USS Richard L. Page DEG / FFG 5 / Brigadier
General Richard Lucian Page / Brooke class Guided Missile Frigate
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s e a f o r c e s – online
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Naval Forces
Technology, History & Information
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Guided Missile Destroyer Escort / Guided Missile Frigate
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DEG 5 / FFG 5 - USS Richard L. Page
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USS Richard L. Page (FFG 5)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Destroyer Escort; Guided Missile Frigate;
Brooke – class;
planned and built as DEG 5;
reclassified to FFG 5; |
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Builder:
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Bath Iron Works, Bath,
Maine, USA |
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STATUS:
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Awarded: May 24, 1963; Laid down: January 4, 1965 (as DEG 5); Launched: April 4, 1966 (as DEG 5); Commissioned: August 5, 1967 (as DEG 5); Reclassified to FFG 5: June
30, 1975; Decommissioned:
September 30, 1988; Fate: leased to Pakistan on March 31,
1989; renamed PNS Tabuk (D-163); returned to US
Navy on November 29, 1994; stricken on December 1, 1994; sold for scrap; |
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Homeport:
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-
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Namesake:
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Named after and in honor of Brigadier General Richard Lucian
Page (1807 – 1901); > see history, below; |
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Ship's
Motto:
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> FIT TO FIGHT < |
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO > Guided
Missile Frigate / Brooke - class. |
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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Richard Lucian
Page |
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Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center |
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Namesake
& History: |
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Brigadier
General Richard Lucian Page (December 20, 1807 – August 9, 1901): |
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Richard Lucian Page, born
in Clarke County, Va., on 20 December 1807, entered the U.S. Navy as a
midshipman in 1824; was promoted to lieutenant in 1834; and to commander in
1855. Sea duty, included assignments as executive officer and commanding
officer of Independence during the Mexican War, commanding officer of the
brig Perry on the African Station 1852-54, and commanding officer of the
sloop-of-war Germantown on the East Indies Station 1857-60. He also served
three tours of duty ashore as an ordnance officer and one tour as executive
officer at the Norfolk Navy Yard. With the secession of Virginia, Page, then
assigned to the Norfolk Navy Yard, resigned from the U.S. Navy and, after
joining the staff of Governor Letcher of Virginia, began organizing a State
navy and constructing fortifications along rivers of the Tidewater area. Commissioned
Commander in the Confederate Navy in 1861, he served as ordnance officer at
the Norfolk Navy Yard and at Charlotte, N.C. In 1864 he was commissioned
Brigadier-General in the Confederate Army and placed in charge of the outer
defenses of Mobile Bay. There, he defended Fort Morgan until that fort fell
to Union forces under Farragut and Granger on 23 August 1864. Page, a
prisoner for the remainder of the Civil War, returned to Norfolk after his
release and, from 1875 to 1883, served as superintendent of public schools. Brigadier General Page died at Blueridge Summit,
Pa., on 9 August 1901. |
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USS Richard L.
Page (DEG/FFG 5): |
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The guided missile destroyer escort
Richard L. Page (DEG-5) was laid down on 4 January 1965 by the Bath Iron
Works Corp., Bath, Maine; launched 4 April 1966; sponsored by Miss Edmonia
Lee Whittle and Mrs. Nannie Page Trinker, granddaughters of Brigadier General
Page; and commissioned at Boston on 5 August 1967, Comdr. Milton J. Schultz,
Jr., in command. |
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… and patches … |
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