List of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy
Aircraft carriers are warships that act as airbases for carrier-based aircraft. In the United States Navy, these consist of ships commissioned with hull classification symbols CV (aircraft carrier), CVA (attack aircraft carrier), CVB (large aircraft carrier), CVL (light aircraft carrier), CVN (aircraft carrier (nuclear propulsion)). Beginning with the Forrestal-class, (CV-59 to present) all carriers commissioned into service are classified as supercarriers. The United States Navy has also used escort aircraft carriers and airship aircraft carriers. This list does not include various amphibious warfare ships which can operate as carriers.
Ships of the United States Navy | |
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Ships Grouped Alphabetically | |
Ships Grouped By Type | |
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The first aircraft carrier commissioned into the United States Navy was USS Langley (CV-1) on 20 March 1922. The Langley was a converted Proteus-class collier (originally commissioned as USS Jupiter (AC-3),[1] Langley was soon followed by the Lexington-class, USS Ranger (the first purpose-built carrier in the American fleet), the Yorktown-class, and USS Wasp. These classes made up the entirety of the United States carrier fleet active prior to the Second World War.[2]
With World War II looming, two more classes of carriers were commissioned under President Franklin Roosevelt: the Essex-class, which are informally divided into regular bow and extended bow sub-classes, and the Independence-class, which are classified as light aircraft carriers.[3] Between these two classes, 35 ships were completed.[4] During this time, the Navy also purchased two training vessels, USS Wolverine and USS Sable.[5][6]
The Cold War led to multiple developments in the United States' carrier fleet, starting with the addition of the Midway-class and the Saipan-class.[7] One more class in the start of the Cold War, the United States-class, was canceled due to the Truman administration's policy of shrinking the United States Navy and in particular, the Navy's air assets. The policy was eventually revised after a public outcry and Congressional hearings sparked by the Revolt of the Admirals.[8]
Later in the Cold War era, the first of the classes dubbed "supercarriers" was born, starting with the Forrestal-class,[9] followed by the Kitty Hawk-class; Enterprise (CVN-65), the first nuclear powered carrier; and John F. Kennedy (CV-67), the last conventionally powered carrier. These were then followed by the Nimitz-class and the modern day post-cold war Gerald R. Ford-class nuclear supercarriers, the only two classes of supercarriers that are currently in active-duty service.[10] The ten-ship Nimitz-class is complete. The USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) was launched in October 2013 and is the lead ship of her planned ten-ship Ford-class supercarriers. The John F. Kennedy (CVN-79) was launched in October 2019 and construction is underway on Enterprise (CVN-80).[15]
List
# | Name | Image | Class | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Service life | Status | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
CV-1 | Langley | Langley (lead ship) |
20 March 1922 | 27 February 1942 | 19 years, 344 days | Scuttled and sunk 65 nmi south of Cilacap, Java | [16][17][18] | |
CV-2 | Lexington | Lexington (lead ship) |
14 December 1927 | 8 May 1942 | 14 years, 145 days | Sunk in the Battle of the Coral Sea | [18][19] | |
CV-3 | Saratoga | Lexington | 16 November 1927 | 26 July 1946 | 18 years, 254 days | Sunk in Operation Crossroads as a nuclear test target near Bikini Atoll | [18][20] | |
CV-4 | Ranger | Ranger (lead ship) |
4 June 1934 | 18 October 1946 | 12 years, 136 days | Scrapped in 1947 | [21] | |
CV-5 | Yorktown | Yorktown (lead ship) |
