USS Iowa (BB-4) was unique.
Connecticut class[?] (note out-of-sequence numbering):
Tennessee class (two of the "Big Five"):
Colorado class[?] (the other three of the "Big Five"):
Senator Benjamin Tillman instructed the Navy to design "maximum battleships." While those plans never progressed beyond the study phase, they did influence later designs.
South Dakota class (keels laid down for the but the entire class was cancelled before they were launched):
South Dakota class (commissioned):
The Montana class was authorized and then cancelled before any of the keels were laid down. They were to have been:
Except for Kearsarge, named by an act of Congress, all American battleships have been named for states, and every state has had at least one battleship named for it except Alaska and Hawaii (recall that these did not become states until 1959). Two battleships have been authorized to be named for Montana, but both were cancelled before commissioning. The pre-dreadnoughts USS Zrinyi (formerly SMS Zrinyi), USS Radetzky[?] (formerly SMS Radetzky[?]), and USS Ostfriesland (formerly SMS Ostfriesland[?]), taken as prizes of war after World War I, were commissioned in the US Navy, but were not assigned hull classification symbols.
No American battleship has ever been lost at sea, though some have been sunk in port and others sunk as targets.
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