List of cruisers of the United States Navy explained

This list of cruisers of the United States Navy includes all ships that were ever called "cruiser", either publicly or in internal documentation.

The Navy has 12 cruisers in active service, as of 28 June 2024, with the last tentatively scheduled for decommissioning in 2027. With the cancellation of the CG(X) program in 2010, the Navy currently has no cruiser replacement program planned.[1] The Navy is looking to the Aegis-equipped destroyers to increasingly fill the role of the cruiser in the protection of the carrier strike group, as it could be well into the 2030s before any possible cruiser replacement program is up and running.[1]

Ship status is indicated as either currently active [A] (including ready reserve), inactive [I], or precommissioning [P]. Ships in the inactive category include only ships in the inactive reserve, ships which have been disposed from US service have no listed status. Ships in the precommissioning category would include ships under construction or on order; as described above there currently are no such cruisers.

Historical overview

Nomenclature

Comprehension of the history of cruisers as shown in these lists requires some understanding of the unique role (sharing both independent and combined fleet operations) that cruisers were expected to support in the US fleet, and of the consequent influence this role had on design. In one example, the Navy's Bureau of Ships issued a memorandum in 1947 listing the ways in which cruiser hulls differed from destroyer hulls, including details such as double hull construction, electrical generation and distribution, water mains for firefighting, fuel lines and tankage, and fresh water distillation.[2]

CGN-9 Long Beach, commissioned in 1961, was the last US cruiser built on a true cruiser hull. All subsequent cruisers, including nuclear powered cruisers, were based on the less expensive and less capable destroyer hulls - the one attempt since Long Beach to revert to the advantages of a "cruiser hull" design was the canceled CSGN nuclear strike cruiser (the CSGN proposal mentioned the greater powerplant survivability from the separation of the two nuclear reactors in a cruiser hull over the adjacent reactors in a destroyer hull).[3]

The sole example of a destroyer built on a cruiser hull was the experimental DL-1 Norfolk, which was originally classed as a hunter-killer cruiser (CLK).[4]

Overview of hull classifications

See main article: Hull classification symbol.

Since the cruiser nomenclature predates the hull numbering system, and there were several confusing renumberings and renamings,[5] there are multiple entries on these lists referring to the same physical ship. Combat history summaries (wars and battle stars[6]) are listed only for the specific hull classification and number; for example, the World War II battle stars for a heavy cruiser (CA) and the Vietnam War battle stars for the same ship after its conversion to a guided missile cruiser (CG) are listed separately in each ship type list.

Hull reclassifications and skipped hull numbers

CA-1, CA-6 and CA-10 were never used, as ACR-1 Maine, ACR-6 California/San Diego and ACR-10 Tennessee/Memphis were lost prior to the 1920 redesignation, and their sisters' original hull numbers were carried over. CA-20 through CA-23 were skipped with the merger of the CA and CL sequences, which allowed the reclassification of the Washington Treaty CLs as CAs without re-numbering.

Heavy cruisers CA-149 and CA-151 to CA-153, light cruisers CL-154 to CL-159, and nuclear guided missile cruiser CGN-42 were canceled before being named.

Guided missile cruisers CG-1 through 8 and CG-10 through 12 were converted from World War II cruisers. CAG-1 USS Boston and CAG-2 USS Canberra retained most of their original gun armament and were later returned to their gun cruiser designations CA-69 and CA-70. CGN-9, Long Beach, originally held the last designation in the heavy-light cruiser sequence, CLGN-160.

CG-15 was skipped so the Leahy-class guided missile frigates (CG-16 class) could be redesignated without renumbering. The other missing numbers in the guided-missile cruiser series, 43–46, were not used so that DDG-47 Ticonderoga and DDG-48 Yorktown could be similarly redesignated. (It has been argued in some sources that the DDG-993 guided missile destroyers, which were essentially identically armed to the s, should have been redesignated CG-43 through −46.)

Before 30 June 1975, CG-16 USS Leahy through CGN-38 USS Virginia were designated DLG or DLGN (Destroyer Leader, Guided Missile (Nuclear powered)). They were redesignated cruisers in the 1975 ship reclassification. CGN-39 USS Texas and CGN-40 USS Mississippi were laid down as DLGNs but redesignated CGN before commissioning. CG-47 Ticonderoga and CG-48 Yorktown were ordered as guided missile destroyers (DDG) but were redesignated to guided missile cruisers (CG) before any ship was laid down. CGN-41 Arkansas and CG-49 through 73 were ordered, laid down and delivered as guided missile cruisers, although as Virginia or Ticonderoga-class ships they had not been designed as cruisers.

