Vintage RMS TITANIC Advert Antique Old Flyer Leaflet Poster Perfume Ladies Retro
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Vintage RMS TITANIC Advert Antique Old Flyer Leaflet Poster Perfume Ladies Retro:
$6.26
RMS TITANICToilet Soap AdvertThis is a Reproduction Replica of TitanicAdvertisementPoster \"Vinolia Otto Toilet Soap\"
Vinolia Otto Toilet Soap was provided for First Class passengers on the maiden voyage of the Titanic. The rare original newspaper ad is considered a valued piece of history and highly desired by many Titanic collectors.
Starting at a Penny...With ..If your the only buyer you win it for 1p....Grab a Bargain!!!!
Would make an Excellent Gift or Collectable Keepsake to a A Great Ship that sunk 100 years ago this week
I have a lot of Titanic Memrobilia on so PleaseCLICK HERE TO VISIT MY SHOPoffer with Confidence - Check My 100% Positive response fromover 2,000 Satisfied CustomersI have over 4 years of SellingExperience- So Why Not Treat Yourself?
I have got married recently and need to raise funds to meet the costs also we are planning to move into a house together
I always combined postage on multiple items so why not>Check out myother items!All Payment Methods in All Major Currencies Accepted. AllItems Sent out within 24 hours of Receiving Payment.
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Australasia up to 12 weeks
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Thanks for Looking and Best of Luck with the offerding!!
The Countries I Send to IncludeAfghanistan * Albania * Algeria * American Samoa (US) * Andorra * Angola * Anguilla (GB) * Antigua and Barbuda * Argentina * Armenia * Aruba (NL) * Australia * Austria * Azerbaijan * Bahamas * Bahrain * Bangladesh * Barbados * Belarus * Belgium * Belize * Benin * Bermuda (GB) * Bhutan * Bolivia * Bonaire (NL) * Bosnia and Herzegovina * Botswana * Bouvet Island (NO) * Brazil * British Indian Ocean Territory (GB) * British Virgin Islands (GB) * Brunei * Bulgaria * Burkina Faso * Burundi * Cambodia * Cameroon * Canada * Cape Verde * Cayman Islands (GB) * Central African Republic * Chad * Chile * China * Christmas Island (AU) * Cocos Islands (AU) * Colombia * Comoros * Congo * Democratic Republic of the Congo * Cook Islands (NZ) * Coral Sea Islands Territory (AU) * Costa Rica * Croatia * Cuba * Curaçao (NL) * Cyprus * Czech Republic * Denmark * Djibouti * Dominica * Dominican Republic * East Timor * Ecuador * Egypt * El Salvador * Equatorial Guinea * Eritrea * Estonia * Ethiopia * Falkland Islands (GB) * Faroe Islands (DK) * Fiji Islands * Finland * France * French Guiana (FR) * French Polynesia (FR) * French Southern Lands (FR) * Gabon * Gambia * Georgia * Germany * Ghana * Gibraltar (GB) * Greece * Greenland (DK) * Grenada * Guadeloupe (FR) * Guam (US) * Guatemala * Guernsey (GB) * Guinea * Guinea-Bissau * Guyana * Haiti * Heard and McDonald Islands (AU) * Honduras * Hong Kong (CN) * Hungary * Iceland * India * Indonesia * Iran * Iraq * Ireland * Isle of Man (GB) * Israel * Italy * Ivory Coast * Jamaica * Jan Mayen (NO) * Japan * Jersey (GB) * Jordan * Kazakhstan * Kenya * Kiribati * Kosovo * Kuwait * Kyrgyzstan * Laos * Latvia * Lebanon * Lesotho * Liberia * Libya * Liechtenstein * Lithuania * Luxembourg * Macau (CN) * Macedonia * Madagascar * Malawi * Malaysia * Maldives * Mali * Malta * Marshall Islands * Martinique (FR) * Mauritania * Mauritius * Mayotte (FR) * Mexico * Micronesia * Moldova * Monaco * Mongolia * Montenegro * Montserrat (GB) * Morocco * Mozambique * Myanmar * Namibia * Nauru * Navassa (US) * Nepal * Netherlands * New Caledonia (FR) * New Zealand * Nicaragua * Niger * Nigeria * Niue (NZ) * Norfolk Island (AU) * North Korea * Northern Cyprus * Northern Mariana Islands (US) * Norway * Oman * Pakistan * Palau * Palestinian Authority * Panama * Papua New Guinea * Paraguay * Peru * Philippines * Pitcairn Island (GB) * Poland * Portugal * Puerto Rico (US) * Qatar * Reunion (FR) * Romania * Russia * Rwanda * Saba (NL) * Saint Barthelemy (FR) * Saint Helena (GB) * Saint Kitts and Nevis * Saint Lucia * Saint Martin (FR) * Saint Pierre and Miquelon (FR) * Saint Vincent and the Grenadines * Samoa * San Marino * Sao Tome and Principe * Saudi Arabia * Senegal * Serbia * Seychelles * Sierra Leone * Singapore * Sint Eustatius (NL) * Sint Maarten (NL) * Slovakia * Slovenia * Solomon Islands * Somalia * South Africa * South Georgia (GB) * South Korea * South Sudan * Spain * Sri Lanka * Sudan * Suriname * Svalbard (NO) * Swaziland * Sweden * Switzerland * Syria * Taiwan * Tajikistan * Tanzania * Thailand * Togo * Tokelau (NZ) * Tonga * Trinidad and Tobago * Tunisia * Turkey * Turkmenistan * Turks and Caicos Islands (GB) * Tuvalu * U.S. Minor Pacific Islands (US) * U.S. Virgin Islands (US) * Uganda * Ukraine * United Arab Emirates * United Kingdom * United States * Uruguay * Uzbekistan * Vanuatu * Vatican City * Venezuela * Vietnam * Wallis and Futuna (FR) * Yemen * Zambia * ZimbabwRMS Titanic was a passenger liner that struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage from Southampton, England, to New York City, and sank on 15 April 1912, resulting in the deaths of 1,517 people in one of the deadliest peacetime maritime disasters in history.
The largest passenger steamship in the world at the time, the Olympic-class RMS Titanic was owned by the White Star Line and constructed at the Harland and Wolff shipyard in Belfast, Ireland, UK. After setting sail for New York City on 10 April 1912 with 2,223 people on board, she hit the iceberg four days into the crossing, at 11:40 pm on 14 April 1912, and sank at 2:20 am the following morning. The high casualty rate resulting from the sinking was due in part to the fact that, although complying with the regulations of the time, the ship carried lifeboats for only 1,178 people. A disproportionate number of men died due to the \"women and children first\" protocol that was enforced by the ship\'s crew.
Titanic was designed by experienced engineers, using some of the most advanced technologies and extensive safety features of the time. The sinking of a passenger liner on her maiden voyage, the high loss of life and media frenzy over Titanic\'s famous victims, the legends about the sinking, the resulting changes in maritime law, and the discovery of the wreck have all contributed to the enduring interest in Titanic.
icro Machines: The Original Scale Miniatures (called either \"Micro Machines\" or simply \"Micros\") were a line of toys originally made by Galoob (now part of Hasbro) in the mid 1980s and throughout the 1990s. Galoob licensed the idea behind Micro Machines from Clem Heeden, a toy inventor from Wisconsin. Micro Machines were tiny scale component style \"playsets\" and vehicles that were slightly larger than N scale. Although Micro Machines have not been sold in the United States in some years, newer models are available in the UK, Europe and the outlets in the US now also once again sell Micro Machines.
Early Micro Machines television commercials were famous for featuring actor John Moschitta, Jr., who was (at the time) listed in the Guinness Book of World Records as the world\'s fastest talker.
Many different styles of Micros were made including all the popular cars and trucks of the times, trains, emergency vehicles, tanks, boats, airplanes, helicopters, and motorcycles. The Tuff Trax series contained many of the popular TNT Motorsports Monster Trucks, including the influential Grave Digger truck. Star Trek and Star Wars models were also made, as were models from other science fiction franchises including Babylon 5, Power Rangers and MIB. They even immortalized James Bond and Indiana Jones in micro scale. After the Hasbro buyout, they came out with Winner\'s Circle NASCAR and G.I. Joe themed cars and playsets.
While the Micro Machines collection was known primarily for sizing down automobiles, it also featured several playsets including 1991\'s fold-out Super Van City. Licensed character products would often be fold-open heads including miniature characters and vehicles interactive with their playset Environment. Micro Machines also utilized several diverse features such as color-changing cars and \"Private Eyes\" vehicles that even allowed one to peek inside and view an illustration of the contents.
One of the many Micro Machines product lines was the Insiders series. Incredibly popular in the late 80s and early 90s, the Insiders series featured a small vehicle inside the standard size Micro Machine. The body and chassis of the larger vehicle connected via a hinge. Opening the larger revealed the smaller, which was a different model of car.
For 3 to 4 years Micro Machines was the largest selling toy car line in the US with total dollar sales exceeding the combined sales of the next top selling lines: Hot Wheels, Matchbox and Majorette.
Micro Machines had a well-known advertising campaign in the 1980s involving fast-talker John Moschitta, Jr.. The commercials featured pitches in his trademark speedy style and ended with the slogan \"[i]f it doesn\'t say Micro Machines, it\'s not the real thing\"[1].
In the 1990s, transforming playsets were released. Some could transform from one playset to another, such as a factory to a test track. Others could transform from giant vehicles to playsets, such as a 6x6 to a jungle. Earlier ones included one that could transform from a toolbox to a city. Another innovative release was a line of special boats in the 1990s. While past boats had merely sunk and were not intended for water use, these new sets could actually float.
When sold to Hasbro, the basic line was largely discontinued, and new packaging of the toys didn\'t catch on as well as hoped, though some imitators continue to be sold in toy stores. In 2006, the brand name was visible only in the detail panel of the Star Wars and Transformers Titanium series die cast vehicles and figures.
