Ships

USS North Carolina in Wilmington, NC
USS Nimitz
LST-World War II

Ships

Purpose

The Ships table is the most comprehensive and nearly complete of the tables in this site. It includes about 48,800 different vessels. It is primarily, but not exclusively, Navy ships, that have helped make American history.

Fewer than half of the vessels in the table are named. Most of the others are identified only by a number but one that is unique to that vessel (called hull numbers by the Navy.) The most famous of the latter is PT-109, John Kennedy’s PT boat that was sunk in World War II. Another famous group is the “LSTs”, the Landing Ships-Tank of World War II fame. (Some crew members who served on these big, ungainly vessels said that LST stood for Large Slow Target.) Following World War II, the Navy started giving the LSTs names, but those in the war were identified only by their hull numbers.

DANFS

The most authoritative and most common source of information about the Navy’s commissioned and named ships, plus the LSTs, is the Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships (DANFS). This series of eight books was published by the Navy and was not available through commercial book stores. The books are now out of print, but are available through the used book market. Much if not all of their content is now also available on line at http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/

Many thousands of watercraft had non-unique numbers, or semi-unique numbers, the latter including landing craft that carried the number of the transport that carried them plus a number of their own (such as PA-91-15). I have not tried to include these latter craft in this project.

The World War II Commercial Fleet

The Navy in World War II utilized many commercial vessels, even in the dangerous landing operations, the most famous being the Liberty Ships, which were mostly freighters, and their larger replacements, the Victory Ships. These and other commercial vessels from that war are included in the table. The U.S. built thousands of these ships and other commercial type ships during and shortly after World War II. Lists of the various types of commercial design ships built for the war, and separate lists of what ships were built by each shipyard, are at the Maritime Commission site, http://shipscribe.com/shiprefs/mc/index.html

Some of these were turned over to the Navy to operate, but most were operated by commercial shipping companies, even in battle and particularly in dangerous convoys crossing the Atlantic.

The liberty ships were named for people, and a book has been published that identifies who these people were. It is Liberty Ships, the People Behind the Names, compiled by Capt. Robert Deschamps and published in 1999. It is probably available on line.

The Army’s Ships
The Army has also used thousands of ships and other watercraft over the years, especially in the Civil War and World War II. Major sources of information about these vessels are:

The Army’s Navy Series Volume I, Marine Transportation in War. The U.S. Army
Experience 1775-1860, by Charles Dana Gibson and E. Kay Gibson

The Army’s Navy Series Volume II, Assault and Logistics Union Army Coastal and River Operations 1861-1866 by Charles Dana Gibson and E. Kay Gibson

U.S. Army Ships and Watercraft of World War II, by David H. Grover

Smaller Vessels

Many books and web sites have been published about the tens of thousands of smaller vessels that the Navy used during World War II. I have found several of them and am sure there are many more that I’m not aware of.

Two fine examples are:

Ten Thousand Men and One Hundred Thirty “Mighty Midget” Ships–The U.S.S. LCS(L)s in World War II, by Raymond A. Baumler. This is about the Landing Ship Support (Large) vessels. This book was privately published and printed in 1991 by PIP Printing, Rockville MD.

At Close Quarters, PT Boats in the United States Navy, by Robert J. Bulkley, Jr. This book has extensive information about the history of each PT-Boat, many of the men who served on them, and their organizations. This book was first printed in 1962 for the Navy by the Government Printing Office, and has been reprinted by the Naval Institute Press.

Ruwix is a collection of online puzzle programs and tutorials. Discover the secret of your unsolved Rubix Cube.

 

NAME
NAME TYPE HULL_NUM CLASS COMM_IS_DATE RECLASS_NUM BUILDER BUILT_CITY BUILT_STATE STATUS DECOM_SUNK_OR_RECLASS HOME_PORT SPECIFICATIONS HISTORYNOTES
Jicarilla ATF 104 Cherokee 1944-06-26 Charleston Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. Charleston SC Decom 1950-06-14 Launched as AF-104
Reclassified ATF-104 May 15 1944, before commissioning
WW II
Oct 1944, Invasion of Leyte, LCDR W. B. Coats (DANFS says at Pearl Harbor during this time)
Jan 1945, Invasion at Lingayen Gulf
Apr and Jun 1945, Okinawa Campaign
1946, Operation Crossroads
Decommissioned 6/14/1950
Transferred to Maritime Administration 8/1962, to National Defense Reserve Fleet
2 Battle Stars WW II
Jim Bridger 1942-12-25 Oregon Shipbuilding Corp. Portland OR Maritime Commission E Hull 610
Merchant ship
Original operator, James Griffiths
WW II
Jun 1944, Operation Overlord, Invasion of Normandy
Apr 17-23 1945, Mindanao Island landings
Jimetta SP 878 1917-09-11 New York Yacht, Launch, & Engine Co. Decom 1918-12-11 Ex Francis II
Built 1915
Motor yacht
Acquired by Navy Jul 16 1917
Commissioned Sep 11 1917
WW I –
3rd Naval District
Decommissioned De 11 1918 and returned to owner the same day
Jimmy Carter SSN 23 Seawolf 2005-02-19 General Dynamics Electric Boat Groton CT Active Bangor Named for U.S. President James Earl (Jimmy) Carter, Jr. qv
Joanna SP 1963 1917-12-09 Albany Boat Co. Watervliet NY Struck Motor boat built 1917
Taken by Navy Dec 9 1917
WW I –
3rd Naval District
Struck 1920
Joaquin Miller 1942-08-29 Permanente Metals Corp., Richmond #1 Richmond CA Maritime Commission E Hull 484
Merchant ship
Original operator, Isthmian Steamship
WW II
Jobb DE 707 Rudderow 1944-07-04 Defoe Shipbuilding Co. Bay City MI Decom 1943-05-13 Named for PhM3c Richard P. Jobb, qv
WW II
Dec 1944, convoy to Mindoro
Jan 1945, Invasion at Lingayen Gulf
Jun 1945, lainding at Brunei Bay, Borneo
Decommissioned May 13 1946
3 Battle Stars WW II
Joe C. Specker Penn Jersey Shipbuilding Camden NJ Built 1945
Army vessel
WW II
Transferred to Navy
Joe Fellows 1944-03-29 California Shipbuilding Corp. Los Angeles CA Maritime Commission E Hull 2241
Merchant ship
Original operator, McCormick Steamship
WW II
Joe Harris 1944-05-12 Permanente Metals Corp., Yard 2 Richmond CA Maritime Commission E Hull 2280
Merchant ship
Original operator, Pacific-Atlantic Steamship
WW II

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