Cruisers without hull designations

First cruisers

The first three modern cruisers in the Navy, the Atlanta, Boston, and Chicago, were most successful as technology demonstrators that stimulated the US industrial base, with features such as steel hulls and electricity generation. Their technology proved so operationally decisive they came to be seen as the dividing line between the "Old Navy" and the "New Navy". The last two protected cruisers which initially served without hull classification numbers, the New Orleans and Albany, were purchased from a British builder during mobilization for the 1898 Spanish–American War.[7]

New Orleans class

Armed merchant cruisers

Beginning in 1891 Congress subsidized a number of fast ocean liners with plans to requisition them in wartime. St. Louis, St. Paul, Harvard, and Yale were the largest and were chartered by the Navy for the Spanish–American War, and seven others were purchased in 1898.[8]

German war prize

Armored cruisers (ACR)

See also: List of battleships of the United States Navy. Officially these ships were e.g., "Armored Cruiser No. 1". Unofficially, top naval officers initially referred to these ships as battleships because they cost almost as much, shared many features with them, and were intended to accompany them in fleet actions; they took care to ensure that Congress never heard their opinion. The 1905 Russo-Japanese War showed armored cruisers did not perform as well as either battleships or as other cruiser types. As battleship technology advanced they were judged obsolete for their original role about the time the last U.S. armored cruiser was commissioned (this advance in part led to the development of battlecruisers as a replacement), and so they were retained for other cruiser roles despite their deficiencies. During 1912–1920 the U.S. armored cruisers had their names changed from states to cities within those states to free up the names for battleships.[9]

Protected and Peace cruisers (C, PG)

In the pre-1920 period abbreviations were informal and not standardized; officially these ships were, e.g., "Cruiser No. 1". Only the Montgomery class were unprotected cruisers, all the rest were protected cruisers. The Navy often referred to unprotected cruisers and obsolete protected cruisers (and some large gunboats without cruiser features) as peace cruisers due to their use in major policing and diplomatic roles.[10]

While classified as patrol gunboats by the Navy and as sloops by the 1930 London Naval Treaty, the 2,000 ton displacement Erie-class gunboats were designed to fulfill the role of peace cruisers in Asia and the Caribbean as detailed in internal Navy documents.[11]

Cruiser minelayers (CM)

In 1919 two cruisers were reclassified as Cruiser Minelayers (CM); they had participated in the laying of the North Sea mine barrage during WW1. Other large minelayers with no cruiser features or history were later given the 'CM' hull symbol, and the 'cruiser' nomenclature was dropped.

Scout cruisers (CS)

The use of fast armed merchant cruisers in the Spanish–American War and the fleet exercises of 1902-03 convinced the Navy that it needed fast scout cruisers. The Chester class was built in part to test high speed propulsion plants. The Omaha class would become the oldest U.S. cruisers to serve in World War II. Officially these ships were, e.g., "Scout Cruiser No. 1", and sometimes abbreviated SC or SCR; on 8 August 1921 all would be reclassed as light cruisers.[12]

Battlecruisers (CC)

See main article: List of battlecruisers of the United States. The United States laid down its only six battlecruisers as part of the 1917 construction program; in accordance with the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty four were scrapped incomplete and two converted during construction into the s.[13]

Heavy and light cruisers (CA, CL)

Post-World War I

On 17 July 1920, all First and Second Class Cruisers (armored and protected cruisers) still in service were reclassified as Armored Cruisers (CA).

Pennsylvania class

Tennessee class

other classes

Columbia class

St. Louis class (1905)

In the 1920 hull designation system, of the Third Class Cruisers the fast Scout Cruisers became Light Cruisers (CL), and the slower New Orleans and Denver-class "peace cruisers" were reclassified as Patrol Gunboats (PG).

On 8 August 1921 the system was revised; the surviving protected cruisers (except for the "semi-armored" St Louis class) and the peace cruiser/patrol gunboats were all grouped with the scout cruisers as Light Cruisers (CL).

Chester class

other classes

(1896)

The CA/CL overlap of hull numbers would persist until the last armored cruiser of the original CA series, Seattle, was reclassed as IX-39 on 17 February 1941.

