USS California |
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Six ships of the United States Navy have been named USS California in honor of the 31th state.
The first USS California[?] was a screw sloop originally named Minnetonka. The second USS California (ACR-6), a Pennsylvania-class[?] armored cruiser later renamed San Diego[?], saw action escorting convoys during World War I. The third USS California (SP-249)[?], originally a yacht named Hauoli, served during World War I as a motor patrol boat[?] in New York City Harbor and as an experimental platform used by Thomas Edison to test underwater listening devices. The fourth USS California (SP-647)[?] served during World War I as a motor patrol boat[?] in San Francisco Harbor. California (ACR-6) was renamed San Diego to free up her name for the lead ship of a new class of battleship. At one time, BB-40 was to have been the new California, but that ship was actually commissioned (and the class[?] actually named for) USS New Mexico (BB-40). The fifth USS California (BB-44), a New Mexico-class battleship[?], saw action in World War II. The sixth USS California (CGN-36)[?], known as the "Golden Grizzly," was the lead ship of her class[?] of a nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser. |
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