Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Cleveland class cruiser
The United States Navy designed the Cleveland class of light cruisers for World War II with the goal of increased range and AA armament as compared with earlier classes.
Although 39 ships were projected to be built, only 27 were actually commissioned. The Cleveland class is the most successful cruiser class in history (tied with the Ticonderoga-class guided missile cruiser).
The ships were mainly used in the Pacific during World War II, some however saw action in Europe and off of the coast of Africa.
Statistics
- Displacement:
- Standard: 11800 tons
- Full: 14131 tons
- Length: 186.0 meters
- Beam: 20.2 meters
- Draught: 7.5 meters
- Height (Mast): 34.5 meters
- Crew (Officers/Men): 70/1285
- Speed: 32.5 knots
- Armament:
Ships
- Cleveland (CL-55)
- Columbia (CL-56)
- Montpelier (CL-57)
- Denver (CL-58)
- Santa Fe (CL-60)
- Birmingham (CL-62)
- Mobile (CL-63)
- Vincennes (CL-64)
- Pasadena (CL-65)
- Springfield (CL-66)
- Topeka (CL-67)
- Biloxi (CL-80)
- Houston (CL-81)
- Providence (CL-82)
- Manchester (CL-83)
- Vicksburg (CL-86)
- Duluth (CL-87)
- Miami (CL-89)
- Astoria (CL-90)
- Oklahoma City (CL-91/CLG-5)
- Little Rock (CL-92)
- Galveston (CL-93)
- Youngstown (CL-94)
- Amsterdam (CL-101)
- Portsmouth (CL-102)
- Wilkes-Barre (CL-103)
- Atlanta (CL-104)
- Dayton (CL-105)
Source
10-26-2009 08:16:03
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


