There is a picture on Wikipedia of the open bridge showing how exposed men on it would be in such an event.
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I thought Australia's bridge was hit and her Captain killed. Mind you, that's from memory, so I could be wrong!
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All four were struck by kamikazes on 5-6 January 1945 on the way to, or at, Lingayen Gulf for the invasion of Luzon. The hit on the bridge of New Mexico killed the ship's captain R. W. Fleming, British LtGen Herbert Lumsden (Churchill's personal liason to MacArthur), and several others, while narrowly missing Adm Bruce Fraser, future commander of the British Pacific Fleet. Australia was hit both days, and would go on to be the most kamikazed ship before the end of the war, with six hits.
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Could I suggest all were hit by kamikaze?
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not quite what I had in mind. The ships are USS Allen M. Sumner, HMAS Australia, USS New Mexico, and USS Louisville, so the identifications are all reasonably valid. But what did my four ships have in common?
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USS Hubbard DD (Allen Sumner)
HMAS Shropshire CA (County)
USS Mississippi BB (New Mexico)
USS Louisville CA
Battle of Surigao Strait 10/1944
Sorry, I don't know the manufacturers.
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Identify these ships (and models) and a historical connection between them:
90
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