USS Active may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy:
USS Washington may refer to:
USS Yuma has been the name of five ships of the United States Navy. The name is taken after the Yuma tribe of Arizona.
Five ships of the United States Navy have borne the name Alert. During World War I, three ships held the name simultaneously.
Six ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Powhatan or USNS Powhatan, named in honor of Powhatan (1550–1618), an Indian chief in tidewater Virginia; the father of Pocahontas.
Three ships in the United States Navy have been named USS Cayuga for one of the six Iroquois tribes.
USS Algonquin may refer to the following ships operated by the United States Navy:
USS Relief may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy:
USS Hampton has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
USS Quileute (YTB–540), later YTM-540, was a United States Navy harbor tug in service from 1945 to ca. 1974.
USS Montezuma may refer to the following vessels of the United States Navy:
USS Muskegon may refer to the following ships operated by the United States Navy:
There have been three ships with the name USS Rainier that saw service in the United States Navy:
USS Wahtah (YT-140), later YTB-140, was a United States Navy harbor tug in commission from 1939 to 1946.
The third USS Osceola (YT-129), previously USS YT-129, later YTB-129, later YTM-129, was a United States Navy harbor tug commissioned in 1938 and sold for scrapping in 1973.
USS Waneta (YT-384), later YTB-384, later YTM-384, was a United States Navy harbor tug in commission from 1944 to 1946 and from 1953 to 1974.
USS Katherine K. (SP-220) was a United States Navy patrol vessel and tug in commission from 1917 to 1919.
The second USS Pocomoke (SP-265), later YT-43, was a United States Navy minesweeper and tug commissioned in 1917 and sold in 1922.
USS Knickerbocker (SP-479), was a United States Navy tug, minesweeper, and dispatch ship in commission from 1917 to 1919.
USS Active was a tug constructed in 1888 at San Francisco by the Union Iron Works. The tug, first steel tug built on the West Coast, was launched 4 August 1888. She was acquired by the United States Navy from John D. Spreckels Brothers Co. on 18 April 1898 "for auxiliary purposes incident to a state of war." Converted for naval service at her builder's yard, she was commissioned at the Mare Island Navy Yard on 6 July 1898. She was the third US Navy ship to be named Active.