Doubling The Fleet: An Analysis of the Causal Factors Behind the U.S. Navy's Warship Building Program from 1933-1941

Doubling The Fleet: An Analysis of the Causal Factors Behind the U.S. Navy's Warship Building Program from 1933-1941

Paperback (22 Aug 2011)

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Publisher's Synopsis

On 7 December 1941, the US Navy had 343 warships in commission; however, a "second" fleet, consisting of 344 warships, was in various stages of construction in shipyards across the country. Given that building a warship could take anywhere from less than a year for a destroyer, to over three years for a battleship or aircraft carrier, it is clear that the foresighted building of warships in the years prior to US involvement in World War II would play a major role in enabling the US Navy to counter and eventually defeat the Imperial Japanese Navy in the Pacific. In order to trace the evolving influences behind this warship building program, this thesis divides the pre-war period into three separate phases: Phase 1 is bounded by Roosevelt's inauguration and the USS Panay incident, phase two runs from the USS Panay incident until the fall of France, and phase three covers from the fall of France until the attack on Pearl Harbor. In total, the building programs of all three prewar phases amount to 586 warships.

Book information

ISBN: 9781608881543
Publisher: W. Frederick Zimmerman
Imprint: Nimble Books
Pub date:
Language: English
Number of pages: 124
Weight: 312g
Height: 278mm
Width: 217mm
Spine width: 8mm