Many vessels named after women have seen military service with the United States military. Most of these were named in civilian service and then subsequently commissioned into the United States Navy. Few ships have been named after women by the military. Ships often are named after people who served in the Navy or who served in the government. Women have only recently been in such prominent positions, and therefore few have been so honored by the Navy. See also, List of ships of the United States Navy.
Early ships
The schooner was commissioned in 1775. The gunboat was commissioned in 1776 and was the first American armed ship named for a woman. She was a row galley, a small wooden river gunboat, built in 1776 by New York State to defend Hudson River, named in honor of Martha Washington. She remained active, under General Washington's command, through June 1777. The sidewheel steamer was launched in 1857. She was the first armed ship in service with the U.S. Navy to be named for a woman. Originally a Revenue Cutter, she was named for Harriet Lane, niece of President James Buchanan, who served as Buchanan's White House hostess. The ship was transferred to the Navy in 1858 and was later returned to Revenue Cutter Service. She was transferred again to Navy when the American Civil War began, 1861 and was captured by Confederates at Galveston, Texas Jan 1863. She was not returned to government service after end of war. The sternwheel river steamer was launched in 1856. Apparently this name was retained from a former name; she was named for feministAmelia Bloomer. Bloomer was captured from Confederates in 1862 and served in the U.S. Navy from 1863–65.
, 1942, was the first instance of a Maritime Commission's assignment of woman's name to naval vessel. She was named for Sacagawea, a Shoshone woman, who served as an interpreter for the Lewis and Clark Expedition. The name already was assigned to a tugboat acquired by Maritime Commission for the Navy. Sacagawea ended up being retained by Maritime Commission and was never commissioned in the Navy.
United States Navy
The following is a list of ships in the United States Navy named after specific women:
, a screw sloop commissioned in 1860 and named for Pocahontas.
, a harbor tug commissioned in 1942 and named for Pocahontas.
, a harbor tug that served in Charleston harbor from 1942 to 1945.
, a 1944 harbor tug named for a Potawatomi woman. However, the Naval Historical Center says the name Watseka is "possibly a variant spelling of Watsaghika, a former village of the Iruwaitsu Shasta Indian tribe of northern California, at the extreme west end of Scott Valley."
, 1945 a Gearing-class destroyer named for Lenah S. Higbee, Superintendent of Navy Nurse Corps 1911–1922, Higbee served in the Fast Carrier Force. She was the first ship laid down, christened, and commissioned for a woman who had served in the U.S. Navy, and the first to see combat so named.
, a planned, also named for Lenah H. Sutcliffe Higbee, a Navy nurse who received the Navy Cross.
Note that even though the name Shenandoah is an American Indian word meaning "Daughter of the Stars," the navy airship and other ships are named for the river Shenandoah in Virginia.
Other Navy ships with a woman's name
Many of these ships served in one or both of World War I, World War II, and some also during the interwar period, many with the ID or SP designation. Others served in the Stone Fleet, or were prizes during the Age of Sail. The names often came from a previous owner and all were commissioned in the Navy. Some vessels may have been named by the Navy, although it has not been determined which, if any, the Navy specifically named.