Ocean liners with four funnels
SS Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse (1897) · SS Deutschland (1900) · SS Kronprinz Wilhelm (1901) · SS Kaiser Wilhelm II (1902) · RMS Lusitania (1906) · RMS Mauretania (1906) · SS Kronprinzessin Cecilie (1906) · SS France (1910) · RMS Olympic (1910) · RMS Titanic (1911) · RMS Aquitania (1913) · HMHS Britannic (1914) · RMS Windsor Castle (1922) · RMS Arundel Castle (1921)
Timeline of the world\'s largest passenger ships
Syracusia (240 BCE) · Thalamegos (200 BCE) · The Caravel (1400s) · SS Royal William (1831) · SS Great Western (1837) · SS British Queen (1839) · SS President (1840) · SS Great Britain (1845) · SS Atrato (1854) · SS Great Eastern (1858) · RMS Celtic (1901) · RMS Baltic (1903) · RMS Empress of Scotland (1906) · RMS Lusitania (1907) · RMS Mauretania (1907) · RMS Olympic (1911) · RMS Titanic (1912 ) · SS Imperator (1913) · SS Leviathan (1913) · RMS Majestic (1922) · SS Normandie (1935) · RMS Queen Elizabeth (1940) · MS Carnival Destiny (1996) · MS Grand Princess (1997) · MS Voyager of the Seas (1999) · MS Explorer of the Seas (2000) · MS Navigator of the Seas (2002) · RMS Queen Mary 2 (2004) · MS Freedom of the Seas / MS Liberty of the Seas / MS Independence of the Seas (2006) · MS Oasis of the Seas (2009) · MS Allure of the Seas (2010)
Olympic-class ocean liners
RMS Olympic (1910) · RMS Titanic (1911) · HMHS Britannic (1914)
Deck officers on the RMS Titanic
Edward J. Smith, Captain · Henry T. Wilde, Chief Officer · William M. Murdoch, First Officer · Charles H. Lightoller, Second Officer · Herbert J. Pitman, Third Officer · Joseph G. Boxhall, Fourth Officer · Harold G. Lowe, Fifth Officer · James P. Moody, Sixth Officer
RMS Titanic on film and TV
Saved from the Titanic (1912) · In Nacht und Eis (1912) · Atlantic (1929) · Titanic (1943) · Titanic (1953) · A Night to Remember (1958) · S.O.S. Titanic (1979) · Raise the Titanic (1980) · Titanic (TV miniseries) (1996) · No Greater Love (1996) · Titanic (1997) · The Legend of the Titanic (1999) · Titanic: The Legend Goes On (2001) · Ghosts of the Abyss (2003) · Titanic II (2010) · Titanic: blood & Steel (2012)
Memorials to the sinking of the RMS Titanic
United Kingdom
Memorial to the Engine Room Heroes of the Titanic, Liverpool
Titanic Musicians\' Memorial Southampton
Titanic Engineers\' Memorial, Southampton
Titanic Memorial, Belfast
Titanic Orchestra\'s Memorial, Liverpool
United States
Straus Park, New York City
Titanic Memorial, New York City
Titanic Memorial, Washington, D.C.
Other
Titanic Memorial Bandstand, Ballarat, Australia
Titanic Memorial, Broken Hill, Australia
Ships that were lost on their maiden voyage
Naval ships
Vasa (1628) · Georgiana (1863) · Flach (1866) · Bismarck (1941)1 · Dinsdale (1942)1
Passenger ships
and cargo liners
Amazon (1851) · Tayleur (1854) · Titanic (1912) · Georges Philippar (1932) · Magdalena (1949) · Hans Hedtoft (1959) · Zenobia (1980)
Cargo ships
Batavia (1629) · Fortuyn (1723) · Amsterdam (1749) · Carrier Pigeon (1852) · Irex (1890) · Hastier (1919) · Adolf Vinnen (1923) · Michael E (1941)1 · Alexander Macomb (1942)1 · Empire Clough (1942)1 · Empire Drum (1942)1, 2 · Empire Dryden (1942)1, 2 · George Calvert (1942)1 · John Morgan (1943)1 · Ranga (1982)
Racing yachts
Mohawk (1876)
1 = Due to enemy action. 2 = Maiden revenue-earning voyage.
White Star Line ships
Surviving Ships
Nomadic (1911)
Planned
Oceanic (Never completed)
Former Ships
Red Jacket (1853) · Blue Jacket (1854) · Tayleur (1854) · Oceanic (1870) · Atlantic (1871) · Baltic (1871) · Tropic (1871) · Asiatic (1871) · Republic (1872) · Adriatic (1872) · Celtic (1872) · Traffic (1872) · Belgic (1872) · Gaelic (1873) · Britannic (1874) · Germanic (1875) · Arabic (1881) · Coptic (1881) · Ionic (1883) · Doric (1883) · Belgic (1885) · Gaelic (1885) · Cufic (1885) · Runic (1889) · Teutonic (1889) · Majestic (1890) · Tauric (1891) · Magnetic (1891) · Nomadic (1891) · Naronic (1892) · Bovic (1892) · Gothic (1893) · Cevic (1894) · Pontic (1894) · Georgic (1895) · Delphic (1897) · Cymric (1898) · Afric (1899) · Medic (1899) · Persic (1899) · Oceanic · Runic (1900) · Suevic (1901) · Celtic (1901) · Athenic (1902) · Corinthic (1902) · Ionic (1903) · Cedric (1903) · Victorian (1903) · Armenian (1903) · Arabic (1903) · Romanic (1903) · Cretic (1903) · Republic (1903) · Canopic (1904) · Cufic (1904) · Baltic (1904) · Tropic (1904) · Gallic (1907) · Adriatic (1907) · Laurentic (1909) · Megantic (1909) · Zeeland (1910) · Traffic (1911) · Olympic (1911) · Belgic (1911) · Zealandic (1911) · Titanic (1912) · Ceramic (1912) · Lapland (1914) · Britannic (1914) · Belgic (1917) · Justicia (1918) · Vedic (1918) · Bardic (1919) · Gallic (1920) · Mobile (1920) · Arabic (1920) · Homeric (1920) · Haverford (1921) · Poland (1922) · Majestic (1922) · Pittsburgh (1922) · Doric (1923) · Delphic (1925) · Regina (1925) · Albertic (1927) · Calgaric (1927) · Laurentic (1927) · Britannic (1930) · Georgic (1932)
List of fictional ships
Anime and manga
Blue 6, Shang 9 — Blue Submarine No. 6
Going Merry — One Piece
Thousand Sunny — One Piece
JDS Mirai — Zipang
Over the Rainbow, (a renamed USS Harry S. Truman) — Neon Genesis Evangelion
Pascal Magi — Tactical Roar
Ghost Ship — Blue Submarine No. 6
Super 99 — Submarine Super 99
Thundersub — Thundersub
Tuatha de Danaan — Full Metal Panic!
Zuko\'s Fire Nation ship
Yamato Takeru - super battleship, Kyokujitsu no Kantai.
Takemikazuchi - aircraft carrier, Konpeki no Kantai
I-3000 - supersubmarine, Konpeki no Kantai
Yashiromaru — Case Closed: Strategy Above the Depths
St. Aphrodite — Case Closed: Strategy Above the Depths
Blue - Blue Drop
Space Battleship Yamato - Space Battleship Yamato
Super Dimension Fortress One (SDF-1) Macross - Robotech
Comics
Aurora — trawler in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star and also from The Sign of Four from Sherlock Holmes
The Black Freighter — a metafictional pirate ship that is referenced throughout the Watchmen comic series
Cithara — alleged source distress signal in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star
HMS Cutlass - the name given to four ships of the Royal Navy - the first a battleship present at the Battle of the Nile; the second an ironclad sunk in World War I; the third a World War II destroyer, and the most recent ship a Cold War-era destroyer. All four ships appear in the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage
Eagle\'s Shadow — Sir Nicholas Fury\'s ship in Marvel 1602
Grossadler - Kriegsmarine destroyer, from the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage
Hawksub — Blackhawk
Karaboudjan — cargo ship in The Adventures of Tintin story The Crab with the Golden Claws
SS Ramona — tramp steamer in The Adventures of Tintin story The Red Sea Sharks
Sea Queen/The Gertrude — Lex Luthor\'s yacht in Superman Returns
Sirius — expedition ship in The Adventures of Tintin story Red Rackham\'s Treasure
Sirius — ship in The Adventures of Tintin story The Shooting Star
The Unicorn — 17th. century wooden sailing warship in The Adventures of Tintin stories The Secret of the Unicorn and Red Rackham\'s Treasure
HMS Viper - British destroyer, from the Commando Comics story Bright Blade of Courage
Vulkan - Kriegsmarine cruiser, from the Commando Comics story Flak Fever
Film
903 - Iranian Kilo class submarine in Steel Sharks, 1996
USS Abraham Lincoln — frigate in Disney\'s 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 1954
Academic Vladislav Volkov — Russian research ship in Virus, 1999
Acheron — French Napoleonic frigate in Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World, 2003
African Queen — The African Queen, 1951 with Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn
Albatross — The Sea Hawk with Errol Flynn, 1940
Amindra — with shanghaied sailor from the Glencairn, torpedoed and sank in The Long Voyage Home, 1940
SS Andes — cruise ship in Let\'s Go Native, 1930
SS Antonia Graza — derelict Italian luxury ocean liner in Ghost Ship
Aquanaut 3 - experimental submarine, 30,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2007
Arabella — Captain blood with Errol Flynn, 1935
Argo — galley Jason and the Argonauts (1963 film), Jason and the Argonauts (TV miniseries)
Argonautica — cruise ship Deep Rising
USS Aspen — Full Fathom Five
HMS Avenger — Billy Budd 1962
Batavia Queen — steamship Krakatoa, East of Java 1969
HMS Bedford — British Type 23 frigate in Tomorrow Never Dies 1997
USS Bedford (DLG-113) — The Bedford Incident (also in book version)
Belafonte — oceanographic research vessel, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou
USS Belinda (APA-22) — Away All Boats, 1956 (Also appears in original novel)
Benthic Explorer — offshore support ship — The Abyss 1989
Black Hawk — The Pirate of the Black Hawk (Il Pirata dello sparviero nero) 1958
Black Pearl (formerly HMS Wicked Wench) — slaver turned pirate ship Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Black Swan — The Black Swan 1942
Brandenburg — World War II German battleship in We Dive at Dawn 1943
SS Britannic — cruise ship in Juggernaut
USS Caine — The Caine Mutiny (Also appears in written version)
USS Charleston - On the Beach, 2000
HMS Chester — British Type 23 frigate in Tomorrow Never Dies 1997
SSN Davies (SSN-???) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Crash Dive, 1996
HMS Devonshire — British Type 23 frigate sunk in Tomorrow Never Dies
SS Chiku Shan — ferryboat — blood Alley (1955)
SS Claridon — ocean liner in The Last Voyage 1960
HMS Compass Rose — Second World War corvette in The Cruel Sea, 1953
USS Copperfin — World War II sub Destination Tokyo, 1943 w/ Cary Grant
HMS Dauntless — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
HMS Defiant — frigate in HMS Defiant, 1962
Disco Volante — motor yacht/hydrofoil in Thunderball 1965
USS Dragonfish — U.S. Submarine in Battle of the Coral Sea 1959
Dulcibella — The Riddle of the Sands 1979
USS Echo — sailing ship from The Wackiest Ship in the Army, 1959
Edinburgh Trader — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man\'s Chest
Elizabeth Dane — The Fog
Elsinore — The Mutiny of the Elsinore 1937
Empress — Chinese junk — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World\'s End
HMS Endeavour — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World\'s End
MS Ergenstrasse — The Sea Chase (1955) with John Wayne and Lana Turner, and Patriot Games (1992) with Harrison Ford.
