab Emirates]] (before [[September 11 attacks|11 September attacks]]) ...ecognition]] from only three states: Pakistan, [[Saudi Arabia]], and the [[United Arab Emirates]]. It has regained some amount of political control and accep
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  • ...M.D.,''' is an American medical doctor and Captain in the [[United States Navy]]. Martin is a recognized expert in the fields of [[infectious diseases]] In 2002, the [[United States Secretary of the Navy]] conferred the [[Legion of Merit]] Award upon Martin for his pivotal role
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  • ...f [[Vice Admiral]] [[Albert T. Church]], an officer in the [[United States Navy]]. Church was then the Naval [[Inspector General]]. ...vestigate the interrogation and incarceration of detainees in the [[United States]] "[[war on terror]]", in [[Afghanistan]], [[Iraq]] and [[Guantanamo Bay de
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  • {{wikisource|Declaration of Stephen Abraham, Lieutenant Colonel, United States Army Reserve, June 14th, 2007}} ...at Guantanamo Attributable to Senior Defense Officials |publisher=[[United States Department of Defense]] |date=March 6, 2007|accessdate=2007-09-22}}</ref>]]
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  • |country= United States |allegiance= United States
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  • ...iveNews.aspx?Id=1394366&SM=1</ref> the [[United Kingdom]] and the [[United States]]. Other nations who have participated include [[Australia]], [[Italy]], [[ |publisher=[[United States Navy]]
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  • ...n Navy]] and the [[Royal Navy]], working alongside elements of the [[Iraqi Navy]] and the Iraqi Marines. It reports to the Coalition Maritime Component Com ...Northern [[Persian Gulf]]. It is also tasked to help develop the new Iraqi Navy.
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  • ...nition is: "In general, a person engaged in hostilities against the United States or its coalition partners during an armed conflict."(source DOD dictionary ...r of the [[Taliban]] being detained as an unlawful combatant by the United States.
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  • ...oxy'''" is used by some critics to describe situations in which the United States has transferred suspected terrorists to countries known to practice [[tortu ...|Radio 4's]] [[Today Programme]] 1 April 2006 on the website of the United States Embassy in London</ref>
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  • ...y Commissions Act of 2006]] for prosecuting detainees held in the [[United States]] [[Guantanamo Bay detainment camp]]s. ...r have as their aim to cause, injury to or adverse effects on the [[United States]] or its citizens, or to have knowingly harbored such individuals, are subj
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  • ...uantanamo]] (JTF-GTMO) which has occupied a portion of the [[United States Navy]]'s [[Guantanamo Bay Naval Base|base at Guantanamo Bay]], [[Cuba]] since 20 ...cutive branch|executive branch]] of the [[Federal government of the United States|U.S. government]] of being [[al-Qaeda]] and [[Taliban]] operatives, as well
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  • ...October 17, 2006. Drafted in the wake of the [[Supreme Court of the United States|Supreme Court]]'s decision on ''[[Hamdan v. Rumsfeld]]'',<ref name="nytimes ...alien unlawful enemy combatants engaged in hostilities against the United States for violations of the law of war and other offenses triable by military com
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  • {{Multiple issues|cleanup=January 2010|expert=United States Government|prose=January 2010|tone=January 2010|update=January 2010|date=Ja ...ef> This action was challenged by a number of groups including the United States Congress as unconstitutional. This article examines the scope, nature and
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  • ...ption = [[Naval commandos (France)|French Naval commandos]] and United States soldiers from the [[3rd US Infantry|3rd Infantry Regiment]] participate in * {{flag|United Kingdom}}
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  • | combatant1={{Flag|Philippines}}<br> {{flag|United States}} {{small|(advisors)}} ...CAFGU Militias:''' unknown{{Citation needed|date=April 2009}}<br>'''United States:''' 600<ref name="GMA&others"/>
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  • | birth_place = [[Brooklyn, New York]], [[United States|U.S.]] ...nown as '''Abdullah al-Muhajir''' or '''Muhajir Abdullah''', is a [[United States citizen]] convicted of aiding [[terrorism|terrorists]].
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  • ...s]] rejected the legal ground of the Caroline case. In 1842, U.S. [[United States Secretary of State|Secretary of State]] [[Daniel Webster]] pointed out that ...using preemptive force is consistent with the terms and purposes of the [[United Nations Charter|U.N. Charter]] and other applicable international agreement
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  • ...Walt pp 224</ref> Preventive war undertaken without the approval of the [[United Nations]] is illegal under the modern framework of [[international law]],<r ...own that the large military strength and production capacity of the United States posed a long-term threat to [[Japanese expansionism|Japan's imperialist des
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  • ...anet.org/irr/hr/winter03/unlawful.html "Unlawful Combatants" in the United States: Drawing the Fine Line Between Law and War] [[Human Rights Magazine]] Winte ...hether a person may be designated an unlawful enemy combatant under United States law. The assumption that such a category as unlawful combatant exists is no
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  • ...tional military campaign led by the [[United States of America]] and the [[United Kingdom]] with the support of other [[NATO]] and non-NATO countries. The ca Following the [[1998 United States embassy bombings|bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania]],<ref>
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  • |national origin= United Kingdom The [[Royal Canadian Air Force]] (RCAF) and [[Royal Canadian Navy]] (RCN) operated the aircraft until 1952. Although the Canadian Ansons were
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  • ...this also included 200 Tiger Moths that were built under wartime [[United States Army Air Forces]] (USAAF) [[Lend-Lease]] orders, which were designated for ...ralia]] assembled an initial batch of 20 aircraft from parts sent from the United Kingdom prior to embarking on a major production campaign of their own of t
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  • :Three-seat dual-control deck landing and radio trainer the Royal Navy/Fleet Air Arm with dinghy stowage and naval instruments, 100 built. ...ee-seat radio trainer, 175 built (including 112 IIA aircraft for the Royal Navy)
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