30 September 1937 | 7 June 1942 | 4 years, 250 days | Sunk in the Battle of Midway | [22] | |
CV-6 | Enterprise | Yorktown | 12 May 1938 | 17 February 1947 | 8 years, 281 days | Scrapped in 1960 | [23] | |
CV-7 | Wasp | Wasp (lead ship) |
25 April 1940 | 15 September 1942 | 2 years, 143 days | Sunk during the Guadalcanal campaign | [24] | |
CV-8 | Hornet | Yorktown | 20 October 1941 | 26 October 1942 | 1 year, 6 days | Sunk in the Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands | [25][26] | |
CV-9 | Essex | Essex (lead ship) |
31 December 1942 | 20 June 1969 | 26 years, 171 days | Scrapped in 1975 | [27] | |
CV-10 | Yorktown | Essex | 15 April 1943 | 27 June 1970 | 27 years, 73 days | Preserved at the Patriot's Point Naval & Maritime Museum—Mount Pleasant, South Carolina, USA | [28] | |
CV-11 | Intrepid | Essex | 16 August 1943 | 15 March 1974 | 30 years, 211 days | Preserved at the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum—New York, New York, USA | [29] | |
CV-12 | Hornet | Essex | 20 November 1943 | 26 May 1970 | 26 years, 187 days | Preserved at USS Hornet Museum—Alameda, California, USA | [30] | |
CV-13 | Franklin | Essex | 31 January 1944 | 17 February 1947 | 2 years, 351 days | Scrapped in 1966 | [31] | |
CV-14 | Ticonderoga | Essex (extended bow) | 8 May 1944 | 1 September 1973 | 29 years, 116 days | Scrapped in 1975 | [32] | |
CV-15 | Randolph | Essex (extended bow) | 9 October 1944 | 13 February 1969 | 24 years, 127 days | Scrapped in 1975 | [33] | |
CV-16 | Lexington | Essex | 17 February 1943 | 8 November 1991 | 48 years, 264 days | Preserved at USS Lexington Museum on the Bay— Corpus Christi, Texas, US | [34][35] | |
CV-17 | Bunker Hill | Essex | 25 May 1943 | 9 July 1947 | 4 years, 45 days | Scrapped in 1973 | [36][37][38] | |
CV-18 | Wasp | Essex | 24 November 1943 | 1 July 1972 | 28 years, 220 days | Scrapped in 1973 | [39] | |
CV-19 | Hancock | Essex (extended bow) | 15 April 1944 | 30 January 1976 | 31 years, 290 days | Scrapped in 1976 | [40] | |
CV-20 | Bennington | Essex | 6 August 1944 | 15 January 1970 | 25 years, 162 days | Scrapped in 1994 | [41] | |
CV-21 | Boxer | Essex (extended bow) | 16 April 1945 | 1 December 1969 | 24 years, 229 days | Scrapped in 1971 | [42][43] | |
CVL-22 | Independence | Independence (lead ship) |
14 January 1943 | 28 August 1946 | 3 years, 226 days | Sunk as a test target near the Farallon Islands in 1951 | [44] | |
CVL-23 | Princeton | Independence | 25 February 1943 | 24 October 1944 | 1 year, 242 days | Sunk in the Battle of Leyte Gulf | [14] | |
CVL-24 | Belleau Wood | Independence | 31 March 1943 | 13 January 1947 | 3 years, 288 days | Scrapped in 1960 | [14] | |
CVL-25 | Cowpens | Independence | 28 May 1943 | 13 January 1947 | 3 years, 230 days | Scrapped in 1960 | [14] | |
CVL-26 | Monterey | Independence | 17 June 1943 | 16 January 1956 | 12 years, 213 days | Scrapped in 1971 | [14] | |
CVL-27 | Langley | Independence | 31 August 1943 | 11 February 1947 | 3 years, 164 days | Scrapped in 1964 | [14] | |
CVL-28 | Cabot | Independence | 24 July 1943 | 21 January 1955 | 11 years, 181 days | Scrapped in 2002 | [14] | |
CVL-29 | Bataan | Independence | 17 November 1943 | 9 April 1954 | 10 years, 143 days | Scrapped in 1961 | [45] | |
CVL-30 | San Jacinto | Independence | 15 December 1943 | 1 March 1947 | 3 years, 76 days | Scrapped 1972 | [14] | |
CV-31 | Bon Homme Richard | Essex | 26 November 1944 | 2 July 1971 | 26 years, 218 days | Scrapped in 1992 | [46] | |
CV-32 | Leyte | Essex (extended bow) | 11 April 1946 | 15 May 1959 | 13 years, 34 days | Scrapped in 1970 | [14] | |
CV-33 | Kearsarge | Essex (extended bow) | 2 May 1946 | 15 January 1970 | 23 years, 258 days | Scrapped in 1974 | [47] | |
CV-34 | Oriskany | Essex (extended bow) | 25 September 1950 | 20 September 1979 | 28 years, 360 days | Scuttled as an artificial reef in the Gulf of Mexico in 2006 | [14] | |
