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This list of cruisers of the United States Navy includes all ships that were ever called "cruiser". Since the nomenclature predates the hull numbering system, and there were several confusing renumberings and renamings, there are multiple entries referring to the same physical ship.

A "*" following the entry indicates a ship that was canceled before completion. Ships in bold saw combat service. A "" indicates a ship lost to enemy action.

CA-1, CA-6 and CA-10 were never used, as ACR-1 Maine, ACR-6 California/San Diego and ACR-10 Tennessee/Memphis were sunk prior to the 1920 redesignation, and their sisters' original hull numbers were carried over. CA-20 through CA-23 were skipped to allow the reclassification of the Washington Treaty CL's as CA's without re-numbering.

Heavy cruisers CA-149 and CA-151 to CA-153, and light cruisers CL-154 to CL-159 were canceled before being named.

CG-15 was skipped so the Leahy-class guided missile frigates (DLG-16 class) could be redesignated without renumbering. The other missing numbers in the guided-missile cruiser series, 43–46, were not used so that DDG-47 Ticonderoga and DDG-48 Yorktown could be similarly redesignated. (It has been argued in some sources that the DDG-993 Kidd-class guided missile destroyers, which were essentially identically armed to the Virginia-class cruisers, should have been redesignated CG-43 through −46.)

CG-1 through 8 and CG-10 through 12 were converted from World War II cruisers. CAG-1 USS Boston and CAG-2 USS Canberra retained most of their original gun armament and were later returned to their gun cruiser designations CA-69 and CA-70. Before 30 June 1975, CG-16 USS Leahy through CGN-38 USS Virginia were designated DLG or DLGN (Guided Missile Frigate (Nuclear powered)). They were redesignated cruisers in the 1975 ship reclassification. CGN-39 USS Texas and CGN-40 USS Mississippi were laid down as DLGNs but redesignated CGN before commissioning. CG-47 Ticonderoga and CG-48 Yorktown were ordered as guided missile destroyers (DDG) but were redesignated to guided missile cruisers (CG) before any ship was laid down. CGN-9 Long Beach, CGN-41 Arkansas and CG-49 through 73 were ordered, laid down and delivered as guided missile cruisers. Long Beach was the only cruiser since World War II built on a true "cruiser hull", and for over ten years was the only new-build guided missile cruiser in the fleet.

As of 2015, only CG-52 through CG-73 remain in active service.

See also List of light cruisers of the United States.

By hull number

Cruisers without hull designations[]

USS Atlanta 1884

USS Atlanta, the US Navy's first cruiser

  • Atlanta (1884), protected cruiser
  • Boston (1884), protected cruiser
  • Chicago (1885), protected cruiser
  • Vesuvius (1888), experimental pneumatic guns
  • Harvard (1888), armed merchant cruiser, ex-City of New York
  • Yale (1889), armed merchant cruiser, ex-City of Paris, later Harrisburg
  • Badger (1889), armed merchant cruiser, ex-Yumuri
  • Panther (1889), armed merchant cruiser, ex-Austin, later destroyer tender AD-6
  • Prairie (1890), armed merchant cruiser, ex-El Sol, later destroyer tender AD-5
  • Buffalo (1892), armed merchant cruiser, ex-El Cid, later destroyer tender AD-8
  • Yankee (1892), armed merchant cruiser, ex-El Norte
  • Yosemite (1892), armed merchant cruiser, ex-El Sud
  • Dixie (1893), armed merchant cruiser, ex-El Rio, later destroyer tender AD-1
  • St. Louis (1894), armed merchant cruiser
  • St. Paul (1895), armed merchant cruiser
  • New Orleans (1898), ex-Brazilian Amazonas
  • Albany (1899), ex-Brazilian Almirante Abreu
  • Frankfurt (1915), German war prize

Armored Cruisers[]

USS Maine h60255a

USS Maine (ACR-1)

Note: in the pre-1920 period abbreviations were informal and nonstandardized; officially these ships were, e.g., "Armored Cruiser No. 1"

Protected and Peace cruisers[]

Uss newark cc-1

USS Newark (C-1), the first of the numbered United States protected cruisers.

Note: in the pre-1920 period abbreviations were informal and nonstandardized; officially these ships were, e.g., "Cruiser No. 1"

Scout cruisers[]

Note: in the pre-1920 period abbreviations were informal and nonstandardized; officially these ships were, e.g., "Scout Cruiser No. 1", and sometimes abbreviated SC or CS

USSChesterCL1

USS Chester (SCR-1), the US Navy's first light cruiser

Battlecruisers (Projected)[]

Heavy and Light cruisers[]

On 17 July 1920, all First and Second Class Cruisers (armored and protected cruisers) still in service were reclassified as Cruisers (CA). The armored cruisers had had their names changed from states to cities within those states to free up the names for battleships.
USSBrooklynCA3

USS Brooklyn

In the 1920 hull designation system, of the Third Class Cruisers the fast Scout Cruisers became Light Cruisers (CL), and the slower Peace Cruisers were reclassified Patrol Gunboats (PG).
On 8 August 1921 the system was revised; the surviving protected cruisers and the peace cruiser/patrol gunboats were all grouped with the scout cruisers as Light Cruisers (CL).
The cruisers laid down between the Washington and London Naval Treaties were originally designated Light Cruisers (CL) due to their light protection. In accordance with the London Treaty, they were reclassified as Heavy Cruisers (CA) in 1931 due to their 8-inch guns. Thenceforward heavy and light cruisers were numbered in a single sequence; the last ship of the original CA series, Seattle, was redesignated IX (Unclassified Miscellaneous) in 1941.

Battlecruisers/"Large" Cruisers[]

Command cruisers[]

Hunter-Killer cruiser[]

Guided missile cruisers[]

C2-CG09Underway

USS Long Beach (CGN-9)

CG-15 skipped to redesignate the Leahy class frigates without renumbering

CG-43 to CG-46 skipped to allow redesignation of DDG-47 Ticonderoga without renumbering.

By name


All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at List of cruisers of the United States Navy and the edit history here.

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