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The vessels of the Navy shall be named by the Secretary of the Navy under direction of the President according to the following rule: Sailing-vessels of the first class shall be named after the States of the Union, those of the second class after the rivers, those of the third class after the principal cities and towns …
When you’re on-board a ship-at-sea, there is no cellphone that you can pick up and use to take care of personal business. You can’t just reach down for your phone and interact with loved ones.
Is the US Navy building any new ships?
The Navy Is Officially Building Its Next-Gen Destroyer. The U.S. Navy has begun working on a next-generation guided missile destroyer. DDG(X) will replace both existing cruisers and destroyers across the fleet. The Navy expects to begin construction of the first ship in 2028, with dozens more to follow.
What does USS stand for in USS Enterprise?
United Space Ship
The Making of Star Trek explains that USS means “United Space Ship” and that “Enterprise is a member of the Starship Class”.
The report outlines the rules for naming ships for Congress, but the ultimate decision rests with the Secretary of the Navy, so of course there are exceptions. In fact, the report says exceptions to the naming rules are as much a Navy tradition as the naming rules themselves.
How many US Navy ships have been named after people?
Five ships were named after the Father of the Nation (as well as the navy) while he was still alive. Then throughout most of the 19th and 20th centuries, the US Navy refrained from naming ships after a living person. That changed in 1973 when an aircraft carrier was named after Carl Vinson, a Congressman from Georgia.
The Navy sometimes breaks the naming rules, which is itself a tradition, a new report from the Congressional Research Service says. Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories. The Secretary of the Navy is in charge of naming US Navy ships, under the direction of the president and with the guidance of Congress.
The Secretary of the Navy is charged with naming new US Navy ships, but there are rules to how those ships are named. The Navy sometimes breaks the naming rules, which is itself a tradition, a new report from the Congressional Research Service says. Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.