Ships in Class
- USS Mahan (DD-364) (sunk 1944)
- USS Cummings (DD-365)
- USS Drayton (DD-366)
- USS Lamson (DD-367) (sunk 1946, Test Able)
- USS Flusser (DD-368)
- USS Reid (DD-369) (sunk 1944)
- USS Case (DD-370)
- USS Conyngham (DD-371) (sunk 1948)
- USS Cassin (DD-372)
- USS Shaw (DD-373)
- USS Tucker (DD-374) (sunk 1942)
- USS Downes (DD-375)
- USS Cushing (DD-376) (sunk 1942)
- USS Perkins (DD-377) (sunk 1942)
- USS Smith (DD-378)
- USS Preston (DD-379) (sunk 1942)
- USS Dunlap (DD-384) (referred to in some publications as a Dunlap class destroyer)
- USS Fanning (DD-385) (referred to in some publications as a Dunlap class destroyer)
Read more about this topic: Mahan Class Destroyer
Famous quotes containing the words ships and/or class:
“I saw three ships come sailing by,
Come sailing by, come sailing by,
I saw three ships come sailing by,
On Christmas Day in the morning.”
—Unknown. As I Sat on a Sunny Bank. . .
Oxford Book of Light Verse, The. W. H. Auden, ed. (1938)
“Why, since man and woman were created for each other, had He made their desires so dissimilar? Why should one class of women be able to dwell in luxurious seclusion from the trials of life, while another class performed their loathsome tasks? Surely His wisdom had not decreed that one set of women should live in degradation and in the end should perish that others might live in security, preserve their frappeed chastity, and in the end be saved.”
—Madeleine [Blair], U.S. prostitute and madam. Madeleine, ch. 10 (1919)