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In 1845, General Taylor was converted into a tugboat, operating out of the Pensacola Navy Yard. [1] Benjamin F. Isherwood, later Engineer-in-Chief of the Navy during the American Civil War, served on General Taylor in 1846–47. [8] William H. Shock, Engineer-in-Chief of the Navy in the 1870s, also served on General Taylor in the late 1840s. [9]
General Frisbie (steamship) General Jackson (riverboat) PS General Slocum; USS General W. C. Gorgas; George R. Vosburg; SS George W. Elder; PS Georgia Queen; SS Golden Gate (1851) Goliah (1849 tugboat) SS Governor (1907) SS Governor Cobb; Governor Grover (sternwheeler) Grahamona; Grand Luxe; Great Lakes passenger steamers; SS Great Northern; SS ...
USS General Omar Bundy, built in 1944, was sold a few times and renamed SS Poet. In 1980 she went missing without a trace and is presumed sunk. her cargo was 13,500 tons of bulk corn that she loaded at Girard Point Terminal in South Philadelphia , she was to steam to Port Said , Egypt.
This section of the list of United States Navy ships contains all ships of the United States Navy with names beginning with G and H. . For a list exclusively of currently commissioned ships, see the List of current ships of the United States Navy.
USAT General Maurice Rose: USNS General Maurice Rose (T-AP-126) USS Admiral W. S. Sims (AP-127) USAT General William O. Darby: USNS General William O. Darby (T-AP-127) USS Admiral D. W. Taylor (AP-128) Canceled 16 December 1944 and completed as civilian passenger liners. USS Admiral F. B. Upham (AP-129)
Converted to passenger service at Ingalls Shipyards, Pascagoula, Mississippi 1948 [25] Scrapped in 2005 Converted from USS General W. P. Richardson (AP-118), a troopship that served with the United States Navy in World War II: SS President Cleveland: 1947 American President Lines: Bethlehem Shipbuilding Co, Alameda, California Scrapped in 1974
USNS General Hoyt S. Vandenberg (T-AGM-10) (originally named USS General Harry Taylor (AP-145)) was a General G. O. Squier-class transport ship in the United States Navy in World War II named in honor of U.S. Army Chief of Engineers Harry Taylor.
Most of the General G. O. Squier class were deactivated in 1958 for two reasons: the introduction of jet airliners, and a decision to use berthing space on U.S.-flagged passenger ships. [5] Two ships, however, General LeRoy Eltinge and General R. M. Blatchford , assisted in United Nations efforts in the Congo Republic in the early 1960s, and ...