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USS Kidd (DD-661) is the only Fletcher-class destroyer preserved in WWII configuration. With 175 total ships launched, the Fletchers were the most numerous and most impactful class of destroyers in the US Navy during the Second World War. DD-661 was named for RAdm. Isaac C. Kidd, who was killed onboard the Battleship Arizona at Pearl Harbor. USS Kidd saw action in both the Atlantic and in the Pacific. In April 1945, the ship was seriously damaged by a Kamikaze strike. Kidd was recommissioned during the Korean War, and finally decommissioned for the final time in 1964. The interior and exterior of the ship have been painstakingly restored and preserved in Baton Rouge by the Louisiana Naval War Memorial Commission. This work uses color photography to provide readers an illustrated tour of the ship, above and below deck.[AuthorName]By David Doyle[/AuthorName][AuthorBio]Since 1999, David Doyle has written over 200publishedbooks, and the range of topics has expanded to include warships and combat aircraft. These books have ranged in size from 56 pages to large works approaching 1,000 pages.[/AuthorBio][NumIllustration]283 color and b/w photos[/NumIllustration][CoAuthor][/CoAuthor][SubTitle]From WWII and Korea to Museum Ship[/SubTitle][ColorPattern]283 color and b/w photos[/ColorPattern]