Esther — sailing merchantman, Old Ironsides 1926
Flying Dutchman — Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man\'s Chest
Geronimo — America\'s Cup racing yacht, Wind 1992
Ghost — sealing schooner, The Sea Wolf 1941
Glencairn — freighter — The Long Voyage Home
Gloria N — E la nave va..., Federico Fellini
SS Goliath — ocean liner — Goliath Awaits — TV film 1981
Hahnchen Maru — cargo vessel modified to command ship — Contact, 1997
Hai Peng — Pirates of the Caribbean: At World\'s End
SS Happy Wanderer — cruise liner — Carry On Cruising
USS Haynes (DE-181) — destroyer escort, The Enemy Below
The Henrietta - paddle steamer - Around the World in 80 Days (1956 film)
Immer Essen (\"Always eating\") — cruise ship, Dead Men Don\'t Wear Plaid
The Inferno — The Goonies
HMS Interceptor — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
USS Intrepid — cruise ship in the film Intrepid
JDS Isokaze — Aegis (Bôkoku no îgisu) 2005
Jenny — Forrest Gump
Jolly Mon — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Wizard King
USS Kornblatt — Don\'t Give Up The Ship, 1959, starred Jerry Lewis
USS Lansing (SSN-795) - Los Angeles Class SSN (Depicted as an SSBN) in Danger Beneath The Sea, 2001
Liparus — Karl Stromberg\'s submarine swallowing supertanker The Spy Who Loved Me 1977
SS Lorelei — An ocean liner in Ghost Ship
HMS Lydia — Captain Horatio Hornblower 1951
Mary Deare — The Wreck of the Mary Deare, starring Gary Cooper and Charlton Heston, 1959
USS Mako - Fast Attack Submarine in Danger Beneath The Sea, 2001
USS Montana — The Abyss, The Fifth Missile
Morning Star —Cutthroat Island 1995
Nathan Ross — whaling ship, All the Brothers Were Valiant 1953
Nautilus — Captain Nemo\'s 1860s submarine — 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea 1954, Captain Nemo and the Underwater City 1969, Mysterious Island, The Return of Captain Nemo 1978, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen 2003
HMS Nereid - Royal Navy submarine, Virus, 1980
USS Oakland (SSN-798) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Steel Sharks, 1996
Olive Branch — sailing merchantman, Captain Caution, 1940
Orca — Quint\'s fishing boat, Jaws, 1975
Patna — tramp steamer in Lord Jim 1965
Pequod — whaleship, Moby Dick 1956, 1978, 1998
USS Pequod - American submarine, 2010: Moby Dick, 2010
Poseidon — ocean liner/cruise ship, The Poseidon Adventure 1972, Beyond the Poseidon Adventure 1979, The Poseidon Adventure 2005, Poseidon 2006
USS Poseidon — USS Poseidon: Phantom Below 2005
The Princess — Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
Q Boat — Q\'s \'fishing boat\' The World Is Not Enough 1999
\"Proteus\" - nuclear mini submarine from the 1966 film \"Fantastic Voyage.\" [1]
Rachel — Moby-Dick, 1956, 1998
Rasputin - Ex-Soviet Submarine in Rapid Assault, 1997
The Reaper- Dog\'s ship in Cutthroat Island, 1995
The Red Witch — Wake of the Red Witch with John Wayne, 1948
USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (1955) and the 1984 television film (also appears in novel, play and TV series versions)
U-571 appears in U-571 (film), coincidently same number as German submarine U-571
Rights-of-Man — Billy Budd, 1962
Rob Roy — commercial freighter, Windbag the Sailor, 1936
USS San Pablo — The Sand Pebbles, 1966
HMS Saltash Castle — Second World War frigate in The Cruel Sea, 1953
Saracen — yacht, Dead Calm
USS Sarasota - Aircraft Carrier, Crash Dive, 1996 & Rapid Assault, 1997
USS Sawfish — On the Beach, 1959
USS Scotia - submarine, 30,000 Leagues Under the Sea, 2007
Sea Star — tug in Virus, 1999
HMS Sea Tiger — Second World War submarine, We Dive at Dawn, 1943
USS Sea Tiger — World War II submarine, Operation Petticoat 1977
SS Sea Witch — Action in the North Atlantic 1943
SSNR Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 1961 with Walter Pidgeon
HMS Shag at Sea - yacht, Austin Powers in Goldmember 2002
HMS Sherwood - British cruiser, Carry on Admiral 1957
HMS Solent - British destroyer, Sink the Bismarck! 1960
IJN Shinaru — Japanese aircraft carrier, Torpedo Run 1958
Stealth Ship — media mogul Elliot Carver\'s secret news creator in Tomorrow Never Dies. Is based on the real life Sea Shadow (IX-529) 1997
St. Georges — British spy ship trawler For Your Eyes Only 1981
USS Starfish — Hellcats of the Navy
USS Stingray - Down Periscope, 1996 with Kelsey Grammer no relation to the Salmon-class SS-186 USS Stingray
USS Thunderfish — Operation Pacific, 1954 with John Wayne
USS Tiger Shark — The Atomic Submarine
SS Titanic II — cruise liner, Titanic II, 2010
HMS Torrin — In Which We Serve, 1942
Ulysses — submarine, Atlantis: The Lost Empire
SSN Ulysses (SSN-???) - Los Angeles Class in Crash Dive, 1996
USS Valhalla (SSN-905) - Los Angeles Class SSN in Rapid Assault, 1997
SS Venture — King Kong, 1933, 2005
HMS Venus — British frigate — Carry On Jack, 1962
HMS Victoria — British WWI ironclad, Britannic, 2000
The Wanderer - Captain Ron, 1992 with Martin Short and Kurt Russell
We\'re Here — Captains Courageous, 1937 with Spencer Tracy
Wonkatania — Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (also appears in 2005 adaptation), based on the Cunard Line tradition of ending ships with an -ania (i.e., RMS Lusitania and RMS Aquitania)
Yellow Submarine — The Beatles\' psychedelic submarine
Literature
Single works
USS Abraham Lincoln — frigate in Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea by Jules Verne, 1868
Adventure — Oceangoing Salvage Tug — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
African Queen — The African Queen by C. S. Forester
HMS Amirante — Destroyer — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
Antarctica — Whaling Factory Ship — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
HMS Antigone — Leander class cruiser commissioned 1938 in \"The Cruiser\" by Warren Tute, 1955
SNS Antilla- Spanish battleship in Trafalgar by Arturo Perez-Reverte, 2004
Antonov — Soviet bulk freighter — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Arabella — Captain blood by Raphael Sabatini, 1924
HMS Aries — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Argo — Jason and the Argonauts
Artemis — Voyager by Diana Gabaldon
HMS Artemis — The Ship, by C. S. Forester, 1943
Astrea — Roman galley ship — Ben-Hur by Genl Lew Wallace, 1880
Aurora — Armed whale catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
Auxoil — Oil-rig tender — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
USS Avenger - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979
Baalbek — Libyan Freighter — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
Bachir — Libyan Auxiliary Cruiser — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983
USS Belinda (APA-22) — Away All Boats by Kenneth M. Dodson, 1954 (also appears in film version)
Bellatrix — Motor yacht — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
HMS Bellipotent — Billy Budd by Herman Melville
Beryte — Libyan Auxiliary Cruiser — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983
Bird of Dawning — Bird of Dawning novel by John Masefield
USS Bradford — Frigate — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986
Black Swan - Pirate ship - \"The Black Swan\" by Rafael Sabatini 1932 (prototype for Pirates of the Caribbean films)
Byblos — Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976
USS Caine — The Caine Mutiny (also appears in film version)
HMS Calypso — frigate — The Captain from Connecticut by C. S. Forester
USS Candlefish (SS-284) — Ghostboat by George E. Simpson and Neal R. Burger 1976. World War II Gato Class submarine
USS Carl Jackson — Nimitz Class aircraft carrier — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
Caspar\'s Folly — Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Chimay — Whale Cacher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
SS Claridon — The Last Voyage
HMS Compass Rose — The Cruel Sea by Nicholas Monsarrat, 1951
Covenant — brig, Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson, 1886
Crozet — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
HMS Cyclades — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Dawn Treader - Voyage of the Dawn Treader by C.S. Lewis
USS Delaware — frigate — The Captain from Connecticut by C. S. Forester
Demeter — Russian schooner in Dracula by Bram Stoker
HMS Deterrent — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN- Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963
HMS Devastation — UK Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
USS Dolphin — Ice Station Zebra by Alistair MacLean 1963
Doneska - Russian Submarine - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
Dostoiny — Krivak class destroyer — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Dulcibella — The Riddle of the Sands by Erskine Childers, 1903
Duncan — ocean yacht, In Search of the Castaways by Jules Verne, 1867
HMS Eagle — Invincible Class aircraft carrier — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
Erebus — Alaska
Esmeralda - Racing Yawl - Her Name Will Be Faith by Max Marlow, 1988
ESO - Experimental nuclear powered stealth minisub - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999
Evening Star — Alaska
Explorer 1 - Bathyscape - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
Falkland — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
Fin of God — Omnian ship, Small Gods
The Fuwalda — Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs, 1914. The ship which took Tarzan\'s parents to Africa.
USS Galveston - Aircraft Carrier - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
USS Garcia — Eyes of the Hammer by Bob Mayer, 1991
Ghost — sealing schooner, The Sea Wolf by Jack London 1904
The Gloria Scott — from the earliest Sherlock Holmes story, by Arthur Conan Doyle
Grande Rapide — Ocean racing catamaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Gratulana — Liberian oil tanker — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Grenouille Frenetique (Frantic Frog) — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
The Hesperus — from the poem The Wreck of the Hesperus by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
HISPANIOLA (capitalized throughout the story) — Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
Huntress — British survey ship — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Ilya Podogin - Soviet SSN - Icebound by Dean Koontz, 1995
USS Imperator - Submarine Amphibious Assault Ship - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
Incroyable — Opium smuggling Clipper — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960
USS Independence, a fictional Wasp class amphibious assault ship where a large part of the plot from The Swarm by Frank Schätzing takes place.
