G and H-class destroyer - meaning and definition. What is G and H-class destroyer
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What (who) is G and H-class destroyer - definition


G and H-class destroyer         
  • Aerial view of ''Garland'' at low speed
  • ''Gallant'' at sea, 28 April 1938
  • ''Hardy'', 1936
  • ''Harvester'' in 1942, with a Hedgehog in lieu of 'A' gun and a Type 271 radar above the bridge
  • ''Hesperus'' wearing [[dazzle camouflage]] showing the angular bridge front that was fitted to ''Hero'', ''Hereward'', and the ex-Brazilian ships
  • Aerial view of ''Highlander'' at sea, 31 May 1942
1935 BRITISH DESTROYER SUPER-CLASS
Havant class destroyer; H class destroyer; Vasilefs Georgios class destroyer; G and h class destroyer; Juruena class destroyer; Jarua class destroyer; G and H class destroyer; H-class destroyer; Vasilefs Georgios-class destroyer; Jurua-class destroyer; Havant-class destroyer
The G- and H-class destroyers were a group of 18 destroyers built for the Royal Navy during the 1930s. Six additional ships being built for the Brazilian Navy when World War II began in 1939 were purchased by the British and named the Havant class.
G-class destroyer (1944)         
1944 CLASS OF BRITISH DESTROYERS, NONE BUILT
HMS Gael; G class destroyer (WWII); G class destroyer (1944); HMS Gift (G45); HMS Gauntlet (G59); HMS Gift (G67); HMS Guinevere (G67); HMS Gauntlet; HMS Guinevere
The G-class destroyers were a proposed class of eight destroyers of the Royal Navy ordered during the Second World War under the 1944 Programme. Two were ordered (from Yarrow) on 24 July 1944, and six more on 30 August 1944, but all were cancelled on 13 December 1945, after the end of the war.
E and F-class destroyer         
  • Profile of an E-class destroyer
  • ''Exmouth'' leaving [[Bilbao]], 22 October 1936
  • ''Eclipse'' at anchor before 1943
  • The damage suffered by ''Escapade'' after her Hedgehog prematurely detonated on 20 September 1943
  • Aerial view of ''Express'' in November 1942
  • ''Fame'' at anchor, 5 September 1942
  • ''Foxhound''{{'}}s forward guns, August 1943
1934 CLASS OF BRITISH DESTROYERS
E class destroyer; E and F class destroyer; E-class destroyer; F-class destroyer (1934)
The E and F-class destroyers were a group of 18 destroyers built for the Royal Navy during the 1930s. The ships were initially assigned to the Home Fleet, although they reinforced the Mediterranean Fleet during the Italian invasion of Abyssinia of 1935–36 and enforced the Non-Intervention Agreement during the Spanish Civil War of 1936–1939.