Washington Naval Treaty

The first cruisers of the Pensacola, Northampton, New Orleans, and Portland classes – which were designed after the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty, so quickly that the last design was complete before sea trial of the first were finished – were originally designated Light Cruisers (CL) due to their light protection. Later, in accordance with the 1930 London Naval Treaty, they were reclassified as "Heavy Cruisers" (CA) in 1931 due to their 8adj=onNaNadj=on guns. Thenceforward new heavy and light cruisers were numbered in a single sequence. These four classes were known as "Treaty cruisers" and "Tinclads" and were seen even before World War II as deficient by the Navy due to the treaty limitations, but despite their high losses in the early days of the war they performed well.[14]

New Orleans class

Portland class

New Orleans class

London Naval Treaty

The terms of the 1930 London Naval Treaty motivated the signatories to de-emphasize heavy cruiser construction in favor of light cruisers. The resultant nine ship Brooklyn-class of light cruisers had a strong influence on US cruiser design. Nearly all subsequent US cruisers, heavy and light, were directly or indirectly based on them, including the unique heavy cruiser Wichita.[15] [16]

New Orleans class

Wichita class

Brooklyn class

Brooklyn class (St. Louis subclass)

Second London Naval Treaty

The 1936 Second London Naval Treaty would also influence the Navy's light cruiser program. It imposed limits that resulted in the smaller displacement Atlanta class with a 5adj=onNaNadj=on dual purpose rapid fire main gun battery, the first such ship in the Navy.[18]

Cruiser-Destroyer (CLD)

Parallel to the Atlanta design was an abortive attempt to design a super-Atlanta known as the Cruiser-Destroyer, or CLD. The "ship characteristics" resulting from this study would be almost identical to that of the later CL-154 design. CLD did not become an official hull classification symbol.[19]

Early World War II

When the United States entered World War II it had three major classes of cruisers under construction: the Atlanta and Cleveland light cruiser classes (with 5-inch and 6-inch main batteries, respectively), and the Baltimore-class of heavy cruisers. The Cleveland-class was an improvement of the Brooklyn design, while the Baltimore-class was an improved Wichita. These ships would form the bulk of the cruiser war construction effort, with eight Atlanta-class, twenty-seven Cleveland-class, and fourteen Baltimore-class cruisers ultimately completed. Early in the war nine Cleveland hulls would be diverted for conversion into light aircraft carriers (CVLs). By the end of the war three Cleveland hulls would be canceled, and one incomplete hull would later be converted to a guided missile cruiser.[20]

Cleveland class

Atlanta class (Oakland subclass)

Cleveland class

Late World War II

As the Navy gained experience with World War II combat conditions, it was decided that the Atlanta, Cleveland, and Baltimore classes needed improvement. However, major improvements would cause unacceptable delays in the construction programs. A new generation of cruisers with minor improvements would consist of the Juneau and Fargo classes of light cruisers (respectively 5-inch and 6-inch main batteries), and the Oregon City-class of heavy cruisers. The major noticeable difference would be that the Fargo and the Oregon City classes would have their engine exhausts trunked into a single funnel to aid anti-aircraft fire. Due to the near-total destruction of the Imperial Japanese Navy, the number of the ships of this generation to be completed as gun cruisers would be small: three Juneau-class, two Fargo-class, and three Oregon City-class cruisers. A fourth Oregon City-class cruiser would be completed postwar as a command cruiser. Seventeen hulls from among the three classes were canceled.[21]

Late in the war the Baltimore-class would also serve as the basis of the two light aircraft carriers (CVLs).

Baltimore class

Post-World War II

The Navy agreed in the waning days of World War II to construct a small number of cruisers for the purpose of operationally testing new gun designs and other major improvements incorporating the lessons learned of World War II combat: the 'CL-154' and Worcester classes of light cruisers (respectively 5-inch and 6-inch main batteries), and the Des Moines-class of heavy cruisers. Initially the Navy wanted at least one squadron of six ships of each class, but in the end only two Worcester-class and three Des Moines-class cruisers would be completed, and the CL-154 class would be cancelled in its entirety. A total of seventeen hulls from among the three planned classes would be canceled.[22]

Baltimore class

Oregon City class

Des Moines class

Des Moines class

CL-154 class

The last ship to be assigned a hull number in the Heavy and Light Cruiser sequence would be the 1950s era nuclear powered Long Beach, though this ship would be assigned another number and designation under the guided missile cruiser hull classification before launch.

