
The Ship That Lived Twice
The Incredible Story of USS Phoenix and General Belgrano (Machines of War: Inside the World’s Most Powerful Military Technology)
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Narrateur(s):
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Eric McDowell
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Auteur(s):
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Hugh Ravenscroft
À propos de cet audio
The story of USS Phoenix, later known as ARA General Belgrano, is one of the most extraordinary naval odysseys of the twentieth century. From her birth in the shipyards of New Jersey to her fiery baptism at Pearl Harbour, from the island-hopping campaigns of the Pacific War to her second life under the Argentine flag, she lived two dramatic and contrasting existences. This book tells her complete story, exploring how a single warship came to embody the ambitions, tragedies, and controversies of two nations separated by oceans but linked by history.
Forged as part of the Brooklyn-class cruiser programme, USS Phoenix was designed in the tense 1930s when the world braced for renewed conflict. Armed with fifteen six-inch guns and built for speed, she entered service as America watched both Europe and Asia slide toward war. At Pearl Harbour on 7 December 1941, Phoenix survived the devastation that crippled much of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, escaping the carnage and immediately joining the fight. For the next four years she sailed the Pacific, escorting convoys, bombarding enemy positions, and surviving the dangers of kamikaze attacks. Sailors came to call her a “lucky ship,” a vessel that always seemed to endure while others around her fell.
In 1945, Phoenix was present at the war’s closing act, a witness to Japan’s surrender. But her American story was not the end. In the climate of the Cold War, the United States transferred surplus vessels to allies, and Phoenix was sold to Argentina in 1951. Rechristened ARA General Belgrano, she became a symbol of Argentine pride and naval tradition.
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