User:ThoughtIdRetired/Sandbox/pictures/experiments

raw material

edit
 
USS Samuel Chase (APA-26) at anchor, circa in 1943
 
The U.S. Navy attack transport USS Samuel Chase (APA-26) underway 25 November 1943.
 
HMS Prince Baudouin working on preparations for D-Day.
 
USS Anne Arundel XAP 76

first go

edit
Troop transports of three types from two navies: USS Samuel Chase (APA 26) (Assault Group O1), USS Anne Arundel (XAP 76) (Assault Group O3), HMS Prince Baudouin an LSI(S) (Assault Group O4)[1]: 367–371 
Troop transports of three types from two navies: USS Samuel Chase (APA 26) (Assault Group O1), USS Anne Arundel (XAP 76) (Assault Group O3), HMS Prince Baudouin an LSI(S) (Assault Group O4)[1]: 367–371 


USS Samuel Chase

USS Anne Arundel

  1. ^ a b Whitmarsh, Andrew (2024). D-Day Landing Craft: How 4,126 ‘Ugly and Unorthodox’ Allied Craft made the Normandy Landings Possible. Cheltenham: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-80399-445-1.