228M024340.jpg
228M024340.jpg

US NAVY ATLANTA-CLASS LIGHT CRUISERS 1940-49

NEW VANGUARD N.340

Autore: Mark Lardas

Codice: 228M024340

€ 17,50

DISPONIBILE FINE LUGLIO 2025

A comprehensively illustrated account of the Atlanta-class cruisers, warships that found a surprising key role in the Pacific War as the US Navy's superb antiaircraft warships.

In the late 1930s, the US Navy created a class of small, light cruisers intended as a versatile destroyer leader. The Atlantas could provide antiaircraft support, lead and launch torpedo attacks, serve as antisubmarine vessels, and outgun other light warships in a surface engagement. The wartime reality was different. In every surface action they fought, they found themselves pitted against bigger cruisers (or even battleships) instead of the destroyers they were designed to defeat.

In this book, naval historian Mark Lardas explains that despite their flaws, they proved one of the most useful warships in the US Navy: with a main battery of sixteen 5in guns, they proved to be superb antiaircraft cruisers. From the battle of Midway onwards, they protected the Navy's most valuable ships – its aircraft carriers – so effectively that later Atlantas were built to a modified design as specialist antiaircraft ships. The Navy even ordered a follow-on class postwar and considered building a “super-Atlanta,” armed only with heavy antiaircraft guns.

Packed with illustrations, this book examines the history, development, and modifications of these unusual warships, and their impact on the Pacific War.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

DESIGN AND DEVELOPMENT

Genesis

Foreign contemporaries

Design

Equipment

VARIANTS, MODIFICATIONS, AND SUBCLASSES

Oakland subclass

Juneau class

CL-154 class

Wartime modifications

OPERATIONAL HISTORY

Introduction

1941–43

1944–45

Postwar

CONCLUSION

FURTHER READING

INDEX

Lingua

INGLESE

Illustrazioni

Riccamente illustrato a colori e in bianco e nero

Pagine

48

Misure

18 x 25

ISBN
9781472866523