Long Beach class

Large cruisers (CB)

The motivation for the large cruiser concept came from the deployment of Germany's so-called pocket battleships in the early 1930s, and from concerns that Japan would follow with similar ships. These large cruisers had design features intermediate between heavy cruisers and battleships (such as the unique and highly effective 12-inch/50-caliber Mark 8 guns); this was unlike the designs of the earlier battlecruisers, the ultimate design of which had the same 16-inch guns as battleships but less armor and more speed. Despite these differences large cruisers and battlecruisers were intended to serve much the same role.[24] [25]

German cruiser war prize (IX)

Hunter-Killer cruisers (CLK)

CLK-1 was authorized in 1947 as an anti-submarine hunter killer. She was designed on a light cruiser hull so she could carry a greater variety of detection gear than a destroyer. CLK-2 was cancelled due to the high cost ($61.9 million) of CLK-1.[26]

Antiaircraft cruisers (CLAA)

On 18 March 1949, the surviving light cruisers of the Atlanta and Juneau classes were redesignated as antiaircraft cruisers (CLAA) without changing their hull numbers; San Diego, San Juan, and Flint were redesignated even though they had been decommissioned and were in reserve. The CL-154 class would also have received this designation had they not been canceled.Atlanta class

Atlanta class (Oakland subclass)

Juneau class

Command cruisers (CLC, CC)

By the end of World War II the Navy had gained favorable experience with dedicated amphibious command ships, and desired similar but faster ships to accompany aircraft carriers for fleet command, which would also relieve overcrowded fleet command facilities on other ships. Both completed conversions, Northampton and Wright, were indirectly based on the Baltimore class heavy cruiser design (the first via the Oregon City class, the second via the Saipan class). The result would be the highly capable but expensive command cruisers. These ships would be absorbed into the National Emergency Command Post Afloat mission, and then retired when that role was cancelled.[28]

Guided missile cruisers (CAG, CLG, CG)

'Cruiser hulls'

With the exception of the purpose-built nuclear powered guided missile cruiser Long Beach, all of the early guided missile cruisers were converted heavy or light cruisers from the World War II era. The early conversions were heavy (CAG) and light (CLG) 'single-enders' which placed the missile facilities aft and conservatively retained their forward main gun batteries; the later conversions (CG) were 'double-enders' which eliminated the main guns. In 1975 the surviving 'single enders' would be reclassified as CG even though they retained their guns.[29]

Alaska class

Long Beach class

CSGN class

The CSGN class, a proposed nuclear-powered Aegis strike cruiser, canceled unnamed and unnumbered; this was the sole proposal since 1961 to use 'cruiser hull' standards in a ship designated 'cruiser'.[30]

'Destroyer hulls'

See also: Guided-missile destroyer.

See also: List of destroyers of the United States Navy. Following the conversion of the Albany class, all guided missile cruisers would be built on 'destroyer hulls'; the pre-1975 ships were originally classified as destroyers (DDG) or as destroyer leaders (DLG) and termed 'frigates' before reclassification as cruisers.[31]

Bainbridge class

Truxtun class

CGN-42 class

The Ticonderoga class ships were originally planned as Aegis guided missile destroyers - they were built on destroyer hulls - but were then reclassed as cruisers.

Ticonderoga class with the Mark 26 missile launch system

Ticonderoga class with the Vertical Launch System (VLS)

CG(X) class

The CG(X) class was intended to apply the same technology used in the Zumwalt-class destroyers within a larger hull, nuclear power was a consideration, but was canceled unbuilt and unnamed.

Nuclear-powered cruisers (CGN)

To date all nuclear cruisers have been guided missile cruisers, and all have been retired.

Long Beach class

Bainbridge class

Truxtun class

California class

Virginia class

CGN-42 class

Miscellaneous lists

List by name

Names without links were not completed, or completed as aircraft carriers or destroyer leaders.

