Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Here you'll find classic and classy boat names of the more serious sort (like the "Honey Fitz" yacht that once belonged to JFK and Jackie O.), as well as funny boat names that your fellow captains ...
Ship names comprises all articles relating to the naming of ships, as opposed to specific vessels. Articles on names attached to multiple vessels as well as those ...
Sold to White Star in 1908 used as a cadet training vessel for Australian routes, sold in 1915 to Norwegian owners multiple times under Transatlantic and Dvergso. Scrapped in 1923. Laurentic: 1908: 1908–1917: 14,892: Launched by Harland and Wolff in 1908 ordered by Dominion Line originally Alberta but IMM transferred ship to White Star under ...
"Nasty Nick" – USS Nicholas, name given by crew due to the proclivity of the ship's AC units to break down in hot weather. "Nelly" – HMS Nelson – also "Nelsol" – from fleet oilers with names ending in "ol" that the Nelson class looked similar to in silhouette.
List of classic vessels; List of cruise ships; Lists of Empire ships; List of largest ferries of Europe; List of gas carriers; List of icebreakers; Lists of Liberty ships; List of lightvessels; List of ocean liners; List of research vessels by country; List of river cruise ships; List of slave ships; List of Sydney Harbour ferries; List of tankers
These rules apply to both named and unnamed vessels. A typical military ship article name has the following form: <prefix> <italicized name> <(hull or pennant number or disambiguation)> [1] Many military ships and boats were not named and are known only by their hull or pennant number (see §Ships with hull number only).
This category is for pages about names used by more than one ship of the Italian Navy.Only shipindex pages should be included in this category. Individual ships (including those that are the only one to bear the name) should instead be categorised in Category:Ships of the Italian Navy/Category:Ships of the Regia Marina or the relevant subcategory for the type of vessel.
Another ship named Hercules built at South Shields in 1801 was bought by the Royal Navy in 1803, becoming HMS Merlin; Hercules (1812 ship) was apparently an American ship in origin. She made two voyages as a whaler in the Southern Whale Fishery and then was no longer listed in 1818. Hercules (1814 ship) was built at Calcutta. She acquired ...