USS Farragut (DDG-37)

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This article is about one of five destroyers bearing the name "USS Farragut." For other uses of the name, see USS Farragut.
USS Farragut (DDG-37)
USS Farragut (DDG-37)
Career (U.S.) United States Navy ensign
Class and type: Farragut-class guided missile frigate
Ordered: January 27, 1956
Builder: Bethlehem Steel Corporation, Quincy, Massachusetts
Laid down: June 3, 1957
Launched: July 18, 1958
Acquired: December 8, 1960
Commissioned: December 10, 1960
Decommissioned: October 31, 1989
Reclassified: 30 June 1975
Struck: November 20, 1992
Status: Dismantled
General characteristics
Displacement: 5,800 tons
Length: 512.5 ft (156.2 m)
Beam: 52 ft (15.8 m)
Draught: 25 ft (7.6 m)
Propulsion: 4 1200psi boilers, 2 geared turbines
Speed: 36.5 knots
Range: 4,500 nautical miles (8,300 km) at 20 knots (40 km/h)
Complement: 377 (21 officers + 356 enlisted)
Sensors and processing systems: AN/SPS-48E air-search radar
AN/SPS-49 air-search radar
AN/SPG-55B fire control radar
AN/SPG-53F gun fire control radar
Electronic warfare and decoys: AN/SLQ-32
Armament: 1 × Mk 42 5-inch/54 (127 mm/54) caliber gun
2 × Mk-32 triple mounts carrying Mark 46 torpedoes
1 × Mk 16 ASROC missile launcher
1 × Mk 10 Mod.0 missile launcher for Terrier / standard (MR) missiles
2 × Mk 141 Harpoon missile launchers
Motto: Damn the torpedoes, full speed ahead!

USS Farragut (DDG-37), named for Admiral David Glasgow Farragut, USN (1801-1870), was a Farragut-class guided missile frigate (destroyer leader) laid down as DLG-6 by the Bethlehem Steel Corporation at Quincy, Massachusetts on 3 June 1957, launched on 15 July 1958 by Mrs. H. D. Felt, wife of the Vice Chief of Naval Operations and commissioned on 10 December 1960. Farragut was reclassified as a guided missile destroyer on 30 June 1975 and designated DDG-37. USS Farragut was decommissioned on 31 October 1989, stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 20 November 1992 and sold for scrap on 16 December 1994. 26 September 2006 a contract to dismantle ex-Farragut was awarded to International Shipbreaking Limited of Brownsville, Texas. The ships bell is currently being kept and preserved at Admiral Farragut Academy in St. Petersburg, Florida.


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