Advertisement

February 2012’s Mystery Ship Answer

I believe the mystery ship to be USS Lexington, CV-2, built by Bethlehem Steel at Quincy, Massachusetts. She was laid down on 8 January 1921, and commissioned as CV-2 on 14 December 1927. The photograph shows her on the Panama Canal and possibly dates from early 1928. She had passed into the Pacific by mid-1928 and ran trials off Southern California, achieving 34.59 knots while producing 202,973shp. She then did the San Pedro Sound to Hawaii trip at an average speed of 30.7 knots, to join the Pacific Fleet. By 1929 she was at Puget Sound Navy yard.

Lexington was similar to USS Saratoga, and both passed through the canal on several occasions, but the vessel in the photograph does not exhibit the differential funnel markings applied to the class after the shambolic Fleet Problem 1X exercise of 1929-30, so it must be Lexington. The only difference I can see between the two ships is in the arrangements of the forward tower superstructure above the range finder. Lexington was lost on 8 May 1942 after being hit by torpedoes at the battle of the Coral Sea.

Sandy McAuslan, Renton

Ships Montly - January 2024

Deltamarin wins contract for six ro-pax vessels for Grimaldi Lines

On 24 June 2025 Deltamarin signed a design and engineering contract with China Merchants Jinling Shipyard (Weihai) for six new ro-pax vessels ordered by...
Advertisement

Related articles

Deltamarin wins contract for six ro-pax vessels for Grimaldi Lines

On 24 June 2025 Deltamarin signed a design and engineering contract with China Merchants Jinling Shipyard (Weihai) for...

New boxboat Maersk Namsos

Japan's Imabari Shipbuilding successfully delivered Maersk Namsos, a 2,086 twenty-foot equivalent unit (TEU) containership, on 4 June 2025. This...

ABB wins electrical and automation contract for next generation of Petrobras FPSO vessels

ABB has been awarded a large order by Seatrium, a global provider of marine engineering solutions based in...

Stena Futura successfully completes sea trials in China

Stena Line has announced that Stena Futura, the first of its new hybrid ferries destined for the Irish...