Yes in a hurricane 600 miles northeast of the Bahamas in Sept. 13, 1944 with terrible loss of life - 248 drowned, 73 saved. The only U-boat in the area at the time played no part in her loss - she was escorted the USS HYADES supply ship from Norfolk to Trinidad.
about 2 hours
it is still maintained by the navy and it was thought to be turne in to a musem
The USS Hamilton actually sank in 1813. The Hamilton, along with the schooner USS Scourge sank during a sudden squall near present-day Hamilton, Ontario, Canada on August 8, 1813.
One Japanese I-Boat (Submarine) managed to sink one fleet aircraft carrier (USS Wasp), damage one new battleship (USS North Carolina), and damage a destroyer which later sank (USS O'Brian) from ONE TORPEDO SALVO.
The axis was better trained, and that probably showed...as they did sink the biggest ship (the USS Lexington).
Lieutenant Stephen_Decatur
Yes they did =]
Havana Harbor in Cuba.
On 7 December 1941.
45 minutes
about 2 hours
One of the pipes was ruptured.
December 31, 1862 was the date that it sank.
Yes and No. USS Hornet, CV-8, did sink at the Battle of Santa Cruz. USS Hornet, CV-12, was renamed in honor of the sunk CV-8 and still exists. She is a museum ship in Alameda, CA
Manchi Hueblo sunk it by shooting at it, which created a leak.
CSS Alabama
it is still maintained by the navy and it was thought to be turne in to a musem