HMS Indomitable — Billy Budd by Herman Melville
Jeroboam — Moby-Dick or The Whale by Herman Melville
Jolly Roger — Captain Hook\'s pirate ship — Peter Pan by J.M. Barrie
John Henry D — Fishing boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Joun — Fishing boat — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
HMS Jupiter — Leander Class frigate — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979\\
K-387 - Russian nuclear submarine - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999
Karamagee — Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
USS Keeling — The Good Shepherd by CS Forester
Kerguelen — Whale Catcher — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1962
Kharkov - Moscow Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
HMS Kittiwake — Bird class patrol boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Korund — Tango Class submarine — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
USS Langley — a Forrestal-class aircraft carrier — The Sixth Battle by Barrett Tillman
Laughing Sandbag — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
Leif Ericson — The Illuminatus! Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson 1975
Leros — Greek Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976
Leopard - Akula class submarine - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999
USS Liberty - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979
Lobitos — Panamanian freighter — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
HMS Loch Torridon — Cruiser — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
HMS Loch Vennachar — Cruiser — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
The Magic Oat Boat — The Magic Oat Boat, (a Children\'s Story), 1992
HMAS Magpie — Mine-sweeper — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
Malange - Freighter - - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967
Marie Celeste — The Relation of J Habakuk Jephson by Arthur Conan Doyle (the real ship was Mary Celeste)
Mary Deare — The Wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes, 1956
USS Mary Jane - Naval Oceanographic Research Ship - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
HMS Massive — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963
Medina — Motor cruiser — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
Mercedes Express Ocean racing trimaran — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Milka — Jingo (name parodies the Pinta)
HMS Missile - Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963
Moonraker — Liberian tramp freighter — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
Myfanwy — Coaster — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
Nancy Bell - The Yarn of the Nancy Bell by W. S. Gilbert
USS Narwhal — SSN — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
USS Nashville — U.S. warship — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
USS Nathan James (DDG-80) — The Last Ship by William Brinkley, 1988
Nautilus — Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island
Nellie — Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, 1899
HMS Nemesis — Tai-Pan by James Clavell 1966
Novgorod - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
Numestra del Oro - Armed Merchantman owned by a Colombian Cartel - Hammerheads by Dale Brown, 1990
Olympus — Supertanker — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986
Omega 1 - Submersible Barge - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
Omega Challenger — Ocean racing sloop — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
HMS Orcus - Oberon class submarine - Submarine by John Wingate, 1982
Orel - Akula class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
Oska Laertes — Danish ferry — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Pacific Klondike - Deep ocean drillship - Fireplay by William Wingate, 1979
Penguin — The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket by Edgar Allan Poe
Pequod — Moby-Dick,or The Whale, by Herman Melville, 1851
USS Pequod — Firefox by Craig Thomas 1977. Sturgeon-class SSN which rendezvoused on the Arctic ice to re-fuel the Mig-31 Firefox
HMS Phoenix - SSN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967
HMS Plover — Bird class patrol boat — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Plymouth Corporation\'s Revenge — pirate ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
HMS Plymouth Sound — sailing Corvette — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960
Poltava - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
Poppy — Opium smuggling schooner — The Watering Place of Good Peace by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1960
SS Poseidon — ocean liner, The Poseidon Adventure by Paul Gallico, 1969
Pushkin — The Last Ship by William Brinkley
USS Pyramus — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967
Queequeg — The Grim Grotto by Lemony Snicket 2004
Rachel — Moby-Dick,or The Whale, in search of the Pequod
USS Raleigh — Eyes of the Hammer by Bob Mayer, 1991
Red Witch — Wake of the Red Witch by Garland Roark
Red October — Soviet submarine, The Hunt for Red October by Tom Clancy 1984
USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (also appears in play, film and TV series versions)
HMS Retaliate — Polaris missile-carrying SSBN — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963
USS Retribution - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979
Retivy — Krivak class destroyer — The Antonov Project by Anthony Trew, 1979
Rigel Star — Oil tanker — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983
Rights-of-Man — Billy Budd by Herman Melville
USN Rio Grande — Aircraft Carrier — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
USS Robert F. Kennedy — A stealth nuclear powered battle cruiser (BCGN) — North Cape by Joe Poyer
Rocketing Spitfire — sloop — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
USS Rosemont - Los Angeles Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
Ryazan - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
HMS Sabre — S-Class submarine — Two Hours to Darkness by Anthony Trew, 1963
HMS Safari - Swiftsure Class - Submarine by John Wingate, 1982
HMS Saltash — The Cruel Sea (HMS Saltash Castle in the film)
USS San Pablo — The Sand Pebbles by Richard McKenna
Santa Cascara (later HMS Golden Vanity) — Spanish galleon captured by the British — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
Santa Umbriago — Spanish warship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
Saracen — Supertanker fitted with reinforced bow. — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986
Saratov - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
HMS Saturn - Swiftsure Class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
Scorpion — Cruising yacht — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986
USS Scorpion — On the Beach by Nevil Shute 1957
USS Seamount — SSBN — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986
The Sea Witch — a yacht in The Wreck of the Mary Deare by Hammond Innes, 1956
USOS Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea by Theodore Sturgeon 1961
Semittanté — Tramp Freighter — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
Shelif — Fishing boat — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
USS Shenandoah — Aircraft carrier — The Hero Ship by Hank Searls, 1969
USN Shenandoah — US Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
Shodo — Japanese Whaling Factory Ship — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
Shodo 4 — Japanese whale catcher — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
Siren - yacht, A Damsel in Distress by P. G. Wodehouse, 1919
USS Skippack — SSN — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Smolensk - Alfa class submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor, 1987
Southern Sun — Freighter — The Moonraker Mutiny by Anthony Trew, 1972
USN Springfield — Aircraft carrier — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
Splendor Hyaline — The Horse and his boy by C. S. Lewis
USS Starbuck (SSN-989)[citation needed] — Pacific Vortex! by Clive Cussler 1983 (Cover of Sphere edition shows SSN-107 on the fin)
USS Stevens — Oliver Hazard Perry Class frigate — Eagle Trap by Geoffrey Archer, 1993
USS Stinson — Spruance class destroyer — The Krone Experiment by J. Craig Wheeler 1986
USS Stormy Beach - Long Beach Class cruiser - Fireplay by William Wingate
Student Prince — Freighter — The Soukour Deadline by Anthony Trew, 1976
Samurai Maru — Japanese Seagoing Tugboat — The Unripe Gold, by Geoffrey Jenkins, 1983
Sunboro Beauty — Ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Sweet Ribena — Multihulled ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
USS Swordfish — On the Beach by Nevil Shute 1957
USS Swordfish - Trident Class SSBN - Inoculate! by Neil Bayne, 1979
Tambov - Russian nuclear submarine - Silent Hunter by Charles D. Taylor
HMS Teaser — Aircraft Carrier- Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
HMS Temeraire (S.191) - SSN - The Deep Silence by Douglas Reeman, 1967
Thorshammer — Norwegian Destroyer — A Grue of Ice by Geoffrey Jenkins
USS Thomas Jefferson — Nimitz Class by Patrick Robinson
HMS Thunder Child — The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells
SS Titan — Futility, or the Wreck of the Titan by Morgan Robertson, 1898
Tornado Four — Ocean racing sloop — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
Trident — Survey Ship — Collision by Anthony Wall, 1986
Twelve Apostles — passenger ship — The Pyrates by George MacDonald Fraser
HMS Ulysses — HMS Ulysses
USS Urchin — Air Force One by Edwin Corley 1978
SS Valparaiso — Godhead Trilogy by James Morrow
USS Vindicator (NMSS-3) — Nuclear-powered strategic missile battleship, Fire Lance by David Mace, 1986
Vingilot — The Silmarillion by J. R. R. Tolkien
USS Viperfish — Spy Sub
Vitebsk - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
Vladimir - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
Vologda - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
Voronetz - Victor class - The Saturn Experiment - Peter Shepherd, 1988
The Walrus — Flint\'s pirate ship in Treasure Island by Robert Louis Stevenson
USS Warren Harding — in Robert Clark Young\'s naval satire One of the Guys
We\'re Here — Captains Courageous: A Story of the Grand Banks, by Rudyard Kipling, 1896
USN Willowtrack — US Submarine — Hunter-Killer by Geoffrey Jenkins 1966
Wilson\'s Savoury — Ocean racing yacht — Sea Fever by Anthony Trew, 1980
USS Woodbridge (SSN-349) - Los Angeles Class - The Tiger Cruise by Richard Thompson, 1999
Yabba-Dabba-Doo — Sewer, Gas & Electric: The Public Works Trilogy by Matt Ruff 1997
Series
Amanda Lee Garrett series by James Cobb
USS Benton
USS Carondelet — PGAC-03
USS Manassas — PGAC-02
USS Queen of the West — PGAC-01
USS Cunningham — CLA-79 (Cruiser Littoral Attack)
USS Evans F. Carlson — LPD-26 (Landing Platform Dock)
Floater 1 — Mobile Offshore Base (consisting of nine superbarges)
Aubrey–Maturin series by Patrick O\'Brian
HM Sloop Sophie
HM Sloop Polychrest
HMS Lively
HMS Surprise
Nutmeg of Consolation
HMS Worcester
HEICS Niobe
Privateer Franklin
HMS Diane
USS Norfolk
Axis of Time trilogy by John Birmingham
USS Hillary Clinton
USS Kandahar
USS Leyte Gulf
USS Amanda Garrett
USS Providence
USS Kennebunkport
HMS Trident
HMS Vanguard
HMS Fearless
HMS Dolphin by L.A. Meyer
HMAS Havoc
HMAS Moreton Bay
HMAS Ipswich Royal Australian Navy Fremantle Class Patrol Boat
JDS Siranui
KRI Nuku
KRI Sutanto
Dessaix
Biggles series by W. E. Johns
SS Alice Clair - British merchant ship
Benegal Star - tramp steamer
Colonia - British merchant ship
Dundee Castle - British merchant ship
HMS Seafret - British destroyer
Queen of Olati - British steamship
Shanodah - British merchant ship
Tasman - Australian merchant ship
Bolitho series by Alexander Kent
HMS Gorgon
HM Cutter Avenger
HMS Destiny
HMS Trojan
HM Sloop Sparrow
HMS Phalarope
HMS Undine
HMS Tempest
HMS Hyperion
HMS Euryalus
HMS Achates
HMS Argonaute
Golden Plover
HMS Unrivalled
HMS Athena
HMS Onward
Nautilus, French frigate
HMS Winger from Corvette Command by Nicholas Monsarrat (based on the real HMS Shearwater)
Edward Mainwaring series by Victor Suthren
HMS Pallas
Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser series by Fritz Leiber
Black Treasurer
Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling
The Durmstrang ship
Flashman series by George MacDonald Fraser
Balliol College — slave-trader
Horatio Hornblower series by CS Forester
HMS Atropos
HMS Clorinda
HMS Hotspur
HMS Justinian
HMS Lydia
HMS Nonsuch
HM Sloop Retribution
HMS Sutherland
HMS Witch of Endor
Mejidieh
Natividad
Inheritance cycle series by Christopher Paolini
The Dragon Wing
Lord Ramage series by Dudley Pope
HM Brig Triton
HMS Calypso
HMS Jocasta
HMS Dido
John Fury series by G. S. Beard
HMS Amazon - British 32
Bedford - merchantman
Earl of Mornington - East India Company
Magicienne - French frigate
Otter - East India Company warship
HMS Wasp - British brigantine
Nathaniel Drinkwater series by Richard Woodman
HM Cutter Kestrel
HM Brig Hellebore
HM Bomb-vessel Virago
HMS Melusine
HMS Antigone former French frigate
HMS Patrician
Vestal paddle-steamer
Para Handy series by Neil Munro
Vital Spark
Paul Gallant series by Victor Suthren
Echo corvette
The Chronicles of Narnia series by C. S. Lewis
Dawn Treader
Splendor Hyaline
Southern Victory Series by Harry Turtledove
USS Chapultepec — aircraft carrier
USS Dakota — Battleship — The Great War: American Front
CSS Fort Sumter — Confederate cruiser — The Great War: American Front
CSS Hot Springs — destroyer escort in the Second Great War
USS Josephus Daniels — destroyer escort in Second Great War
USS Oregon — battleship in Second Great War
USS Pocahantas, Arkansas — troop transport named after one of the rare US victories in the Second Mexican War
USS Punishment — US river monitor operating on the Mississippi — The Great War: Walk in Hell
USS Remembrance
Ripple — U.S. fishing boat — The Great War: American Front
USS Sandwich Islands
CSS Scallop — Confederate submarine — The Great War: American Front
Spray — Fishing trawler — The Great War: American Front
CSS Swamp Fox — Confederate commerce raider — The Great War: American Front
USS Trenton — aircraft carrier
CSS Whelk — Confederate submarine — The Great War: American Front
Travis McGee series by John D. McDonald
Busted Flush — houseboat
John Maynard Keynes
Thorstein Veblen
Dray Prescot series by Kenneth Bulmer (as Alan Burt Akers)
HMS Rockingham
Sherlock Holmes
The Five Orange Pips
Lone Star
The Cardboard Box
May Day (Liverpool and London Line)
Conqueror (Liverpool and London Line)
The Adventure of Black Peter
Sea Unicorn (whaler)
bloody Jack series by Louis A. Meyer
HMS Dolphin
HMS Hope
HMS Wolverine
bloodhound
Nancy B. Alsop
Belle of the Golden West
Emerald
HMS Juno
Jack Ryan universe series by Tom Clancy
Red October, a Soviet Typhoon-class submarine
V.K. Konovalov, a Soviet Alfa-class submarine
E.S. Politovsky, a Soviet Alfa-class submarine
Norse mythology
Hringhorni, the ship of Baldr
Naglfar, a ship in Norse mythology made of the fingernails and toenails of the dead
Skíðblaðnir, the ship of Freyr
Radio
Empress of Coconut — Potarneyland cruise liner, The Navy Lark
HMS Makepeace — British destroyer, The Navy Lark
Marie Valette — 18th century ship sunk in the English Channel, The Navy Lark
Poppadum — Potarneyland frigate, The Navy Lark
Saucy Seagull — British fishing trawler, The Navy Lark
HMS Troutbridge — British frigate, The Navy Lark
Stage
Flying Dutchman — in the opera The Flying Dutchman by Richard Wagner and other plays, movies and novels.
