After the abrogation of disarmament treaties by Japan in 1936, the U.S. took a realistic look at its naval strength. With the
Naval Expansion Act of Congress passed on 17 May 1938, an increase of 40,000 tons in aircraft carriers was authorized. This permitted the building of , which was the third -class carrier, and , which was the
lead ship of a new class. CV-9 was to be the prototype of the 27,000-ton (standard displacement) aircraft carrier, considerably larger than , yet smaller than (a
battlecruiser converted to a carrier). The Navy ordered the first three of the new design,
CV-9,
CV-10 and
CV-11, from
Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock on 3 July 1940. These were to become known as
Essex-class carriers. Under the terms of the
Two-Ocean Navy Act, eight more of these carriers were programmed. Eight were ordered on 9 September, CV-12 through −15 from Newport News, and CV-16 through −19 from
Bethlehem Steel's
Fore River Shipyard; the last two, and , were authorized 23 December 1941, with the primary intention of keeping existing slipways busy, and were ordered eight days after
Pearl Harbor from the
Brooklyn Navy Yard and Newport News respectively. After the US declaration of war, Congress appropriated funds for nineteen more
Essex-class carriers. Ten were ordered in August 1942 (CV-31 and 33–35 from Brooklyn, CV-32 from Newport News, CV-36 and -37 from the
Philadelphia Navy Yard, CV-38 through -40 from the
Norfolk Navy Yard) and three more in June 1943 (CV-45 from Philadelphia, -46 from Newport News and -47 from Fore River). Only two of these were completed in time to see active World War II service. Six ships ordered in 1944 (CV-50 through -55) were canceled before construction was begun. The
Essex-class carriers combined the policy of naming aircraft carriers after historic battles begun with the
Lexington class with the policy of naming them for historic navy ships generally followed for the
Yorktown class. The first eight hulls were originally assigned names from historic Navy ships (
Essex,
Bon Homme Richard,
Intrepid,
Kearsarge,
Franklin,
Hancock,
Randolph,
Cabot). was originally laid down as
Cabot, but was renamed during construction after the previous was lost in the
Battle of the Coral Sea in May 1942. , originally to be named
Bon Homme Richard, was renamed after the previous was lost at the
Battle of Midway on 7 June 1942.
Lexington and
Yorktown share the unique distinction of being named after both historic ships and historic battles. Likewise, 's name was changed from
Oriskany after the original was sunk in September 1942 in the South Pacific near
Guadalcanal, and 's name was changed from
Kearsarge after the original was lost in October 1942 in the
Battle of Santa Cruz Islands. The erstwhile
Valley Forge was renamed after was sunk in the
Battle of Leyte Gulf in October 1944. The names of and were swapped while they were under construction: the
John Hancock life insurance company had offered to conduct a bond drive to raise money for
Hancock if that name was used for the carrier under construction in the company's home state of Massachusetts. USS
Shangri-La was named after a facetious remark by President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt suggesting that the
Doolittle Raiders flew from the fictional Himalayan kingdom setting of the novel
Lost Horizon. At the conclusion of the war, the six ships ordered but never laid down (CV-50 through 55) were cancelled. Of the nine still unfinished, six were completed, two (
Reprisal and
Iwo Jima) were scrapped, and was taken in hand for modification to an improved design, completing in 1950. In summary, during World War II and until its conclusion, the US Navy ordered 32 aircraft carriers of the
Essex class, including the
Ticonderoga subgroup, of which 26 were laid down and 24 actually commissioned. ==Design==