List of unnamed ships by hull number

List of canceled conversions

List of skipped hull numbers

See also

References

General and cited sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20140712052732/http://www.defensenews.com/article/20140706/DEFREG02/307060007/US-Navy-s-Cruiser-Problem Defense News
  2. Friedman, 1984, pp. 1-2
  3. Friedman, 1984, pp. 1-2, 413-425
  4. Friedman, 1982, pp 255-258
  5. Friedman, 1984, pp. 448-455
  6. "NavSource website"
  7. Friedman, 1984, pp. 18–22, 41–43
  8. Friedman, 1984, p. 41
  9. Friedman, 1984, pp. 45-46, 50-65
  10. Friedman, 1984, pp. 23–40, 48–50, 54–56
  11. Friedman, 1984, pp 167, 176-178
  12. Freidman, 1984, pp. 66–84
  13. Freidman, 1984, pp. 85–103
  14. Friedman, 1984, pp. 104–161
  15. Ewing, 1984, p. 76
  16. Friedman, 1984, pp. 182-215
  17. The ARA General Belgrano would be sunk by torpedo 2 May 1982 during the Falklands War, 323 killed
  18. Friedman, 1984, pp. 216–251
  19. Friedman, 1984, pp. 247–248
  20. Friedman, 1984, pp. 252–277
  21. Friedman, 1984, pp. 253, 277–281
  22. Friedman, 1984, pp. 348-371
  23. Friedman, 1984, p. 454
  24. Freidman, 1984, pp. 286–309
  25. "Knupp, Navy General Board website"
  26. Friedman, 1982, pp 255–258
  27. Web site: U.S. NAVY SHIPS -- Listed by Hull Number . April 2010 . DEPARTMENT OF THE NAVY -- NAVAL HISTORY AND HERITAGE COMMAND.
  28. Freidman, 1984, pp. 427-445
  29. Friedman, 1984, pp. 372-419
  30. Friedman, 1984, pp. 414, 419-422
  31. Friedman, 1982, pp. 300–307, 321–347
  32. Friedman, 1984, pp. 421
  33. Friedman, 1982, pp. 346–347
  34. Web site: Inactive ship inventory. NAVSEA, US Navy. 27 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20210915051633/http://www.navsea.navy.mil/Portals/103/Documents/TeamShips/SEA21/InactiveShips/InactiveShipInventory-27Sep16(3).pdf. 15 September 2021.
  35. Web site: Ripley . Julie Ann . USS Bunker Hill Decommissions . Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet . 22 September 2023 . 22 September 2023.
  36. USS Mobile Bay Decommissions, Honors 36 Years of Service. United States Navy. 11 August 2023. 11 August 2023.
  37. News: Jennewein. Chris. Guided-Missile Cruiser USS Mobile Bay Decommissioned in San Diego After 36 Years. Times of San Diego. 10 August 2023. 11 August 2023.
  38. USS San Jacinto (CG-56) Decommissions, Honoring 35 Years of Service. United States Navy. 16 September 2023. 16 September 2023.
  39. Web site: USS Lake Champlain Decommissions After 35 Years of Distinguished Service. surfpac.navy.mil. 1 September 2023. 2 September 2023.
  40. News: Sailors Bid Farewell to USS Monterey as Navy Prepares to Decommission 3 More Cruisers This Month . September 2022 . Heather . Mongilio . USNI News . United States Naval Institute .
  41. Web site: USS Robert Smalls (CG-62). nvr.navy.mil. 1 March 2023. 8 March 2023.
  42. News: Schmall . Emily . Stripping Confederate Ties, the U.S. Navy Renames Two Vessels . 12 March 2023 . The New York Times . 11 March 2023.
  43. News: Anzio, Hué City Leave the Fleet as Navy Cruiser Decommissionings Continue . September 2022 . Heather . Mongilio . USNI News . United States Naval Institute .
  44. News: USS Vella Gulf Becomes First of Five Ticonderoga-Class Cruisers to Decommission This Year . August 2022 . Heather . Mongilio . USNI News . United States Naval Institute .
  45. News: Cruiser USS Port Royal Decommissioned at Pearl Harbor . September 2022 . Seapower . Navy League of the United States .
  46. Albany (CA-72) was renamed Pittsburg 1944
  47. California (ACR-6) was renamed San Diego 1914
  48. Chancellorsville (CG-62) was renamed Robert Smalls 2023
  49. Colorado (ACR-7) was renamed Pueblo 1916
  50. Des Moines (CA-75) was renamed Helena 1944
  51. Flint (CL-64) was renamed Vincennes 1942
  52. Maryland (ACR-8) was renamed Frederick 1916
  53. Montana (ACR-13) was renamed Missoula 1920
  54. New York (ACR-2) was renamed Saratoga 1911
  55. North Carolina (ACR-12) was renamed Charlotte 1920
  56. Pennsylvania (ACR-4) was renamed Pittsburgh 1912
  57. Pittsburg (CA-70) was renamed Canberra 1942
  58. St. Paul (CA-71) was renamed Quincy 1942
  59. Saratoga (ACR-2) was renamed Rochester 1917
  60. South Dakota (ACR-9) was renamed Huron 1920
  61. Tennessee (ACR-10) was renamed Memphis 1916
  62. Vicksburg (CL-81) was renamed Houston 1942
  63. Washington (ACR-11) was renamed Seattle 1916
  64. West Virginia (ACR-5) was renamed Huntington 1916
  65. Wilkes-Barre (CL-90) was renamed Astoria 1942