HMS Pinafore by Gilbert and Sullivan
Tarantula — The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert and Sullivan
USS Reluctant (AK-601) — Mister Roberts (also appears in novel, films, and TV series versions)
Television
HMAS Ambush — Patrol Boat
HMAS Defiance — Patrol Boat
HMAS Hammersley — Sea Patrol (TV series)
HMS Hero (F42) — Warship
Argonaut — Mike Nelson\'s boat in Sea Hunt, \' 50s series
Batboat — Batman
SS Bernice — a cargo ship in the Doctor Who serial Carnival of Monsters
Black Pig — Captain Pugwash — UK children\'s TV cartoon series
SS Claridon — Ocean liner (based on the RMS Queen Mary) in Ghost Whisperer
Golden Lolly — pirate ship, Henry\'s Cat
Gone Fission — Mr. Burns\' yacht — The Simpsons
Greasy Fleece — pirate ship, Henry\'s Cat
Haunted Star — General Hospital
Horatio Hornblower
HMS Indefatigable — (Edward Pellew, Capt.)
HMS Hotspur —
HMS Justinian —
Papillion — French frigate
Le Rève — French sloop
JAG / NCIS universe
USS Angel Shark (SSGN-559)
USS Benjamin Harrison (CVN-79)
USS Bennington (CVN-78)
USS Bladensburg (LPH-12)
USS Cathedral City (SSN-757)
USS Cayuga (DDG-51)
USS Connolly (CVN-84)
USS Crawford (SSN-806)
USS Daniel Boone (DDG-72)
USS Ellyson (FFG-19)
USS Gainsville
USS Gillcrist (DDG-114)
USS Hartung (DD-998)
USS Hennessey (FFG-65)
USS John Cooper (DDG-99)
USS Manassas (CG-74)
USS Monroe Smith (FFG-63)
USS Montana (CGN-42)
USS Patrick Henry (CVN-74)
USS Reprisal (CV-35)
USS San Michel
USS Seahawk (CVN-65)
USS Skerrett (EDDG-31)
USS Stanley Dace
USS Stockdale (FFG-62)
USS Suribachi (LST-1186)
USS Thomas Jefferson
USS Thomas Lyons
USS Tigershark
USS Vance (DDG-101)
USS Wake Island
USS Watertown (SSN-696)
Vasiliev — Russian destroyer
USS Walter Mondale — laundry ship from The Simpsons, mentioned in the episode Bart vs. Australia
USS Kiwi — The Wackiest Ship in the Army
SS Lady Anne — cruise ship, \"Passage on the Lady Anne\" episode of The Twilight Zone
HMS Lindana - sloop - Phineas and Ferb
SS Minnow — Gilligan\'s Island
SS Moldavia - passenger ship, You Rang, M\'Lord?
USS Monroe (DD-211) — The Pretender
The Onedin Line series
Anne Onedin — a steamship
Charlotte Rhodes — first ship of James Onedin
Medusa
Pampero
Soren Larsen
Naughty Jane — rowboat, Dad\'s Army
Persephone — log salvage boat from The Beachcombers
Piper Maru — French ship from The X-Files episode Piper Maru
U.S.S. Ardent — American naval destroyer from The X-Files episode Død Kalm
PT 73 — the PT boat from McHale\'s Navy
PT-116 — McHale\'s Navy
USS Reluctant (AK-601) — World War II cargo ship in Mister Roberts (also appears in novel, play and film versions)
SS Tipton — The Suite Life on Deck
USOS Seaview — Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
seaQuest DSV 4600 — seaQuest DSV
USS Sea Spanker — aircraft carrier, from the New Kids on the Blecch episode of The Simpsons
SkyDiver — UFO 1970–1971
Sultana —The Buccaneers 1956
Thunderbird 4 Thunderbirds
Temperance - Bones
Tiki III — schooner in Adventures in Paradise 1960s series by James Michener
Thunder — super speedboat in Thunder in Paradise 1994
Video games
Scinfaxi & Hrimfaxi — Aircraft carrier submarines featured in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War
Gangplank Galleon — Donkey Kong Country series
Jolly Roger\'s ship — Super Mario 64
OFS Kestrel — Aircraft Carrier in Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War and Ace Combat Zero: The Belkan War
SS Anne — Ship in Pokémon games
The Antaeus, an \"adaptive cruiser\" in Hostile Waters: Antaeus Rising
USS Liberty — amphibious assault ship in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas
Luna Lucura — cargo vessel in Jurassic Park: Chaos Island
Maria Doria — Tomb Raider 2
The \"Salty Hippo\"- Captain Blubber\'s ship in the [Banjo-Kazooie] series of games.
The S.S. Zelbess (alternately the S.S. Invincible) in Chrono Cross
The Eastern Spirit — decommissioned Russian whaler rebuilt to serve as supply-ship and secondary laboratory in Cold Fear.
Elisabeth Dane — Small cargo ship Vampire: The Masquerade - bloodlines
The USS Ravenswood — Coastguard ship in Cold Fear.
The GFS Olympus and the GFS Valhalla from Metroid Prime 3: Corruption
The Space Pirate Vessel Orpheon from Metroid Prime
The GFS Tyr from Metroid Prime 2 Echoes
The Borealis — abandoned ship in Half-Life 2 Episode 2
The S.S. Selene — Cargo vessel commanded by Ronnie Olsen in Freedom Wings
The RMS Artanic - Royal Mail Ship commanded by Antares Andrews in Blockland
The Reaver - The name of Reaver\'s ship, originally going to be named the Narcissus in Fable II
Folklore
HMS Friday, a popular urban legend
Flying Dutchman
Courser or the Tuscarora, Alfred Bulltop Stormalong\'s clipper ship
RMS Titanic on film and TV
Saved from the Titanic (1912) · In Nacht und Eis (1912) · Atlantic (1929) · Titanic (1943) · Titanic (1953) · A Night to Remember (1958) · S.O.S. Titanic (1979) · Raise the Titanic (1980) · Titanic (TV miniseries) (1996) · No Greater Love (1996) · Titanic (1997) · The Legend of the Titanic (1999) · Titanic: The Legend Goes On (2001) · Ghosts of the Abyss (2003) · Titanic II (2010) · Titanic: blood & Steel York is the most populous city in the United States[9] and the center of the New York Metropolitan Area, one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world.[10][11][12] New York exerts a significant impact upon global commerce, finance, media, art, fashion, research, technology, education, and entertainment. The home of the United Nations Headquarters,[13] New York is an important center for international affairs and is widely deemed the cultural capital of the world.[14][15][16][17][18] The city is also referred to as New York City or the City of New York[19] to distinguish it from the state of New York, of which it is a part.[20]Located on one of the world\'s largest natural harbors,[21] New York City consists of five boroughs which were consolidated in 1898:[22] The Bronx, Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens, and Staten Island.[23] With a 2010 United States Census population of 8,175,133[7] distributed over a land area of just 305 square miles (790 km2),[24][25][26] New York is the most densely populated major city in the United States.[27] As many as 800 languages are spoken in New York, making it the most linguistically diverse city in the world.[28] The New York City Metropolitan Area\'s population is the United States\' largest, estimated at 18.9 million people distributed over 6,720 square miles (17,400 km2),[8][29] and is also part of the most populous combined statistical area in the United States, containing 22.2 million people as of 2009 Census estimates.[30] New York has the largest internet presence of any location in the world; registering 7.1 billion search results as of December 2011.[31]New York traces its roots to its 1624 founding as a trading post by colonists of the Dutch Republic, and was named New Amsterdam in 1626.[32] The city and its surrounds came under English control in 1664[33][34] and were renamed New York after King Charles II of England granted the lands to his brother, the Duke of York.[35][36] New York served as the capital of the United States from 1785 until 1790.[37] It has been the country\'s largest city since 1790.[38] The Statue of Liberty greeted millions of immigrants as they came to America by ship in the late 19th and early 20th centuries[39] and is a globally recognized symbol of the United States and its democracy.[40]Many districts and landmarks in New York City have become well known to its approximately 50 million annual visitors.[41][42][43] Times Square, iconified as \"The Crossroads of the World\",[44][45][46][47][48] is the brightly illuminated hub of the Broadway theater district,[49] one of the world\'s busiest pedestrian intersections,[50] and a major center of the world\'s entertainment industry.[51] The city hosts many world renowned bridges, skyscrapers,[52] and parks. New York City\'s financial district, anchored by Wall Street in Lower Manhattan, functions as the financial capital of the world[53][54][55][56][57][58][59] and is home to the New York Stock Exchange, the world\'s largest stock exchange by total market capitalization of its listed companies.[60] Manhattan\'s real estate market is among the most expensive in the world.[61] Manhattan\'s Chinatown incorporates the highest concentration of Chinese people in the Western Hemisphere.[62][63][64][65] Unlike most global rapid transit systems, the New York City Subway provides 24/7 service.[66] Numerous colleges and universities are located in New York,[67] including Columbia University, New York University, and Rockefeller University, which are ranked among the top 50 in the world
