About: USS Barber (DE-161)   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/iy9n5RfxHaRjDjDTh60XKQ==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

{{Infobox ship |Ship image= |Ship caption= |module= |module2= |module3= |module4= |module5= |module6= |module7= |module8={{Infobox ship career|embed=yes |Ship struck=16 July 2001 |Ship fate=unknown |module= USS Barber (DE-161/APD-57), a Buckley-class destroyer escort of the United States Navy, was named in honor of brother Malcolm, Randolph, and Leroy Barber who were all killed aboard the USS Oklahoma on 7 December 1941. The ship was laid down in April 1943 and launched one month later, but because the Barber brothers' mother was not available on the day of launching, the ship was christened at the same time that she was commissioned in October 1943. After a year of service in the Atlantic escorting convoys and helping to sink , Barber was converted to a Charles Lawrence-class high speed t

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • USS Barber (DE-161)
rdfs:comment
  • {{Infobox ship |Ship image= |Ship caption= |module= |module2= |module3= |module4= |module5= |module6= |module7= |module8={{Infobox ship career|embed=yes |Ship struck=16 July 2001 |Ship fate=unknown |module= USS Barber (DE-161/APD-57), a Buckley-class destroyer escort of the United States Navy, was named in honor of brother Malcolm, Randolph, and Leroy Barber who were all killed aboard the USS Oklahoma on 7 December 1941. The ship was laid down in April 1943 and launched one month later, but because the Barber brothers' mother was not available on the day of launching, the ship was christened at the same time that she was commissioned in October 1943. After a year of service in the Atlantic escorting convoys and helping to sink , Barber was converted to a Charles Lawrence-class high speed t
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:military/pr...iPageUsesTemplate
Ship refit
  • October 1944 – January 1945, Philadelphia Navy Yard
embed
  • yes
Ship laid down
  • 1943-04-27(xsd:date)
Ship commissioned
  • 1943-10-10(xsd:date)
Ship struck
  • 1968-11-27(xsd:date)
Ship reclassified
  • --10-23
Hide header
  • yes
Ship honors
  • 3(xsd:integer)
Ship sponsor
  • Mrs. Peter Thomas Barber
Ship renamed
  • ARM Coahuila
  • ARM Vincente Guerrero, 1994
Ship ordered
  • 1942(xsd:integer)
Ship fate
  • --02-17
Ship builder
  • Norfolk Navy Yard, Portsmouth, Virginia
Ship decommissioned
  • 1946-03-22(xsd:date)
Ship class
  • , as built
Ship country
  • Mexico
  • United States
Ship namesake
Ship acquired
  • 1969-02-17(xsd:date)
Ship launched
  • 1943-05-30(xsd:date)
Ship christened
  • 1943-10-10(xsd:date)
Ship Name
  • ARM Coahuila
  • USS Barber
abstract
  • {{Infobox ship |Ship image= |Ship caption= |module= |module2= |module3= |module4= |module5= |module6= |module7= |module8={{Infobox ship career|embed=yes |Ship struck=16 July 2001 |Ship fate=unknown |module= USS Barber (DE-161/APD-57), a Buckley-class destroyer escort of the United States Navy, was named in honor of brother Malcolm, Randolph, and Leroy Barber who were all killed aboard the USS Oklahoma on 7 December 1941. The ship was laid down in April 1943 and launched one month later, but because the Barber brothers' mother was not available on the day of launching, the ship was christened at the same time that she was commissioned in October 1943. After a year of service in the Atlantic escorting convoys and helping to sink , Barber was converted to a Charles Lawrence-class high speed transport and assigned the new hull code of APD-57. After her conversion was complete in January 1945, Barber sailed for duty in the Pacific. After earning three battle stars for her wartime service, Barber was decommissioned in March 1946 and placed in reserve. After 22 years of inactivity, Barber was struck from the Naval Vessel Register in November 1968, and transferred to the Mexican Navy the following February as ARM Coahuila (B07). In 1994, she was renamed ARM Vincente Guerrero after former Mexican president Vincente Guerrero. The ship was later restored to her original Mexican name of Coahuila with a new pennant number of E21, before she was stricken from the rolls of the Mexican Navy in July 2001. Her ultimate fate is unreported in secondary sources.
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