USS Cincinnati (CL-6)

USS Cincinnati (March 1944)
History
United States
NameCincinnati
NamesakeCity of Cincinnati, Ohio
Ordered29 August 1916
Awarded
  • 27 August 1917
  • 21 February 1919 (supplementary contract)
BuilderTodd Dry Dock and Construction Company, Tacoma, Washington
Cost$1,238,833 (cost of hull & machinery)[1]
Laid down15 May 1920
Launched23 May 1921
Sponsored byMrs. C. E. Tudor
Completed1 July 1922
Commissioned1 January 1924
Decommissioned1 November 1945
Identification
Honors and
awards
1 × battle star
FateScrapped, February 1946
General characteristics (as built)[2][3]
Class and typeOmaha-class light cruiser
Displacement
Length
  • 555 ft 6 in (169.32 m) oa
  • 550 ft (170 m) pp
Beam55 ft (17 m)
Draft
  • 14 ft 3 in (4.34 m) (mean)
  • 20 ft (6.1 m) (max)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed35 kn (65 km/h; 40 mph) (designed speed)
Crew29 officers 429 enlisted (peacetime)
Armament
Armor
  • Belt: 3 in (76 mm)
  • Deck: 1+12 in (38 mm)
  • Conning Tower: 1+12 in
  • Bulkheads: 1+12-3 in
Aircraft carried2 × floatplanes
Aviation facilities
General characteristics (1945)[4]
Armament

USS Cincinnati (CL-6), was the third Omaha-class light cruiser, originally classified as a scout cruiser, built for the United States Navy. She was the third Navy ship named after the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, the first being Cincinnati, an ironclad commissioned in 1862, during the Civil War, and the second being Cincinnati, a protected cruiser, that was decommissioned in 1919.

Cincinnati split her pre-war career between the Atlantic and the Pacific fleets. She served in the Scouting Fleet, based in the Atlantic, in 1924 to 1927, serving in the Pacific for a brief time in 1925 for fleet maneuvers. Cincinnati joined the Asiatic Fleet in 1927, and returned to the Atlantic from 1928 to 1932. She continued to go back and forth between oceans until March 1941, when she was assigned to Neutrality Patrol in the western Atlantic.

When the United States entered World War II she was assigned to TF41, based at Recife, and used on convoy escort duties and patrols in the south Atlantic. In 1944, she sailed for the Mediterranean to support Operation Dragoon, the invasion of the south of France. After the war, she was deemed surplus and scrapped at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard in February 1946.

  1. ^ Navy List 1921, p. 771.
  2. ^ Ships21 1921, pp. 54–59.
  3. ^ Ships35 1935, pp. 24–31.
  4. ^ Terzibashitsch 1988.

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