INDIANAPOLIS was laid
down 31 March 1930 by the New York Shipbuilding Corp., and commissioned
at the Philadelphia Navy Yard 15 November 1932.
Indianapolis had
a distinguished career from the start. As the flagship of the navy’s
Scouting Force, she hosted President Roosevelt three times including a
state visit to South America in 1936. She was at sea in the Pacific
when World War II broke out, then went on to serve in the Aleutian
Islands in 1942–43 rather than in the Solomon Islands, as most of her
sister pre-war heavy cruisers did. Afterward, she served as Admiral
Spruance’s fifth Fleet flagship and was hit by a kamikaze. After her
repairs were completed, she received orders to carry parts for the first
atomic bombs in a high-speed secret mission to Tinian, she raced on
unescorted and arrived Tinian 26 July, having set a record in covering
some 5000 miles from San Francisco in only 10 days. At 12:14 a.m. on
July 30, 1945, the USS Indianapolis was torpedoed by a Japanese
submarine in the Philippine Sea. This is the last major American warship
to be lost during World War II, and the greatest sea disaster in
American naval history.
INDIANAPOLIS earned 10 battle stars for World War II service.
Item No 05326
Item Name USS Indianapolis CA-35 1945
Bar Code 9580208053264
Scale 1:350
Item Type Static Kit
Model Brief Length:531.4 mm Beam:58.5 mm
Total Parts 630+
Metal Parts n/a
Photo Etched Parts 2 pcs
Film Parts n/a
Resin Parts n/a
Total Sprues 14 sprues and stand
Paint Schemes USS Indianapolis CA-35 1945
Released Date 2013-03
More Features "Hull
-hull split into two parts
-Deck wood pattern finely rendered