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  2. Fort Drum (Philippines) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Drum_(Philippines)

    The rocky island was levelled by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and was built up with thick layers of steel-reinforced concrete into a massive structure roughly resembling a battleship, 350 ft (110 m) long, 144 ft (44 m) wide, and with a top deck 40 ft (12 m) above water at mean low tide. [12]

  3. 14-inch gun M1907 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/14-inch_gun_M1907

    Fort Drum in Manila Bay, called the “concrete battleship”, was a unique fort mounting four 14-inch guns in two twin turrets. A twin 14-inch turret made for Fort Drum being tested at the Sandy Hook Proving Ground. Fort Drum in 1983 with USS New Jersey (BB-62) behind the fort.

  4. Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harbor_Defenses_of_Manila...

    El Fraile was razed to the waterline and a "concrete battleship" structure built on it. Fort Drum was both the only sea fort and the only fort with turrets in the post-1885 US fort systems. Two turrets housing two 14-inch (356 mm) guns each were atop the fort. The 14-inch guns were the only M1909 14-inch guns deployed; they were specially ...

  5. Coastal artillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_artillery

    On June 25, 1944, the American battleship Texas engaged German shore batteries on the Cotentin Peninsula around Cherbourg. Battery Hamburg straddled the ship with a salvo of 240 mm shells, eventually hitting Texas twice; one shell damaging the conning tower and navigation bridge, with the other penetrating below decks but failing to explode.

  6. List of battleships of the United States Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_battleships_of_the...

    Texas and USS Maine, [a] commissioned three years later in 1895, were part of the New Navy program of the late 19th century, a proposal by then Secretary of the Navy William H. Hunt to match Europe's navies that ignited a years-long debate that was suddenly settled in Hunt's favor when the Brazilian Empire commissioned the battleship Riachuelo.

  7. Moral Injury: The Grunts - The ... - The Huffington Post

    projects.huffingtonpost.com/moral-injury/the-grunts

    In April 2012, Martz was 26 and a Marine sergeant already on his third combat deployment, in the Kajaki District of southern Afghanistan. He’d lost a good friend in combat, 22-year-old Lance Cpl. William H. Crouse IV, of Woodruff, S.C. Martz’s unit, 1st Battalion 10th Marines, had taken other casualties.

  8. SS Atlantus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Atlantus

    SS Atlantus is the most famous of the twelve concrete ships built by the Liberty Ship Building Company [4] in Brunswick, Georgia, United States, during and after World War I. The steamer was launched on 5 December 1918, and was the second concrete ship constructed in the World War I Emergency Fleet. The war had ended a month earlier, and so ...

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