USS Paducah is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
Arizona has been the name of three ships of the United States Navy and will be the name of a future submarine.
USS Cole is the name of two ships of the United States Navy;
USS Enterprise may refer to the following ships and other vessels:
Four ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Maine, named for the 23rd state:
Four ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Missouri in honor of the state of Missouri:
USS Nautilus may refer to:
USS Liberty may refer to:
Four ships of the United States Navy have been named USS Indianapolis:
USS Voyager can refer to:
USS Franklin may refer to:
Chief may refer to:
USS Percival may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy:
USS Peosta (1857) – also known as "Tinclad" # 36—was a steamboat acquired by the Union Navy during the American Civil War. Peosta was outfitted as an armed gunboat, with heavy guns for battles at sea, and large howitzers for shore bombardment. She served on the rivers and other waterways of the Confederate States of America enforcing the Union blockade on the South.
USS Paducah (PG-18) was a Dubuque-class gunboat acquired by the US Navy prior to World War I. Her task was to patrol, escort, and protect Navy ships.
USS Plover is a name the United States Navy has used more than once in naming a vessel:
USS Condor is a name used more than once by the U.S. Navy:
USS Fixity (AM-235) was an Admirable-class minesweeper built for the United States Navy during World War II. The ship was ordered and laid down as PCE-905-class patrol craft USS PCE-908 but was renamed and reclassified before her December 1944 commissioning as Fixity (AM-235). She earned two battle stars in service in the Pacific during the war. She was decommissioned in November 1946 and placed in reserve. In January 1948, she was transferred to the United States Maritime Commission which sold her into merchant service in 1949. Operating as the Commercial Dixie, she sank in the Ohio River in the late 1990s.
USS Theodore Roosevelt has been the name of more than one United States Navy ship, and may refer to:
USS Sallie Wood (1860) was a 256-ton steamer captured by the Union Navy during the early years of the American Civil War.
The Minnesota Naval Militia is the currently inactive naval militia of Minnesota. As a naval militia, the Minnesota Naval Militia served as a Navy and Marine Corps parallel to the National Guard, where, like the soldiers of the Army National Guard and the airmen of the Air National Guard, sailors and marines could serve in a dual federal and state role as state military forces answerable to the governor, unless federalized and deployed by the federal government. The naval militia served as an active component of the organized militia from 1903 until the end of World War II.