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Strange Names For Ships

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Strange Names For Ships
Posted by subfixer on Friday, October 31, 2008 11:11 AM

This was a topic a few years back and now that we have some new members, I thought it might be fun to bring it back and get some fresh names.

My first entry is USS Hull. I remember seeing "Hull" on the stern of this ship and remarking "No kidding, how is the rest of the ship labeled?"

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, October 31, 2008 11:51 AM
Glowworm...
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Posted by subfixer on Friday, October 31, 2008 11:58 AM
HMS Pansy was renamed HMS Heartsease and later USS Courage. She was a Flower class corvette. Legend has it that the commissioning crew almost mutinied over the name because they would have to wear "Pansy" on their uniform hats.

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Posted by searat12 on Friday, October 31, 2008 12:16 PM
'HMS Pickle' was Nelsons' Aviso schooner at Trafalgar, brought the news back to England of the victory, as well as rescued a large number of sailors from a sinking 74-gun ship...
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Posted by onyxman on Friday, October 31, 2008 12:45 PM
A containership, Ever Uranus.
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Posted by subfixer on Friday, October 31, 2008 2:00 PM

 onyxman wrote:
A containership, Ever Uranus.

ooo.... good one!

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, October 31, 2008 3:06 PM

The Brits seem to have the bulk of 'em....like the destroyer, "Tribe"...

And the Japanese...their carriers, like Akagi, Kaga, etc. translate into various things, like: Red Castle, Green Dragon...etc...

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Posted by m60a3 on Friday, October 31, 2008 3:12 PM

 The good ship "Lollipop".

 I know, I shouldn't have.

 How about "Maru"? Isn't that Japanese for 'ship'? And if so, why do some have it in the name and not others?

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Posted by stikpusher on Friday, October 31, 2008 3:32 PM

USS Cowpens.

Yes I know the historical significance of the name, but it still sounds funny.

 

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Posted by BigSmitty on Friday, October 31, 2008 3:50 PM

Back in my active duty Navy days, we did a BALTOPS with some German ships...

FGS Fuchs...

'nuff said.

Matt - IPMS #46275

"Build what ya love and love what ya build..."

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Posted by subfixer on Friday, October 31, 2008 5:22 PM
 m60a3 wrote:

 The good ship "Lollipop".

 I know, I shouldn't have.

 How about "Maru"? Isn't that Japanese for 'ship'? And if so, why do some have it in the name and not others?

             60

"Maru" has no definite meaning in Japanese apparently. Check this link for a discussion on this topic:   http://www.mccmedia.com/pipermail/brin-l/Week-of-Mon-20070813/139603.html

 

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Posted by thunder1 on Friday, October 31, 2008 6:55 PM
Cowslip...Buttonwood...Sagebrush....Willow...Bittersweet...Salvia...U S Coast Guard buoy tenders. A class of 39 180 foot vessels all saw service in WWII, many overseas. Last one decommissioned 2 years ago, taxpayers got their money's worth.
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Posted by ps1scw on Friday, October 31, 2008 8:08 PM
Not a ship, but right before WWII, the Navy was thinking of calling the top man in the fleet: Commander in Chief, U.S. or CINCUS for short.  Somebody must have said the CINCUS (sink us) would be the wrong image for the Navy.  The name didn't stick.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, October 31, 2008 8:22 PM
 thunder1 wrote:
Cowslip...Buttonwood...Sagebrush....Willow...Bittersweet...Salvia...U S Coast Guard buoy tenders. A class of 39 180 foot vessels all saw service in WWII, many overseas. Last one decommissioned 2 years ago, taxpayers got their money's worth.
Got their money's worth on everything but the names...
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Posted by m60a3 on Friday, October 31, 2008 9:01 PM
 subfixer wrote:
 m60a3 wrote:

 The good ship "Lollipop".

 I know, I shouldn't have.

 How about "Maru"? Isn't that Japanese for 'ship'? And if so, why do some have it in the name and not others?

             60

"Maru" has no definite meaning in Japanese apparently. Check this link for a discussion on this topic:   http://www.mccmedia.com/pipermail/brin-l/Week-of-Mon-20070813/139603.html

 

 Now I'm really confused...Confused [%-)]

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Posted by searat12 on Saturday, November 1, 2008 9:05 AM
 m60a3 wrote:
 subfixer wrote:
 m60a3 wrote:

 The good ship "Lollipop".

 I know, I shouldn't have.

 How about "Maru"? Isn't that Japanese for 'ship'? And if so, why do some have it in the name and not others?

             60

"Maru" has no definite meaning in Japanese apparently. Check this link for a discussion on this topic:   http://www.mccmedia.com/pipermail/brin-l/Week-of-Mon-20070813/139603.html

 

 Now I'm really confused...Confused [%-)]

'Maru' indicates a merchant ship (i.e. not Naval).  So when you see a ship named 'Godzilla Maru,' it indicates some sort of commercial ship named 'Godzilla.'
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Posted by subfixer on Monday, November 3, 2008 6:32 AM

Scratching the surface of Royal Navy names gave me three good ones:

HMS Adam and Eve - Two ships named this, one a hoy, the other a stores ship.

HMS Black Joke  (no joking!) - Two ships, one an armed lugger. the other a captured slaver.

HMS Broke  - Two or three named this, two of them were destroyer flotilla leaders. This beats Hull as far as looking funny on the transom.

I'm going back to look for more, the Brits have had so many ships that the odds are high to find a bunch of good ones.

 

 

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Posted by Hieronymus on Monday, November 3, 2008 9:49 AM
 stikpusher wrote:

USS Cowpens.

