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.
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.
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.
Lieutenant Stephen_Decatur
A few moments after the 0806 sinking of the Arizona.
Yes they did =]
One of the pipes was ruptured.
about 2 hours
Havana Harbor in Cuba.
On 7 December 1941.
45 minutes
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
After the time that it's guns were unable to fire, the Bismark took roughly 45 minutes to sink.
it is still maintained by the navy and it was thought to be turne in to a musem