CV-35 | Reprisal | Essex (extended bow) | n/a | n/a | n/a | Cancelled during construction. Scrapped in 1949 |
[48] | |
CV-36 | Antietam | Essex (extended bow) | 28 January 1945 | 8 May 1963 | 18 years, 100 days | Scrapped in 1974 | [49] | |
CV-37 | Princeton | Essex (extended bow) | 18 November 1945 | 30 January 1970 | 24 years, 73 days | Scrapped in 1971 | ||
CV-38 | Shangri-la | Essex (extended bow) | 15 September 1944 | 30 July 1971 | 26 years, 318 days | Scrapped in 1988 | [50] | |
CV-39 | Lake Champlain | Essex (extended bow) | 3 July 1945 | 2 May 1966 | 20 years, 303 days | Scrapped in 1972 | ||
CV-40 | Tarawa | Essex (extended bow) | 8 December 1945 | 13 May 1960 | 14 years, 157 days | Scrapped in 1968 | ||
# | Name | Image | Class | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Service life | Status | Refs. |
CVB-41 | Midway | Midway (lead ship) |
10 September 1945 | 11 April 1992 | 46 years, 214 days | Preserved at the USS Midway Museum—San Diego, California, USA | [51] | |
CVB-42 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | Midway | 27 October 1945 | 1 October 1977 | 31 years, 339 days | Scrapped in 1978 | [52] | |
CVB-43 | Coral Sea | Midway | 1 October 1947 | 26 April 1990 | 42 years, 207 days | Scrapped in 1993 | [53] | |
CV-44 | No name assigned | (no image available) | Midway | n/a | n/a | n/a | Cancelled before construction began. | [54] |
CV-45 | Valley Forge | Essex (extended bow) |
3 November 1946 | 15 January 1970 | 23 years, 73 days | Scrapped in 1971 | ||
CV-46 | Iwo Jima | Essex (extended bow) | n/a | n/a | n/a | Cancelled during construction. Scrapped in 1946 |
[55] | |
CV-47 | Philippine Sea | Essex (extended bow) | 11 May 1946 | 28 December 1958 | 12 years, 231 days | Scrapped in 1971 | ||
CVL-48 | Saipan | Saipan (lead ship) |
14 July 1946 | 14 January 1970 | 23 years, 184 days | Scrapped in 1976 | ||
CVL-49 | Wright | Saipan | 9 February 1947 | 15 March 1956 | 9 years, 35 days | Scrapped in 1980 | [14] | |
CV-50 to CV-55 | No names assigned | (no images available) | Essex | These hulls were all cancelled before construction began. | [54] | |||
CVB-56 & CVB-57 | No names assigned | (no images available) | Midway | These hulls were both cancelled before construction began. | [54] | |||
CVA-58 | United States | United States (lead ship) |
n/a | n/a | n/a | Cancelled during construction. Scrapped | [56] | |
CV-59 | Forrestal | Forrestal (lead ship) |
1 October 1955 | 30 September 1993 | 37 years, 364 days | Scrapped in 2014 | [57][58] | |
CV-60 | Saratoga | Forrestal | 14 April 1956 | 20 August 1994 | 38 years, 128 days | Scrapped in 2015 | [61] | |
CV-61 | Ranger | Forrestal | 10 August 1957 | 10 July 1993 | 35 years, 334 days | Scrapped in 2017 | [62] | |
CV-62 | Independence | Forrestal | 10 January 1959 | 30 September 1998 | 39 years, 263 days | Scrapped in 2019 | [63] | |
# | Name | Image | Class | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Service life | Status | Refs. |
CV-63 | Kitty Hawk | Kitty Hawk (lead ship) |
29 April 1961 | 12 May 2009 | 48 years, 13 days | Struck, to be scrapped | [64][65][66] | |
CV-64 | Constellation | Kitty Hawk | 27 October 1961 | 7 August 2003 | 41 years, 284 days | Scrapped in 2015 | [67] | |
CVN-65 | Enterprise | Enterprise (lead ship) |
25 November 1961 | 3 February 2017 | 55 years, 70 days | Struck, disposal plans still being determined | [68] | |
CV-66 | America | Kitty Hawk | 23 January 1965 | 9 August 1996 | 31 years, 199 days | Sunk as a test target in the Atlantic Ocean in 2005 | [69] | |
CV-67 | John F. Kennedy | John F. Kennedy
(lead ship) |
7 September 1968 | 23 March 2007 | 38 years, 197 days | Struck, to be scrapped | [70] | |
CVN-68 | Nimitz | Nimitz (lead ship) |
3 May 1975 | — |
45 years, 283 days | Stationed at Naval Base Kitsap, Bremerton, Washington | [71] | |
