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The Flores class ]s, Flores and Soemba, were gun boats in the Royal Dutch Navy during the second World War. The Flores class ]s, Flores and Soemba, were gun boats in the Royal Dutch Navy during the second World War.


They were squat ships with a relatively heavy armament for their size (3 x 5.9 inch guns). Their main asset was an advanced fire control system that made them very accurate in bombing shore targets as the Flores demonstrated during the German attack on the ] when she silenced a German battery from a distance of over 10 miles. They were squat ships with a relatively heavy armament for their size (3 x 5.9 inch guns). Their main asset was an advanced fire control system that made them very accurate in bombing shore targets as their sister ship HNLMS John Maurits van Nassau demonstrated during the German attack on the ] when she silenced a German battery from a distance of well over 10 miles.


Flores and Soemba were united in the Mediterranean and played an active and successful role in the landings on Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, Gargliano, Gaeta and finally, at the beaches of Normandy in June 1944. British war correspondents referred to them as "the terrible twins". Flores and Soemba were united in the Mediterranean and played an active and successful role in the landings on ], ], ], ], ] and finally, at the beaches of Normandy in June 1944. British war correspondents referred to them as "the terrible twins".

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] ]

Revision as of 10:49, 13 June 2005

The Flores class sloops, Flores and Soemba, were gun boats in the Royal Dutch Navy during the second World War.

They were squat ships with a relatively heavy armament for their size (3 x 5.9 inch guns). Their main asset was an advanced fire control system that made them very accurate in bombing shore targets as their sister ship HNLMS John Maurits van Nassau demonstrated during the German attack on the Low Countries when she silenced a German battery from a distance of well over 10 miles.

Flores and Soemba were united in the Mediterranean and played an active and successful role in the landings on Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, Gargliano, Gaeta and finally, at the beaches of Normandy in June 1944. British war correspondents referred to them as "the terrible twins".

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