Coordinates: 40°43′N 74°00′WCoordinates: 40°43′N 74°00′WCountry United StatesState New YorkCounties BronxKingsNew YorkQueensRichmondSettled 1624Government• Type Mayor-Council• Body New York City Council• Mayor Michael Bloomberg (I)[6]Area• City 468.9 sq mi (1,214.4 km2)• Land 304.8 sq mi (789.4 km2)• Water 165.6 sq mi (428.8 km2)• Urban 3,352.6 sq mi (8,683.2 km2)• Metro 6,720 sq mi (17,405 km2)Elevation 33 ft (10 m)Population (April 1, 2010 United States Census)[7][8]• City 8,175,133• Density 27,532/sq mi (10,630/km2)• Urban 18,223,567• Urban density 5,435.7/sq mi (2,098.7/km2)• Metro 18,897,109• Metro density 2,812.1/sq mi (1,085.7/km2)Demonym New YorkerTime zone EST (UTC-5)• Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)ZIP codes 100xx-104xx, 11004-05, 111xx-114xx, 116xxArea code(s) 212, 718, 917, 646, 347, 929FIPS code 36-51000
New York CityThe Five Boroughs: The Bronx · Brooklyn · Manhattan · Queens · Staten IslandHistory · Neighborhoods · Architecture · Skyscrapers · Tourism · Attractions · Culture · Books · Arts · Parks · Cuisine · Dialect · People · Music · Sports · Media · Economy · Companies · Education · Schools · Government · Mayor · Central Park · Council · Fire · Police · Landmarks · Crime · Elections · Geography · Harbor · Gardens · Flag · Environment · Demographics · Enclaves · Transportation · Hospitals · Lists · Images · Portal
New York metropolitan area · New York State · United States[hide] v d eGreater Long IslandGeneral topicsLong Island • Long IslandersGeography • History • Economy • Transportation • Politics • Policing • Music • Popular culture • RecreationPlacesMunicipalities • North Shore • South Shore • North Fork • South Fork • Long Island Sound • Barrier islands • Fire IslandCountiesKings (Brooklyn) • Queens • Nassau • SuffolkCitiesNew York City (part) • Glen Cove • Long BeachTowns(Nassau:) Hempstead • North Hempstead • Oyster Bay(Suffolk:) Babylon • Brookhaven • East Hampton • Huntington • Islip • Riverhead • Shelter Island • Smithtown • Southampton • SoutholdVillages & hamletswith more than10,000 inhabitantsBabylon• Baldwin • Bethpage • East Rockaway • Floral Park • Freeport • Garden City • Hempstead Village • Hicksville • Huntington • Islip • Kings Park •Lake Grove • Levittown • Lindenhurst • Lynbrook • Massapequa • Massapequa Park • Merrick • Mineola • Oceanside • Riverhead • Rockville Centre • Patchogue • Smithtown • Uniondale • Valley Stream • Wantagh • Westbury • West IslipVillages & hamletswith fewer than10,000 inhabitantsAmityville• Asharoken • Atlantic Beach • Baxter Estates • Bayville • Belle Terre •Bellerose • Bellerose Terrace • Bellport • Brightwaters • Brookville • Cedarhurst • Centre Island • Cove Neck • Dering Harbor • East Hampton • East Hills • East Williston • Farmingdale • Flower Hill • Great Neck • Great Neck Estates • Great Neck Plaza • Greenport • Head of the Harbor •Hewlett Bay Park • Hewlett Harbor • Hewlett Neck • Huntington Bay • Island Park • Islandia • Kensington • Kings Point • Lake Success • Lattingtown • Laurel Hollow • Lawrence • Lloyd Harbor • Malverne • Manorhaven • Matinecock • Mill Neck • Munsey Park • Muttontown • New Hyde Park • Nissequogue • North Haven • North Hills • Northport • Ocean Beach • Old Brookville • Old Field • Old Westbury • Oyster Bay Cove • Plandome • Plandome Heights • Plandome Manor • Poquott • Port Jefferson •Port Washington North • Quogue • Roslyn • Roslyn Estates • Roslyn Harbor • Russell Gardens • Saddle Rock • Sag Harbor • Sagaponack • Sands Point • Saltaire • Sea Cliff • Shoreham • South Floral Park • Southampton • Stewart • Thomaston • Upper Brookville • Village of the Branch • West Hampton Dunes • Westhampton Beach • Williston Park[hide] v d eNew York-Newark-Bridgeport Combined Statistical AreaCountiesBergen• Bronx • Dutchess • Essex • Fairfield • Hudson • Hunterdon • Kings • Litchfield • Mercer • Middlesex • Monmouth • Morris • Nassau • New Haven• New York • Ocean • Orange • Passaic • Pike • Putnam • Queens • Richmond • Rockland • Somerset • Suffolk • Sussex • Ulster • Union • Westchester
Major cityNew York CityCities and towns100k–999kBridgeport • Elizabeth • Huntington • Jersey City • New Haven • Newark • Paterson • Stamford • Waterbury • YonkersCities and towns25k–99kBayonne• Branford • Cheshire • Clifton • Danbury • East Haven • East Orange • Englewood • Fairfield • Garfield • Greenwich • Hackensack • Hamden • Hoboken • Howell, New Jersey Kearny • Long Beach • Long Branch • Meriden• Middletown • Milford • Mount Vernon • Naugatuck • New Brunswick • New Milford • New Rochelle • Newburgh • Newtown • Norwalk • Passaic • Perth Amboy • Plainfield • Poughkeepsie • Rahway • Shelton • Stratford • Torrington • Trenton • Trumbull • Union City • Wallingford • West Haven •Westfield • Westport • White PlainsCities and towns10k–25kAnsonia• Asbury Park • Beacon • Bethel • Brookfield • Darien • Derby • Dover •Guildford • Guttenberg • Harrison (NJ) • Harrison (NY) • Kingston • Linden • Madison • Monroe • Morristown • New Canaan • New Fairfield • North Branford • North Haven • Orange • Plymouth • Peekskill • Ridgefield • Rye • Scarsdale • Secaucus • Seymour • Southbury • Summit •Watertown • West New York • Weston • Wilton • Winchester • WolcottSub-regionsCentral Jersey • Greater Danbury • Greater New Haven • Greater Waterbury • Hudson Valley • Litchfield Hills • Long Island • North Jersey • Southwestern Connecticut[hide] v d eState of New YorkAlbany (capital)* The Empire StateTopicsAdministrative divisions Bibliography Congressional districts Constitution Demographics Economy Education Elections Geography Government Governor Legislature Court System History Symbols People Politics Transportation Visitor AttractionsRegionsAdirondack Mountains Allegheny Plateau Capital District Catskill Mountains Central Region (formerly Central-Leatherstocking) Central New York Champlain Valley City of New York Finger Lakes Holland Purchase Hudson Highlands Hudson Valley Long Island Mohawk Valley New York Metro Niagara Frontier North Country Ridge and Valley Saint Lawrence Seaway Shawangunks Ski country Southern Tier Southtowns Tech Valley Thousand Islands Upstate WesternMetro areasAlbany / Schenectady / Troy Binghamton Buffalo / Niagara Falls Elmira / Corning Glens Falls Ithaca Jamestown Newburgh / Middletown New York City Poughkeepsie Rochester Syracuse Utica / RomeCountiesAlbany Allegany Bronx Broome Cattaraugus Cayuga Chautauqua Chemung Chenango Clinton Columbia Cortland Delaware Dutchess Erie Essex Franklin Fulton Genesee Greene Hamilton Herkimer Jefferson Kings Lewis Livingston Madison Monroe Montgomery Nassau New York Niagara Oneida Onondaga Ontario Orange Orleans Oswego Otsego Putnam Queens Rensselaer Richmond Rockland Saint Lawrence Saratoga Schenectady Schoharie Schuyler Seneca Steuben Suffolk Sullivan Tioga Tompkins Ulster Warren Washington Wayne Westchester Wyoming Yates[hide] v d eSummer Paralympic Games host cities1960: Rome 1964: Tokyo 1968: Tel Aviv 1972: Heidelberg 1976: Toronto 1980: Arnhem 1984: Stoke Mandeville/New York 1988: Seoul 1992: Barcelona 1996: Atlanta 2000: Sydney 2004: Athens 2008: Beijing 2012: London 2016: Rio de Janeiro[hide]Other articles related to New York City\'s population and geography[hide]Geographic localeBergen County, NJ Westchester CountyYonkers Long Island SoundHudson County, NJJersey City Nassau County New York City
Middlesex County, NJ Monmouth County, NJ Atlantic OceanLat. and Long. 40°43′N 74°0′W[hide] v d e50 most populous cities of the United States New YorkLos AntonioSan DiegoDallasSan JoseJacksonvilleIndianapolisSan FranciscoAustinColumbusFort WorthCharlotteDetroitEl VegasOklahoma BeachKansas CityMesaVirginia BeachAtlantaColorado United States Census Bureau)[hide] v d e50 largest metropolitan statistical areas in the United States by population New YorkLos AngelesChicagoDallas–Fort PaulSan DiegoSt. LouisTampa–St. AntonioOrlandoCincinnatiClevelandKansas CityLas VegasSan JoseColumbus, OhioCharlotteIndianapolisAustinVirginia CityHartfordNew OrleansBuffaloRaleighBirminghamSalt Lake City[hide] v d eWorld\'s fifty most-populous urban areasTokyo –YokohamaDelhiSeoul –IncheonJakartaManilaMumbaiNew YorkSão PauloMexico CityShanghaiCairoOsaka –Kobe –KyotoKolkataShenzhenLos AiresDongguanRio de JaneiroGuangzhou Chi Minh CityChennaiJohannesburg –East RandBangaloreLahoreTehranRuhr Area(Essen–Düsseldorf)BangkokHong LumpurToronto –Hamilton[hide] v d eLocation of the capital of the United States and predecessorsColoniesNew Amsterdam (New Netherland) · Boston (Massachusetts Bay Colony)1774 First Continental CongressPhiladelphia1775 – 1781 Second Continental CongressPhiladelphia → Baltimore → Lancaster → York → Philadelphia1781 – 1789 Congress of the ConfederationPhiladelphia → Princeton → Annapolis → Trenton → New York City1789 – present Federal government of the United StatesNew York City → Philadelphia → Washington, D.C.
