USS Planter

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USS Planter may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy:

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Planter or Planters may refer to:

The second USS Chimo (ACM-1) was the lead ship of her class of minelayers in the United States Navy during World War II.

USS <i>Planter</i> (1862) Gunboat of the United States Navy

USS Planter was a steamer taken over by Robert Smalls, a Southern slave and ship's pilot who steered the ship past Confederate defenses and surrendered it to Union Navy forces on 13 May 1862 during the American Civil War. The episode is missing from Scharf's History of the Confederate States Navy, except for one sentence saying that Smalls "stole" the ship.

USS <i>Planter</i> (ACM-2) Minelayer in the United States Navy during World War II

The second USS Planter (ACM-2) was a Chimo-class minelayer in the United States Navy during World War II.

USS Obstructor (ACM-7) was a Chimo-class minelayer in the United States Navy during World War II.

USS <i>Picket</i> (ACM-8) Chimo-class minelayer

USS Picket (ACM–8) was a Chimo-class minelayer of the United States Navy during World War II.

USCGC <i>Yamacraw</i> (WARC-333)

USCGC Yamacraw (WARC-333) was a United States Coast Guard Cable Repair Ship. The ship was built for the Army Mine Planter Service as U. S. Army Mine Planter Maj. Gen. Arthur Murray (MP-9) delivered December 1942. On 2 January 1945 the ship was acquired by the Navy, converted to an Auxiliary Minelayer and commissioned USS Trapper (ACM-9) on 15 March 1945. Trapper was headed to the Pacific when Japan surrendered. After work in Japanese waters the ship headed for San Francisco arriving there 2 May 1946 for transfer to the Coast Guard.

USS Nausett may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy:

Camanche (ACM-11/MMA-11) was the name given in 1945 to the former U.S. Army Mine Planter (USAMP) Brigadier General Royal T. Frank (MP-12) while in naval inactive reserve more than ten years after acquisition of the ship by Navy from the Army in 1944. The ship had previously been classified by the Navy as an Auxiliary Mine Layer (ACM) and then Minelayer, Auxiliary (MMA). The ship was never commissioned by Navy and thus never bore the "USS" prefix.

Mine planter

Mine planter and the earlier "torpedo planter" was a term used for mine warfare ships into the early days of World War I. In later terminology, particularly in the United States, a mine planter was a ship specifically designed to install controlled mines or contact mines in coastal fortifications. This type of ship diverged in both function and design from a ship operating as a naval minelayer. Though the vessel may be seagoing it is not designed to lay large numbers of mines in open sea. A mine planter was designed to place controlled minefields in exact locations so that they might be fired individually or as a group from shore when observers noted a target to be at or near a designated mine's position. The terms and types of specialized ship existed from the 1860s where "torpedoes" were made famous in the American Civil War until the demise of large, fixed coastal fortifications brought on by the changes of World War II.

USS Dekanawida may refer to the following ships operated by the United States Navy:

References

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships .