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For a list of submarines named Nautilus (not only those in the US Navy), see Nautilus (submarine). for an account of the mollusc called the
nautilus, see nautilus.
Six ships of the United States Navy have been named
USS Nautilus. A popular ship's name in many languages for centuries, it derives from a Greek word meaning "sailor" or "ship." The nautilus is also a tropical mollusk having a many-chambered, spiral
shell with a pearly interior.
A popular belief maintains that ships named Nautilus are named for the fictional submarine in the 1870 novel 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, by Jules
Verne. Indeed, the novel may have influenced the decisions to christen various submarines with this centuries-old name, but
Captain Nemo's was not the first Nautilus.
- The first USS
Nautilus, 12, was a schooner that served against the Tripolitan pirates
and into the War of 1812.
- The second USS
Nautilus was a schooner commissioned in 1847 that played a role in the
Mexican-American War.
- The third USS
Nautilus (SS-29), renamed H-2 in 1911, served through World
War I.
- The fourth USS Nautilus (SP-559) was a Motor Patrol Boat commissioned in 1917 and assigned to patrol and escort duty during World War I
(contemporaneously with the third Nautilus).
- The submarine O-12 (SS-73) was stricken from the
Naval Vessel Register in 1930 and converted for use by Sir Hubert Wilkins's Arctic Expedition of geophysical investigation. The Expedition
renamed the decommissioned submarine Nautilus.
- The fifth USS Nautilus (SS-168) was one
of the largest submarines ever built for the United States
Navy, and served during World War II.
- The sixth USS Nautilus (SSN-571) was
the first nuclear-powered submarine in the world.
See also HMS
Nautilus.
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one
that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name. If you followed a link here, you might want to go back and
fix that link to point to the appropriate specific page.
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