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Baltimore-class cruiser
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===Service=== [[File:USS Baltimore (CA-68) being reactivated at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, in 1951 (NH 98241).jpg|thumb|right|USS ''Baltimore'' during her reactivation]] Of the seventeen (including the three ''Oregon City''s) completed ships, twelve were commissioned before the [[Surrender of Japan|Japanese capitulation]] on 2 September 1945, though only seven took part in the battles of the [[Pacific War|Pacific Theater]] and one in the [[European Theater]]. By 1947, nine of the ''Baltimore''s had been decommissioned and placed in the reserve fleet, while seven (''Helena'', ''Toledo'', ''Macon'', ''Columbus'', ''Saint Paul'', ''Rochester'', and ''Albany'') remained in service. However, at the start of the 1950s, six were reactivated (''Macon'' had been decommissioned for four short months: June–October 1950), making thirteen available for deployment in the [[Korean War]]. Six of these were used for escort missions and coastal bombardment in Korea, while the other seven reinforced fleets in other areas of the globe. Four ships remained out of service: the ''Fall River'' was never reactivated, the ''Boston'' and ''Canberra'' were refitted as ''Boston''-class guided missile cruisers (CGs), and the ''Chicago'' was reactivated after being converted to an ''Albany''-class CG. After the Korean War ended and due to the high cost of keeping them in service; starting in 1954 with ''Quincy'', some of the ''Baltimore''s were decommissioned for good. By 1969, only six ships were still in commission; five (''Boston'', ''Canberra'', ''Chicago'', ''Columbus'', ''Albany'') as CGs (guided missile cruisers), and only one unmodified ship, the ''Saint Paul'', which remained active to serve in the [[Vietnam War]], providing gunfire support. ''Saint Paul'' was the only member of the class to serve continuously from commissioning (serving 26 years) and was finally decommissioned in 1971. ''Boston'' and ''Canberra'' retired in 1970, ''Columbus'' (serving 29.5 years) in 1975, and finally ''Chicago'' in 1980. Starting in 1972 all fourteen of the original ''Baltimore''s were sold for scrap after being decommissioned, with ''Chicago'' being the final one broken up in 1991. ====Damage==== [[File:USS Pittsburgh (CA-72) underway after she lost her bow in June 1945 (80-G-325746).jpg|thumb|right|{{USS|Pittsburgh|CA-72|6}} with her bow ripped off]] In World War II, only the {{USS|Canberra|CA-70|2}} was damaged through enemy fire, when she was struck with an air-dropped [[torpedo]] on 13 October 1944, which killed 23 men in the engine room and left the ship immobilized. The ship was hit amidships and both [[boiler]] rooms were flooded with 3,000 tons of seawater. She was towed away by [[sister ship]] {{USS|Boston|CA-69|2}}, and as a result, both ships missed the crucial [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]]. A year later, repairs were completed at the Boston Naval Shipyard, and ''Canberra'' was assigned to the [[United States Fleet Forces Command|Atlantic Fleet]]. In June 1945, {{USS|Pittsburgh|CA-72|2}} had her entire bow ripped off in a typhoon, but there were no casualties. The ship struggled through {{convert|70|kn|adj=on}} winds to [[Guam]], where provisional repairs were made before sailing to the [[Puget Sound Naval Shipyard]] for a full reconstruction. ''Pittsburgh''{{'}}s detached bow stayed afloat, and it was later towed into Guam and scrapped. During the Korean War, a fire in a forward [[gun turret]] on 12 April 1952, killed 30 men on ''St. Paul''. Then, in 1953, the same ship was hit by a coastal battery, though without injury to the crew. ''Helena'' in 1951 and ''Los Angeles'' in 1953 were also struck by coastal batteries without injuries during the war. In June 1968, ''Boston'', along with its escort, the [[Australia]]n [[destroyer]] {{HMAS|Hobart|D 39|6}}, were victims of [[friendly fire]] when planes of the [[US Air Force]] mistook them for enemy targets and fired on them with [[AIM-7 Sparrow]] missiles. Only ''Hobart'' was seriously damaged; although ''Boston'' was hit, the warhead of the missile failed to detonate.
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