Yes I know the historical significance of the name, but it still sounds funny.

CVL-25 USS Cowpens, Independence Class Light aircraft carrier, don't forget her nickname: Mighty MOO! (no kidding)

My all time favourites for this category:

HMS Invincible............ it blew up during a gunfight with German battlecrusiers during the battle of the Skagerak, do I have to say more?

HMS Indefatigable........... it suffered the same fate at the same battle as the one above 

But my best one is the name a friend of mine gave his brand new catamaran: Unsinkable II

Keep on modeling

René

www.usns.biz 

keep on modeling: www.usns.biz
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Posted by diggeraone on Monday, November 3, 2008 11:00 AM
Here is one for you HMAS Vampire...This is a blood sucker for sure..Digger
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Posted by subfixer on Monday, November 3, 2008 11:27 AM

After scanning the list of Royal Navy ship names, I discovered some that were best to just omit as they could be construed as being in bad taste (I, however, found them to be very funny). Here are a few more:

HMS Lucifer, HMS Belzebub:

HMS Griper, HMS  Indignant: Malcontents in those crews, I suppose.

HMS Plumper:

HMS Nonsuch:

HMS Fairy, HMS Flamer:

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Posted by Grem56 on Monday, November 3, 2008 12:59 PM

I remember reading a book about the British submarine "Unbroken". The captain apparently once suggested changing the ship's name to "Badly Bent" after it was worked over by enemy depth charges (see link below).

Julian

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Unbroken_(P42)

 

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Posted by Allen109 on Monday, November 3, 2008 3:46 PM

Don't forget the German Derfflinger.

HMS Audacious-only dreadnought or battlcruiser to sink as a result of a mine in 1914-18.

HMS Superb,HMS Bellerophon

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Posted by subfixer on Tuesday, November 4, 2008 6:23 AM

Here are two more:

HMS Handmaid, HMS Happy Entrance.

Imagine the poor sailors who had those names on their hats.

The Royal Navy has a plethora of these names, it isn't much of a challenge to find a good one. I'm going to try to pick on another navy.

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Posted by Rick Martin on Friday, November 14, 2008 4:45 PM
The word "Maru" I think derives from the Japanese word for lucky or happy but is applied to merchant ships while naval vessels went without the "Maru". (this only applies if my memory is working correctly) Rick Martin
"Whoever said the pen is mightier than the sword obviously never encountered automatic weapons" General Douglas Macarthur
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Posted by subfixer on Friday, November 14, 2008 6:13 PM

 Rick Martin wrote:
The word "Maru" I think derives from the Japanese word for lucky or happy but is applied to merchant ships while naval vessels went without the "Maru". (this only applies if my memory is working correctly) Rick Martin

I will again resubmit this website for a pretty good explanation:

http://www.mccmedia.com/pipermail/brin-l/Week-of-Mon-20070813/139603.html

I think it somewhat reenforces your recollection and adds a few more.

 

 

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Posted by DD393 on Sunday, November 16, 2008 2:37 PM
 subfixer wrote:

My first entry is USS Hull. I remember seeing "Hull" on the stern of this ship and remarking "No kidding, how is the rest of the ship labeled?"

 

Named for Isaac Hull, Commander of USF Constitution when she took HMS Guerriere.

I like HMS Biter.  Maybe HMAS Vampire would be one of her escorts.

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Posted by chris hall on Sunday, November 16, 2008 3:02 PM

The French have a SSBN called Le Triomphant. Given the French Navy's record since October 1805, whom, exactly, are they trying to kid?

Until quite recently, there was a frigate in the Royal Navy called HMS Beaver....

Cheers,

Chris.

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Posted by billydelawder on Sunday, November 16, 2008 3:56 PM
British Ships have real cool names! Guess The only books the Lords of the Admiralty had on hand when deciding how to name ships were the dictionary, and books of mythology, and a few biographies of dead officers.
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Posted by RickF on Sunday, November 16, 2008 5:33 PM

Oh no, Billy. They also had the botanical list (HMS Pansy), the entomological dictionary (HMS Cockchaffer) and the complete works of Sigmund Freud (HMS Spanker).

Rick

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Posted by Pavlvs on Saturday, December 6, 2008 7:52 PM
 searat12 wrote:
 m60a3 wrote:
 subfixer wrote:
 m60a3 wrote:

 The good ship "Lollipop".

 I know, I shouldn't have.

 How about "Maru"? Isn't that Japanese for 'ship'? And if so, why do some have it in the name and not others?

             60

"Maru" has no definite meaning in Japanese apparently. Check this link for a discussion on this topic:   http://www.mccmedia.com/pipermail/brin-l/Week-of-Mon-20070813/139603.html

 

 Now I'm really confused...Confused [%-)]

'Maru' indicates a merchant ship (i.e. not Naval).  So when you see a ship named 'Godzilla Maru,' it indicates some sort of commercial ship named 'Godzilla.'


A colleague of mine who spent many years as a missionary in Japan said that "Maru" is an ancient spiritual reference to the Sun and is a spiritual way of infusing the ship with the spirit of the Land of the Rising Sun. I like this explanation.

As for unusual names for ships, there was one Japanese ship whose name translated to "Lotus blossom on a misty pond" I cannot remember the Japanese name but it was a cruiser.

As for the Flower Class corvettes, I can imagine the U-Boat captains in the Hereafter discussing who sank them and a conversation going something like this: I was sunk by the "Invincible" what about you? I was sunk by the "Indefatigable;" I was sunk by the "Warspite" and some poor fellow having to admit to his colleagues that he was sunk by the "Pansy." That's just wrong!

Deus in minutiae est. Fr. Pavlvs

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