Key Facts
Located on the Atlantic coast of NE United StatesEmpire State Building is one of the 7th Wonders of the Modern WorldAverage 47 million tourists per year enjoy New York city breaks39 theatres in the Broadway districtBirthplace of numerous cultural movements5 boroughs: Manhattan, Brooklyn, The Bronx, Queens, Staten IslandNew York tourist attractions
Empire State BuildingStatue of LibertyTimes SquareEllis IslandBroadway theatresLuxury shopping on Fifth Avenue and at Macy\'sMuseum of Modern ArtCentral ParkMetropolitan Museum of ArtThe Guggenheim Museum
The original World Trade Center was a complex with seven buildings featuring landmark twin towers in Lower Manhattan, New York City, United States. The complex opened on April 4, 1973, and was destroyed in 2001 during the September 11 attacks. The site is currently being rebuilt with five new skyscrapers and a memorial to the casualties of the attacks. As of November 2011, only one skyscraper has been completed, with four more expected to be completed before 2020. One World Trade Center will be the lead building for the new complex and is expected to be finished by 2013. A sixth tower is still awaiting confirmation to be built. At the time of their completion, the original 1 and 2 World Trade Center, known colloquially as the Twin Towers, were the tallest buildings in the world.The complex was designed in the early 1960s by Minoru Yamasaki and Associates of Troy, Michigan, and Emery Roth and Sons of New York.[2] The twin 110-story towers used a tube-frame structural design. To gain approval for the project, the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey agreed to take over the Hudson & Manhattan Railroad, which became the Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH). Groundbreaking for the World Trade Center took place on August 5, 1966. The North Tower (1) was completed in December 1972 and the South Tower (2) was finished in July 1973. The construction project involved excavating a large amount of material, which was later used as landfill to build Battery Park City on the west side of Lower Manhattan. The cost for the construction was $400 million ($2,200,000,000 in 2012 dollars).[3] The complex was located in the heart of New York City\'s downtown financial district and contained 13.4 million square feet (1.24 million m2) of office space.[4][5] The Windows on the World restaurant was located on the 106th and 107th floors of 1 World Trade Center (the North Tower) while the Top of the World observation deck was located on the 107th floor of 2 World Trade Center (the South Tower). Other World Trade Center buildings included the Marriott World Trade Center; 4 World Trade Center; 5 World Trade Center; 6 World Trade Center, which housed the United States Customs. All of these buildings were built between 1975 and 1981. The final building constructed was 7 World Trade Center, which was built in 1985. The second King Kong was filmed in 1976 with some scenes mentioning and showing the World Trade Center. The World Trade Center experienced a fire on February 13, 1975, and a bombing on February 26, 1993. In 1998, the Port Authority decided to privatize the World Trade Center, leasing the buildings to a private company to manage, and awarded the lease to Silverstein Properties in July 2001.On the morning of September 11, 2001, Al-Qaeda-affiliated hijackers flew two 767 jets into the complex, one into each tower, in a coordinated terrorist attack. After burning for 56 minutes, the South Tower (2) collapsed, followed a half-hour later by the North Tower (1), with the attacks on the World Trade Center resulting in 2,753 deaths.[6] 7 World Trade Center collapsed later in the day and the other buildings, although they did not collapse, had to be demolished because they were damaged beyond repair. The process of cleanup and recovery at the World Trade Center site took eight months. The first new building at the site was 7 World Trade Center, which opened in May 2006. The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC), established in November 2001 to oversee the rebuilding process, organized competitions to select a site plan and memorial design. Memory Foundations, designed by Daniel Libeskind, was selected as the master plan, which included the 1,776-foot (541 m) One World Trade Center, three office towers along Church Street and a memorial designed by Michael Arad.
Record heightTallest in the world from 1971 to 1973[I]Preceded by Empire State BuildingSurpassed by Willis TowerGeneral informationLocation New York CityCoordinates 40°42′42″N 74°00′45″WCoordinates: 40°42′42″N 74°00′45″WGroundbreaking August 25, 1966Construction started1 WTC: August 19682 WTC: January 19693 WTC: December 19794, 5, & 6 WTC: 19707 WTC: 1983Completed1 WTC: December 23, 19702 WTC: July 19, 19713 WTC: February 19814, 5, & 6 WTC: 19757 WTC: 1987Opening April 4, 1973Destroyed September 11, 2001HeightAntenna spire 1 WTC: 1,727 ft (526.3 m)Roof1 WTC: 1,368 ft (417.0 m)2 WTC: 1,362 ft (415.0 m)3 WTC: 242 ft (74.0 m)4 & 5 WTC: 118 ft (36.0 m)6 WTC: 105 ft (32.0 m)7 WTC: 610 ft (186.0 m)Top floor1 WTC: 1,348 ft (411.0 m)2 WTC: 1,342 ft (409.0 m)Technical detailsFloor count1 & 2 WTC: 110 floors3 WTC: 22 floors4 & 5 WTC: 9 floors6 WTC: 8 floors7 WTC: 47 floorsFloor area1 & 2 WTC:[clarification needed] 4,300,000 sq ft (400,000 m2)4, 5, & 6 WTC: 500,000 sq ft (50,000 m2)7 WTC: 1,868,000 sq ft (170,000 m2)Elevator count Both had 99 elevatorsDesign and constructionOwner Port Authority of New York and New JerseyArchitectMinoru YamasakiEmery Roth & SonsEngineer Leslie E. Robertson Associates
Timeline of tallest buildings in New York CityCollegiate Reformed Protestant Dutch Church (c.1643) · Trinity Church (85 m) (1846) · New York World Building (94 m) (1890) · Manhattan Life Insurance Building (100 m) (1894) · Park Row Building (119 m) (1899) · Singer Building (187 m) (1908) · Metropolitan Life Tower (213 m) (1909) · Woolworth Building (241 m) (1913) · 40 Wall Street (283 m) (1929) · Chrysler Building (320 m) (1930) · Empire State Building (443 m) (1931) · World Trade Center (526 m) (1973) · Empire State Building (443 m) (2001)[hide] v d eSupertall skyscrapers[hide]CurrentNorth AmericaAon Center · Bank of America Plaza · Bank of America Tower · Chrysler Building · Empire State Building · Franklin Center (Chicago) · JPMorgan Chase Tower · John Hancock Center · The New York Times Building · Trump Tower Chicago · Two Prudential Plaza · U.S. Bank Tower · Wells Fargo Plaza · Willis TowerAsiaBaiyoke Tower II · Bank of China Tower · The Center · Central Plaza · China World Trade Center Tower III · CITIC Plaza · Guangzhou International Finance Center · International Commerce Centre · International Finance Centre · Jin Mao Tower · Keangnam Hanoi Landmark Tower · Kingkey 100 · Menara Telekom · Minsheng Bank Building · Nanjing Greenland Financial Center · Nina Tower · Northeast Asia Trade Tower · Petronas Towers · Shanghai World Financial Center · Shimao International Plaza · Shun Hing Square · Taipei 101 · Tianjin World Financial Center · Tuntex Sky Tower · Wenzhou World Trade CenterEuropeCity of CapitalsAustraliaEureka Tower · Q1Middle EastAlmas Tower · Aspire Tower · Arraya 2 · Burj Al Arab · Burj Khalifa · Emirates Office Tower · Emirates Towers Hotel · HHHR Tower · Kingdom Centre · Rose Tower · Ocean Heights · The Address Downtown Dubai · The Index · The Marina Torch[hide]Under constructionNorth America175 Greenwich Street · 200 Greenwich Street · Carnegie 57 · One World Trade CenterSouth AmericaGran Torre SantiagoAsiaAbenobashi Terminal Building Skyscraper (Abeno Harukas) · Busan Lotte World Tower · Dalian Eton Center · East Pacific Business Center · Forum 66 · Gate of the Orient · Gate of Taipei · Global Financial Building · Goldin Finance 117 · The Gramercy Residences · Grand International Mansion (The Pinnacle) · Hanging Village of Huaxi · Leatop Plaza · Lotte World Premium Tower · MahaNakhon · Orchid Heights · Palais Royale, Mumbai · Pearl River Tower · Pingan International Finance Center · Ryugyong Hotel · Shanghai Tower · Sino-Steel Tower · The Wharf Times Square · We\'ve the Zenith · White Magnolia Plaza · Yantai Shimao No.1 The HarbourEuropeFederation Tower · Mercury City Tower · Shard London BridgeMiddle East23 Marina · Abraj Al Bait · Ahmed Abdul Rahim Al Attar Tower · Al Hamra Tower · Al Yaqoub Tower · Central Market Project · DAMAC Heights · Dubai Pearl · Elite Residence · Emirates Park Towers · Infinity Tower · Lamar Towers · Qatar National Bank Tower · The Landmark · Marina 101 · Princess Tower · Sky Tower[hide]Construction suspendedAl Quds Endowment Tower · Barwa Tower · BDNI Center 1 · Burj Al Alam · Chow Tai Fook Centre · Dalian International Trade Center · Doha Convention Center Tower · Dubai Towers Doha · Eurasia · Faros del Panamá · India Tower · JW Marriott International Finance Centre · Pentominium · Parc1 Tower A · Plaza Rakyat · Skycity · Square Capital Tower · Waterview Tower · Xiamen Post & Telecommunications Building[hide]FormerWorld Trade CenterSee also Proposed supertall skyscrapers · List of architects of supertall buildings[hide] v d eWorld Trade CenterWorld Trade Center ComplexTower One and Tower Two · Marriott World Trade Center · 4 World Trade Center · 5 World Trade Center · 6 World Trade Center · 7 World Trade Center · The Sphere · The Bathtub2001–presentWorld Trade Center site · One World Trade Center · Two World Trade Center · Three World Trade Center · Four World Trade Center · Five World Trade Center · 7 World Trade Center · National September 11 Memorial & Museum · The Mall at the World Trade Center · PATH stationTerrorist Attacks1993 bombing · September 11 attacksAlternative ProposalTHINK TeamPeopleMinoru Yamasaki · Emery Roth & Sons · Larry Silverstein · Austin J. Tobin[hide] v d eArchitecture by Minoru YamasakiSkyscrapersOne Woodward Avenue (1963) · IBM Building (1963) · Century Plaza Hotel (1966) · M&T Bank Center, Buffalo (1967) · World Trade Center Tower 1, Tower 2, Buildings 4, 5 and 6 (1970–1971) · Montgomery Ward Corporate Headquarters Tower (1972) · Century Plaza Towers (1975) · Bank of Oklahoma (1977) · Rainier Bank Tower (1977) · Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond (1978) · 100 Washington Square (1981) · Torre Picasso (1988) · Columbia Center (1989–2000)
AirportsLambert-St. Louis International Airport main terminal (1956) · Dhahran International Airport terminal (1961) · Eastern Airlines terminal at Logan Airport (1969) · King Fahd International Airport master plan (1977)Houses of worshipNorth Shore Congregation Israel (1964) · Temple Beth El (1974) · Shinji Shumeikai Founder\'s Hall (1982)Other buildingsFederal Reserve Bank of Chicago Detroit Branch Building annex (1951) · Pruitt–Igoe housing project (1954) · Grosse Pointe University School (1954) · Military Personnel Records Center (1955) · McGregor Memorial Conference Center (1957) · Prentis Building and DeRoy Auditorium Complex (1959) · Robertson Hall at Princeton University (1965) · Pacific Science Center (1962) · Irwin Library at Butler University (1963) · Oberlin Conservatory of Music (1963) · Quo Vadis Entertainment Center (1966) · Dr. John Archer Library (1967) · Japan Center (1968) · Tulsa Performing Arts Center (1976) · Istanbul Cevahir (1987)Landscape architectureWascana Centre and University of Regina - Regina Campus (1961–1967)
The September 11 attacks (also referred to as September 11, September 11th or 9/11[nb 1]) were a series of four coordinated suicide attacks upon the United States in New York City and the Washington, D.C. areas on September 11, 2001. On that Tuesday morning, 19 terrorists from the Islamist militant group al-Qaeda hijacked four passenger jets. The hijackers intentionally crashed two planes, American Airlines Flight 11 and United Airlines Flight 175 into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York City; both towers collapsed within two hours. Hijackers crashed American Airlines Flight 77 into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. The fourth jet, United Airlines Flight 93, crashed into a field near Shanksville, Pennsylvania after passengers attempted to take control before it could reach the hijacker\'s intended target in Washington, D.C. Nearly 3,000 died in the attacks.Suspicion quickly fell on al-Qaeda, and in 2004, the group\'s leader Osama bin Laden, who had initially denied involvement, claimed responsibility for the attacks.[1] Al-Qaeda and bin Laden cited U.S. support of Israel, the presence of U.S. troops in Saudi Arabia, and sanctions against Iraq as motives for the attacks. The United States responded to the attacks by launching the War on Terror and invading Afghanistan to depose the Taliban, which had harbored al-Qaeda. Many countries strengthened their anti-terrorism legislation and expanded law enforcement powers. In May 2011, after years at large, bin Laden was found and killed.The destruction of the twin towers caused serious damage to the economy of Lower Manhattan and had a significant impact on global markets. Cleanup of the World Trade Center site was completed in May 2002, and the Pentagon was repaired within a year. Numerous memorials were constructed, including the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York, the Pentagon Memorial, and the Flight 93 National Memorial in Pennsylvania. Adjacent to the National Memorial, the 1,776 feet (541 m) One World Trade Center is expected to be completed in 2013.
