MöLDERS (D186)

Museum ship ''Mölders''

'D186 ''Mölders''' was a guided missile destroyer of the Bundesmarine (West German Navy) and later the Deutsche Marine (Navy of reunited Germany). It was the second ship of the Lütjens class, a modification of the Charles F. Adams class.
On March 31965 Bath Iron Works got the order to build ''Mölders'' and her keel was laid down on April 12 1966 with the hull number DDG-29. April 131967 ''Mölders'' was launched and chistened for Luftwaffe Oberst (Colonel) Werner Mölders by his mother Anne-Marie Mölders.
''Mölders'' was commissioned on February 23 1969 into the ''1. Zerstörergeschwader'' (first destroyer squadron) based in Kiel.
During her 33 years in commission 14000 sailors served on her under 16 different commanders, and she traveled 675,054.6 nautical miles. The ''Mölders'' was decommissioned May 282003 in Wilhelmshaven.
Unlike her sisters ''Lütjens'' and ''Rommel'', ''Mölders'' was preserved and is now on display as museum ship in Wilhelmshaven (Marinemuseum), although ironically, she was never stationed in Wilhelmshaven during her active career.

Contents
USS Henry A. Wiley
External link
References

USS Henry A. Wiley


Originally the hull number DDG-29 was reserved for the ''USS Henry A. Wiley'' (DDG-29), a Charles F. Adams class guided missile armed destroyer named for Admiral Henry Aristo Wiley USN (1867-1943), but that order was cancelled.

External link



MaritimeQuest Mölders D-186 photo gallery

References



★ http://www.d-186.de (in German)

Zerstörer Mölders (German / English)

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