USS America
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USS America

1964 Kitty Hawk-class aircraft carrier


Country of Registry
United States
Commissioning Date
January 23, 1965
Manufacturer
Newport News Shipbuilding
Operator
United States Navy
Vessel Type
supercarrier, Kitty Hawk-class aircraft carrier
Decommissioning Date
August 09, 1996
Pennant Number
CV-66
Call Sign
NUSA
Current Location
33° 9' 9", -71° 39' 7"
Aliases
CV-66

* This information from Wikidata is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

The USS America (CV-66) was a Kitty Hawk-class supercarrier constructed for the United States Navy during the 1960s. Laid down on January 1, 1961, at Newport News, Virginia, by Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Corporation, she was initially ordered as a nuclear-powered Enterprise-class carrier but was reconfigured as a conventionally powered vessel due to rising costs. She was launched on February 1, 1964, and commissioned on January 23, 1965, with Captain Lawrence Heyworth Jr. in command. The vessel measured approximately 1,046 feet in length and featured a flight deck capable of supporting a large air wing. Her service included extensive operations in the Atlantic and Mediterranean, with notable deployments to the Pacific during the Vietnam War, supporting combat sorties from Yankee Station. She participated in significant conflicts such as the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War, and various NATO exercises, earning five battle stars for her Vietnam service. Throughout her operational life, USS America was involved in numerous notable events, including the first large aircraft carrier to be expended in weapons tests in 2005, after being decommissioned in 1996. Her construction was initially intended for nuclear propulsion, but she was completed with conventional power due to the prohibitive costs associated with her original design. She served as a flagship for multiple commanders and participated in various NATO, Mediterranean, and Middle East operations, often engaging in joint exercises with allied navies. In her final years, she was used as a live-fire test platform to gather data for future carrier design improvements, culminating in her sinking southeast of Cape Hatteras on May 14, 2005. Her wreck lies upright at a depth of approximately 16,860 feet in the Atlantic Ocean, marking the end of a distinguished 40-year service life. USS America remains a significant vessel for her size, operational history, and contributions to U.S. naval power during the Cold War and beyond.

This description has been generated using GPT-4.1-NANO based on the Vessel's wikidata information and then modified by ShipIndex.org staff.

Ships

20 ship citations (8 free) in 9 resources

Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
America (aircraft carrier)
Book Naval Warfare: An International Encyclopedia
Author Spencer C. Tucker, ed.
Published ABC-CLIO, Santa Barbara, CA,
ISBN 1576072193, 9781576072196, 1576077403, 9781576077405
Pages 394, 1085
America (CV 66) Subscribe to view
America (CV-66) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1966 deck logs) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1967 deck logs) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1968 deck logs) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1970 deck logs) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1972 deck logs) Subscribe to view
America (CVA-66, US Navy) (1973 deck logs) Subscribe to view
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio
Web WorldCat
Published OCLC, Dublin, Ohio