GMorrison
I've seen pictures of empty T-2s with the bow completely out of the water.
With a single screw ship "in ballast" where you are going to have one end or the other out of the water, it's better to bury the screw than the bow.
In the days of the old three-island tramp steamer, the prop would chug over as much as half out of the water, but the ballance would be about even along the keel.
The big container ships put the bridge in the forward third as it's a good place to run the ship--good visibility for one. Ahead of the CG, too, which makes steering clightly simpler.
Those modern ships only need compartments of 15-20 crew, so, many are only accomodations from the 01 deck up.
Fashions in powerplants, as noted above, vary. Large marine diesels were just that. Three stories tall with 1 - 3 m cylinders on 5-6m strokes, and enough compression to run on raw crude. But, it can be easier to just install 18 & 20 cylinder turbodiesels to sping gnerators--these are often just the same powerplants as locomotives.
In days of old, the line of the shaft deterined where the powerplant had to be, as it would be inline to the output shaft of a turbine or reciprocating engine. Today, such things just have their reduction gears arrayed to get the out put power to where the shaft is.
The number of ships using azipods has also changed the axes for power, too.