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ezgo394
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 1:53 am
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klagldsf wrote:
I'd be willing to bet that in the near future there will be a USS Hilary Clinton, whether the woman herself even wants it or not.
Haha, now I'm wondering if they'll come out with a ship named after Barack Obama.

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klagldsf
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 3:13 am
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What makes Hilary Clinton realistic is because she's a Sec of State who's actually (arguably) done stuff plus she's more or less popular with significant portions of both parties. There are reasons why it's unlikely for Obama to get a ship named after him, and I hope this isn't sounding too political in what's becoming a very political thread - but the general sentiment is that he's driven away a lot of his former supporters while doing very little to bring new ones in. This is not the same thing as saying that this is a fault of the man, his administration or his policies, or an accusation of his detractors or those who do not agree with his policies - it's just an observation of the political climate.

But it is a commentary on the political process of determining what politicians get ships named for them. Yes, it's a popularity contest, but at the very basest, more core concept, popularity is a measure of effectiveness and no one's going to be clamouring for a ship to be named after an ineffective president (I challenge someone to show me evidence of a USS President Van Buren). Of course what isn't helping either individual is that they both lack Navy service (and they've advocated or have been behind policies that are not the most popular with the service branches).


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SHIPDUDE
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 3:19 am
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Van_Buren


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klagldsf
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 3:46 am
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...well I'll be damned.

Though I'd like to question the validity of both examples as one was in the revenue service (though I suppose still a commissioned ship) and the other was named after a city :P


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Zephyr
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 7:03 am
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deankal55 wrote:
Klagldsf, Zephyr,

Several US ships have been named after National Park (Yellowstone, Everglades), there are also ships named after historic sites and battles (Alamo, Monticello, Carter Hall). While all of the National Parks are managed by the government, not all of the historic sites are government run. All three of the historic sites I listed are owned by private non-profit groups-Daughters of the Texas Revolution, the Thomas Jefferson Foundation, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation respectively.

Also a fine point of US bureaucracy-National Parks and National Forests are established for different management purposes. The US Forest Service is part of the Department of Agriculture (think trees as a crop) while the National Park Service is part of the Department of the Interior. I don't konw of any US ships named for National Forests.
Yes, I know that. My comments were not about ships named after the parks. I was commenting on exhibits within the parks sponsored by corporations. And I'm not saying thats a bad thing, getting additional money to preserve history.

Been studying naval history since the mid-60's. I hope I have figured out USN naming conventions by now.

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Zephyr
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 3rd, 2012, 7:19 am
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USN ships named for Presidents

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Raxar
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 4th, 2012, 2:20 pm
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Here's some, but ti's in French...

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Wizard
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 10th, 2012, 9:45 am
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Harold ... FF-1074%29

....and he was not an American. He had a US warship named for him because he supported LBJ's stance on the Vietnam war.

If you follow the links you'll see we actually lost this bloke in a swimming accident in December 1967. There are as many conspiracy theories on the disappearance of Harold Holt as there are surrounding the assassination of JFK.


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deankal55
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 10th, 2012, 3:00 pm
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Several of the SSBNs were named for individuals who were not U.S. citizens. Pulaski had an honorary US citizenship (he died before the US gained its independance). Simon Bolivar was not a US citizen, nor an honorary citizen. Tecumseh was an American Indian, and therefore throughly American, but was a citizen of the Shawnee tribe (Indians were not US citizens at the time) and in fact died in a British uniform fighting against the US Army. (Maybe the Navy like that he was fighting against the Army?) Likewise, Kamehameha was a native Hawaiian and not a US citizen having died several generations before the US annexation of Hawaii; he was not only a citizen of the Kingdom of Hawaii, he was the soverign ruler of that kingdom.


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Scifibug
Post subject: Re: Ship naming conventions of the world.Posted: March 10th, 2012, 8:07 pm
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An apocryphal story is that Admiral Burke didn't want a ship named after him.

He was still alive, thank-you very much!


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