by Rick E Davis » Fri Oct 15, 2010 11:32 pm
I think Mark is looking for any photos of the two specific destroyers ... WILSON and MADISON ... that operated in TF 39 with the home fleet during late March 1942 to late May 1942 period and not too interested in Pacific appearance. The only photos of these eight(+) destroyers I'm aware of during this period, that are identified as such, are the ones I posted. Also, I was trying to get at is that if photos of these two destroyers turn-up outside of this period of time, they may or may not be in the same camo worn during that period. Ms 12 didn't follow any standard patterns and several destroyers had multiple Ms 12 patterns between late 1941 into the Fall of 1942. Many of these destroyers had refits before and after the TF 39 assignment, when repainting of the ship to the same or different pattern could have occurred.
An example is STERETT, she completed a yard period just before this mission and the photos I scanned show a fresh paint job to the same pattern shown in the above 26 May 1942 image I posted and a photo taken after she went to the Pacific has a completely different pattern of Ms 12. Unfortunately there were not similar photos for all ships in the class.
DD-407 STERETT on 22 March 1942 at Norfolk Navy Yard
Notice plated over portholes.
DD-407 STERETT dated as 16 February 1943, but this photo was taken earlier since other Mare Island photos taken ten days before this view is dated shows her painted in Ms 21 and with armament upgrades.
DD-407 STERETT on 6 February 1943 at MINY.
The USN was experimenting with camo all through this period and I have yet to find anyone who can say when one "style" of Ms 12 began and ended. Saying a ship during this period was in Ms 12 is almost meaningless.
Just as an aside, MADISON and her sisters ... DD-426 through DD-428 ... all in the same DesDiv, many times went in for refits at the same time. Also, each East Coast Navy Yard; Boston, New York, Norfolk, Charleston, and maybe Philadelphia, had their own "style" in applying camo. So, it is "possible" that photos of one of them would be similar to the others in the Des Div. But, that by far is NOT a certainty.
I think Mark is looking for any photos of the two specific destroyers ... WILSON and MADISON ... that operated in TF 39 with the home fleet during late March 1942 to late May 1942 period and not too interested in Pacific appearance. The only photos of these eight(+) destroyers I'm aware of during this period, that are identified as such, are the ones I posted. Also, I was trying to get at is that if photos of these two destroyers turn-up outside of this period of time, they may or may not be in the same camo worn during that period. Ms 12 didn't follow any standard patterns and several destroyers had multiple Ms 12 patterns between late 1941 into the Fall of 1942. Many of these destroyers had refits before and after the TF 39 assignment, when repainting of the ship to the same or different pattern could have occurred.
An example is STERETT, she completed a yard period just before this mission and the photos I scanned show a fresh paint job to the same pattern shown in the above 26 May 1942 image I posted and a photo taken after she went to the Pacific has a completely different pattern of Ms 12. Unfortunately there were not similar photos for all ships in the class.
DD-407 STERETT on 22 March 1942 at Norfolk Navy Yard
[img]http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p303/TincanREDavis/DD407x20-22Mar42.jpg[/img]
Notice plated over portholes.
[img]http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p303/TincanREDavis/DD407x21-22Mar42.jpg[/img]
DD-407 STERETT dated as 16 February 1943, but this photo was taken earlier since other Mare Island photos taken ten days before this view is dated shows her painted in Ms 21 and with armament upgrades.
[img]http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p303/TincanREDavis/DD407x11-16Feb43.jpg[/img]
DD-407 STERETT on 6 February 1943 at MINY.
[img]http://i131.photobucket.com/albums/p303/TincanREDavis/DD407x28-6Feb43.jpg[/img]
The USN was experimenting with camo all through this period and I have yet to find anyone who can say when one "style" of Ms 12 began and ended. Saying a ship during this period was in Ms 12 is almost meaningless.
Just as an aside, MADISON and her sisters ... DD-426 through DD-428 ... all in the same DesDiv, many times went in for refits at the same time. Also, each East Coast Navy Yard; Boston, New York, Norfolk, Charleston, and maybe Philadelphia, had their own "style" in applying camo. So, it is "possible" that photos of one of them would be similar to the others in the Des Div. But, that by far is NOT a certainty.