USS Forrest Sherman (DDG-98)

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See USS Forrest Sherman for other ships of this name.
USS Forrest Sherman (DDG-98)
Career United States Navy Ensign
Ordered: 6 March 1998
Laid down: 7 August 2003
Launched: 2 October 2004
Commissioned: 28 January 2006
Homeport: Norfolk, Virginia
Motto: "Relentless Fighting Spirit"
Status: Active in service as of 2008
General characteristics
Displacement: 9,200 tons
Length: 509 ft 6 in (155.3 m)
Beam:   66 ft (20 m)
Draft:   31 ft (9.4 m)
Propulsion: 4 × General Electric LM2500-30 gas turbines, 2 shafts, 100,000 shp (75 MW)
Speed: 30+ knots (55+ km/h)
Complement: 380 officers and enlisted
Armament: 1 × 32 cell, 1 × 64 cell Mk 41 vertical launch systems, 96 × RIM-66 SM-2, BGM-109 Tomahawk or RUM-139 VL-Asroc, missiles
1 × 5/62 in (127/62 mm), 2 × 25 mm, 4 × 12.7 mm guns
2 × Mk 46 triple torpedo tubes
Aircraft carried: 2 × SH-60 Sea Hawk helicopters

USS Forrest Sherman (DDG-98) is an Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyer in the United States Navy. She is named for Admiral Forrest Sherman.

Built by Northrop Grumman Ship Systems Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula, Mississippi, Forrest Sherman was launched on 2 October 2004. Admiral Sherman's daughter, Ann Sherman Fitzpatrick, is the ship's sponsor. She was commissioned on January 28, 2006 at NAS Pensacola and six days later departed for her homeport in Norfolk, Va. to join the Atlantic Fleet.

She departed Norfolk for her maiden deployment in July 2007, visiting various nations around the Mediterranean and the Black Sea, as well as circumnavigating the continent of Africa. She returned to homeport in December of that year.

In August 2007, while the ship was visiting Sevastopol to conduct drills with the Ukrainian navy, a 1,100 pound mine from World War II was discovered 500 yards from the vessel. The mine was discovered and secured before it could damage the ship.[1]

[edit] References

This article includes information collected from the Naval Vessel Register, which, as a U.S. government publication, is in the public domain.

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