USS Edsall (DD-219)
General Type | Ship |
Unit Type | Destroyer |
Cost | 6 |
Set | Surface Action |
Manufacturer | Hasbro |
Available | 1941 |
Set ID | 14 |
Game Class Limits | Clemson |
Country | United States (Details) |
Prototype | USS Edsall (DD-219) (Details) |
Class | Clemson (Details) |
Armor | 2 |
Vital | 5 |
Hull Points | 2 |
Speed | 139 |
Primary | 4/3/3/0 |
Torpedoes | 2/2/0/0 |
AA | 4/0/-/- |
ASW | 3/-/-/- |
Special Ability | ASW Pinpointer |
Special Ability | Chase the Salvoes |
Special Ability | Lay Smoke Screen |
Game Rarity | C |
Prototype:
USS Edsall (DD-219), named for Seaman Norman Eckley Edsall (1873–1899), was a Clemson-class destroyer of the United States Navy.
Edsall was laid down by the William Cramp & Sons Ship and Engine Building Company on 15 September 1919, launched on 29 July 1920 by Mrs. Bessie Edsall Bracey, sister of Seaman Edsall and commissioned on 26 November 1920, Commander A. H. Rice in command. She was sunk 1 March 1942.
Edsall was laid down by the William Cramp & Sons Ship and Engine Building Company on 15 September 1919, launched on 29 July 1920 by Mrs. Bessie Edsall Bracey, sister of Seaman Edsall and commissioned on 26 November 1920, Commander A. H. Rice in command. She was sunk 1 March 1942.
Class History:
The Clemson class was a series of 156 destroyers which served with the United States Navy from after World War I through World War II.The Clemson-class ships were commissioned by the United States Navy from 1919 to 1922, built by Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company, New York Shipbuilding Corporation, William Cramp and Sons, Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Mare Island Naval Shipyard, Norfolk Naval Shipyard and Bath Iron Works, some quite rapidly. The Clemson class was a minor redesign of the Wickes class for greater fuel capacity, and was the last pre-World War II class of flush-decker destroyers to be built for the United States. Until the Fletcher-class destroyer, the Clemsons were the most numerous class of destroyers commissioned in the United States Navy, and were known colloquially as "flush-deckers", "four-stackers", or "four-pipers."
Country:
The U.S. is a country of 50 states covering a vast swath of North America, with Alaska in the northwest and Hawaii extending the nation’s presence into the Pacific Ocean. Major Atlantic Coast cities are New York, a global finance and culture center, and capital Washington, DC. Midwestern metropolis Chicago is known for influential architecture and on the west coast, Los Angeles' Hollywood is famed for filmmaking.
Item created by: Lethe
on 2015-05-31 17:46:30
Last edited by: gdm on 2019-05-05 12:38:59
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Last edited by: gdm on 2019-05-05 12:38:59
If you see errors or missing data in this entry, please feel free to log in and edit it. Anyone with a Gmail account can log in instantly.