CVN-69 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | Nimitz | 18 October 1977 | — |
43 years, 115 days | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [72] | |
CVN-70 | Carl Vinson | Nimitz | 13 March 1982 | — |
38 years, 334 days | Stationed at Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California | [73][74] | |
CVN-71 | Theodore Roosevelt | Nimitz | 25 October 1986 | — |
34 years, 108 days | Stationed at Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California | [75] | |
CVN-72 | Abraham Lincoln | Nimitz | 11 November 1989 | — |
31 years, 91 days | Stationed at Naval Air Station North Island, San Diego, California | [76] | |
CVN-73 | George Washington | Nimitz | 4 July 1992 | — |
28 years, 221 days | Stationed at Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia | [77] | |
CVN-74 | John C. Stennis | Nimitz | 9 December 1995 | — |
25 years, 63 days | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [78] | |
CVN-75 | Harry S. Truman | Nimitz | 25 July 1998 | — |
22 years, 200 days | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [79] | |
CVN-76 | Ronald Reagan | Nimitz | 12 July 2003 | — |
17 years, 213 days | Stationed at Yokosuka Naval Base, Yokosuka, Japan | [80] | |
CVN-77 | George H.W. Bush | Nimitz | 10 January 2009 | — |
12 years, 31 days | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [81] | |
CVN-78 | Gerald R. Ford | Gerald R. Ford (lead ship) |
22 July 2017 | — |
3 years, 203 days | Stationed at Naval Station Norfolk, Norfolk, Virginia | [82] | |
CVN-79 | John F. Kennedy | Gerald R. Ford | ~2022 | — |
— |
Under construction; Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia | [11][83] | |
CVN-80 | Enterprise | Gerald R. Ford | ~2027 | — |
— |
Steel cutting and fabrication; Newport News Shipbuilding, Newport News, Virginia | [11][84] | |
CVN-81 | Doris Miller | Gerald R. Ford | ~2030 | — |
— |
Ordered | [11][85] | |
CVN-82 | tba | Gerald R. Ford | ~2034 | — |
— |
Ordered | [11] | |
# | Name | Image | Class | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Service life | Status | Refs. |
- Keys
- ships currently out of service
- ships cancelled prior to completion
- ships currently in active service
- ships currently under construction
- ships currently on order
Training ships
During World War II, the United States Navy purchased two Great Lakes side-wheel paddle steamers and converted them into freshwater aircraft carrier training ships. Both vessels were designated with the hull classification symbol IX (Unclassified Miscellaneous) and lacked hangar decks, elevators or armaments. The role of these ships was for the training of pilots for carrier take-offs and landings.[86] Together the Sable and Wolverine trained 17,820 pilots in 116,000 carrier landings. Of these, 51,000 landings were on Sable.[87]
# | Name | Image | Class | Commissioned | Decommissioned | Service life | Status | Refs. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IX-64 | Wolverine | n/a (converted side-wheel steamer) |
12 August 1942 | 7 November 1945 | 3 years, 2 months and 26 days | Scrapped in 1947 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States | [13][14] | |
IX-81 | Sable | n/a (converted side-wheel steamer) |
8 May 1943 | 7 November 1945 | 2 years, 5 months and 30 days | Scrapped in 1948 in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada | [13][14] | |
Aircraft carrier museums
See also
- List of amphibious warfare ships
- List of aircraft carriers
- List of aircraft carriers by configuration
- List of aircraft carriers in service
- List of aircraft carriers of World War II
- List of ships of World War II
- List of sunken aircraft carriers
- Naval Inactive Ship Maintenance Facility
- Timeline for aircraft carrier service
- Timeline of aircraft carriers of the United States Navy
- Escort carrier
- List of escort carriers of the United States Navy
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