USS Alabama
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There have been at least six United States Navy or United States Revenue Cutter Service ships named Alabama, after the southern state of Alabama.
- The first Alabama was a 74-gun ship of the line, started in 1818, though never completed as such. She was eventually launched in 1864 as the storeship New Hampshire.
- The first ship completed as Alabama was a 56 ton Revenue Cutter built at New York in 1819. She captured more than a dozen slavers and pirates, and sold off in 1833.
- The second Alabama was the first US Navy ship christened Alabama. She was a sidewheel steamer transferred to the Navy in 1849 that served as a troop transport during the Mexican-American War.
- The third Alabama was a sidewheel steamer merchant vessel that was commissioned in 1861 during the American Civil War. She served as a troop and cargo transport.
- The fourth Alabama (BB-8) was a pre-dreadnought battleship commissioned in 1900 and scrapped in 1924.
- The fifth Alabama (BB-60) was a dreadnought battleship commissioned 1942 and converted to a museum ship in 1964.
- The sixth Alabama (SSBN-731) is an Ohio-class ballistic missile submarine.
There was also a Confederate States Navy ship named Alabama, the CSS Alabama, a sloop-of-war.
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