• SY Corsair (1880) built for C J Osborn but sold to
J. P. Morgan in 1882 renamed SY Kanapha in 1890 sank in 1898 off the Cuban coast. • SY Stranger (1880) built for a Mr Osgood, later sold to US Navy • , a small
ocean liner built for the
Red D Line in 1882. She was wrecked on the coastline of Vancouver Island, on January 22, 1906, killing around 116 people. ''Valencia's'' loss is considered one of the worst shipwrecks in the region known as the
Graveyard of the Pacific. •
Atalanta (1883) Atalanta was built for financier
Jay Gould in the same year that the
American Yacht Club was founded. • , a small
ocean liner of 2,499 tons built for the
Red D Line in 1885 • , was launched on 6 October 1888 and played a major role in the
Baltimore crisis and took part in the
Spanish–American War. • , was launched on 2 December 1891 and became
flagship of
Admiral William T. Sampson's squadron during the
Spanish–American War. • , Battleship No. 1 of the
United States Navy, launched 28 February 1893. • and —the first major ocean liners built in the United States after the collapse of the
Collins Line in the 1850s. On 15 November 1899,
St. Paul, en route from New York to England with
Guglielmo Marconi on board supervising the ship's new wireless telegraph equipment, became the first liner to report her imminent arrival by radio. • , Battleship No. 4 of the US Navy, launched 28 March 1896 • contracted by
Russian Imperial Admiralty, launched October 31, 1899. The cruiser was sunk by the crew in
Russo-Japanese War, salvaged by the Japanese and then reclaimed by the Russians. • , America's first all-big gun
battleship (or "
dreadnought"), was laid down in 1906, launched on 11 July 1908, and completed in 1910. •
Patria, gunboat and training ship built for the
Cuban Revolutionary Navy in 1911. It served during both world wars and was decommissioned in 1955. • , an American ocean liner and cruise ship built in 1927 for the
Matson Line in its Pacific/Hawaiian services and the largest passenger ship built in the United States up to that time at 17,226 registered tones (only the German-built
SS Leviathan of the
United States Lines was larger in the 1920s). The Matson ship was scrapped in 1977 in Greece after being sold in the meantime. •
SS Evangeline, a coastal passenger liner built in 1927 for the Eastern Steamship Company. While operating as the cruise ship
Yarmouth Castle in 1965, she caught fire, killing 87 people. • On 6 September 1941, the keel for the Cleveland-class light cruiser designated CL-90 was laid down by the Cramp Shipbuilding Company. • On 8 December 1942, the keel to the
light cruiser designated CL-91, was laid down by the Cramp Shipbuilding Company. On 22 April 1943, Oklahomans were outraged, having just learned that the Japanese had executed the captured American pilots from
Jimmy Doolittle's bombing raid over Tokyo. That same day, booths were set up in Oklahoma City with a goal to sell $40 million in
War Bonds to fund the construction of a cruiser. That goal was topped by $5 million when the booths closed that night. CL-91 then became the . • On 6 March 1943, was launched. • The last ship Cramp's built was the cruiser , launched on April 22, 1945. Vessels built by the firm that are listed on the U.S.
National Register of Historic Places include: • , Shipwreck, Amook Island, Larsen Bay, Alaska,
NRHP-listed in Kodiak Island Borough, Alaska • , Hackensack River at 150 River St., Hackensack, New Jersey • ,
National Historic Landmark,
Battleship Cove, Fall River, Massachusetts • , Shipwreck 1. mi. SSW of
Pensacola Pass, Pensacola, Florida ==See also==