Location New York City; Arlington County, Virginia; and near Shanksville, Pennsylvania.Date Tuesday, September 11, 20018:46 a.m. – 10:28 a.m. (UTC-04:00)Attack type Aircraft hijacking, mass murder, suicide attack, terrorismDeaths 2,996Injured More than 6,000Perpetrator(s) Al-Qaeda led by Osama bin Laden
September 11 attacksTimelinePlanning · September 11, 2001 · Rest of September · October · Beyond OctoberVictimsCasualtiesHijacked airlinersAmerican Airlines Flight 11 · United Airlines Flight 175 · American Airlines Flight 77 · United Airlines Flight 93Crash sitesWorld Trade Center · The Pentagon · Stonycreek, Pennsylvania · Shanksville, PennsylvaniaEffectsAirport security · Economic effects · Local health effectsAftermathImmediate aftermath · Cultural references · Audiovisual entertainment · Closings and cancellations · Detentions · Post-9/11 · Reactions · 9/11 conspiracy theoriesResponseU.S. military response · U.S. government response · Rescue and recovery effort · Financial assistance · Operation SUPPORT · Operation Yellow Ribbon · Memorials and servicesPerpetratorsResponsibility · Motives · Hijackers · 20th hijackerInquiriesU.S. Congressional Inquiry · 9/11 Commission (Report · Criticism) · PENTTBOMMiscellaneousCommunication (Radio communications) · Patriot Day · WTC collapse · Slogans and terms · Survivors\' StaircaseBook · Category · Portal · WikiProject[hide] v d eWorld Trade CenterWorld Trade Center ComplexTower One and Tower Two · Marriott World Trade Center · 4 World Trade Center · 5 World Trade Center · 6 World Trade Center · 7 World Trade Center · The Sphere · The Bathtub2001–presentWorld Trade Center site · One World Trade Center · Two World Trade Center · Three World Trade Center · Four World Trade Center · Five World Trade Center · 7 World Trade Center · National September 11 Memorial & Museum · The Mall at the World Trade Center · PATH stationTerrorist Attacks1993 bombing · September 11 attacksAlternative ProposalTHINK TeamPeopleMinoru Yamasaki · Emery Roth & Sons · Larry Silverstein · Austin J. Tobin[hide] v d eWar on TerrorParticipantsOperationalISAF · Operation Enduring Freedom participants · Afghanistan · Northern Alliance · Iraq (Iraqi Armed Forces) · NATO · Pakistan · United Kingdom · United States · European Union · Philippines · EthiopiaTargetsAl-Qaeda · Osama bin Laden · Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula · Abu Sayyaf · Anwar al-Awlaki · Al-Shabaab · Hamas · Harkat-ul-Jihad al-Islami · Hezbollah · Hizbul Mujahideen · Islamic Courts Union · Jaish-e-Mohammed · Jemaah Islamiyah · Lashkar-e-Taiba · Mujahideen · Taliban · Islamic Movement of UzbekistanConflictsOperationEnduring FreedomWar in Afghanistan · OEF – Philippines · Georgia Train and Equip Program · Georgia Sustainment and Stability · OEF – Horn of Africa · OEF – Trans Sahara · Drone attacks in PakistanOtherInsurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present) · Insurgency in the Philippines · Iraq War · Iraqi insurgency · Operation Linda Nchi · South Thailand insurgency · Terrorism in Saudi Arabia · War in North-West Pakistan · War in Somalia (2006–2009) · 2007 Lebanon conflict · Yemeni al-Qaeda crackdownSee alsoAbu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse · Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act · Axis of evil · Black sites · Bush Doctrine · The Clash of Civilizations · Combatant Status Review Tribunal · Criticism of the War on Terror · Death of Osama bin Laden · Enhanced interrogation techniques · Torture Memos · Extrajudicial prisoners · Extraordinary rendition · Guantanamo Bay detention camp · Military Commissions Act of 2006 · NSA electronic surveillance program · Pakistan\'s role · President\'s Surveillance Program · Protect America Act of 2007 · Targeted killing · Targeted Killing in International Law · Unitary executive theory · Unlawful combatant · USA PATRIOT ActTerrorism · War[hide] v d eal-QaedaLeadershipSaif al-Adel · Ayman al-Zawahiri · Abu Musab Abdel Wadoud · Abu Yahya al-Libi · Adam Yahiye Gadahn · Adnan Gulshair el Shukrijumah · Abu DuaFormer leadershipOsama bin Laden (killed) · Khalid Sheikh Mohammed (captured) · Anwar al-Awlaki (disputed; killed) · Nasir al-Wuhayshi (killed) · Younis al-Mauritani (captured) · Mohammed Atef (killed) · Fazul Abdullah Mohammed (killed) · Atiyah Abd al-Rahman (killed) · Mohammad Hasan Khalil al-Hakim (killed) · Abu Laith al-Libi (killed) · Abdullah Said al Libi (killed) · Abu Faraj al-Libbi (captured) · Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi (killed) · Ilyas Kashmiri (killed) · Mohamed Atta (killed in the 9/11 attacks) · Khadr family (captured/killed) · Samir Khan (killed)Timeline of attacks1993 World Trade Center bombing · 1998 United States embassy bombings · USS Cole bombing · September 11 attacks · 2002 Bali bombings · Iraq Ashura bombings · 2004 Madrid train bombings · 7 July 2005 London bombings · 23 November 2006 Sadr City bombings · 18 April 2007 Baghdad bombings · 2007 Algiers bombings (April, December) · 2007 Yazidi communities bombings · 2008 Danish embassy bombing in Islamabad · 2009 Little Rock recruiting office shooting · Northwest Airlines Flight 253 · Cargo planes bomb plotWarsSoviet war in Afghanistan · Civil war in Afghanistan (1989–1992) · Civil war in Afghanistan (1992–1996) · Civil war in Afghanistan (1996–2001) · War in Afghanistan (2001–present) · Iraq War · Yemeni al-Qaeda crackdown · Shia insurgency in Yemen · Somali Civil War · War in North-West Pakistan (Drone attacks) · Insurgency in the Maghreb ·AffiliatesAl-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula · al-Qaeda in Iraq · Al-Qaeda Organization in the Islamic MaghrebConspiracy / propagandaAl Qaeda Handbook · Al Neda · As-Sahab · Fatawā of Osama bin Laden · Inspire · Al-Khansaa · Kuala Lumpur al-Qaeda Summit · Management of Savagery · Voice of Jihad · Benevolence International Foundation · Qaedat al-Jihad · Al-Qaeda safe houseVideo and audioVideos and audio recordings of Osama bin Laden · Videos and audio recordings of Ayman al-Zawahiri · USS Cole bombing video[hide] v d e← 2000 · Aviation accidents and incidents in 2001 · 2002 → Jan 23 Yemenia Flight 448Jan 27 Oklahoma State basketball team crashJan 31 Japan Airlines mid-air incidentMar 03 Thai Airways International Flight 114Mar 19 Comair Flight 5054Mar 29 Avjet Aspen crashApr 01 Hainan Island incidentApr 04 Sudanese Air Force AN-24 crashJul 04 Vladivostok Air Flight 352Aug 24 Air Transat Flight 236Aug 29 Binter Mediterráneo Flight 8261Sep 11 (9/11) American Airlines Flight 11Sep 11 (9/11) United Airlines Flight 175Sep 11 (9/11) American Airlines Flight 77Sep 11 (9/11) United Airlines Flight 93Sep 11 Korean Air Flight 85Sep 17 Grozny Mi-8 crashOct 04 Siberia Airlines Flight 1812Oct 08 Linate Airport disasterNov 12 American Airlines Flight 587Nov 24 Crossair Flight 3597Dec 02 AFRF Flight 9064Dec 22 American Airlines Flight 63 (\"Shoe bomb\" plot)
The United States of America (also called the United States, the States, the U.S., the USA, and America) is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its forty-eight contiguous states and Washington, D.C., the capital district, lie between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, bordered by Canada to the north and Mexico to the south. The state of Alaska is in the northwest of the continent, with Canada to the east and Russia to the west across the Bering Strait. The state of Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific. The country also possesses several territories in the Pacific and Caribbean.
At 3.79 million square miles (9.83 million km2) and with over 312 million people, the United States is the third or fourth largest country by total area, and the third largest by both land area and population. It is one of the world\'s most ethnically diverse and multicultural nations, the product of large-scale immigration from many countries.[6] The U.S. economy is the world\'s largest national economy, with an estimated 2010 GDP of $14.526 trillion (23% of nominal global GDP and over 19% of global GDP at purchasing-power parity).[3][7]
Indigenous peoples descended from forebears who migrated from Asia have inhabited what is now the mainland United States for many thousands of years. This Native American population was greatly reduced by disease and warfare after European contact. The United States was founded by thirteen British colonies located along the Atlantic seaboard. On July 4, 1776, they issued the Declaration of Independence, which proclaimed their right to self-determination and their establishment of a cooperative union. The rebellious states defeated the British Empire in the American Revolution, the first successful colonial war of independence.[8] The current United States Constitution was adopted on September 17, 1787; its ratification the following year made the states part of a single republic with a strong central government. The Bill of Rights, comprising ten constitutional amendments guaranteeing many fundamental civil rights and freedoms, was ratified in 1791.
Through the 19th century, the United States displaced native tribes, acquired the Louisiana territory from France, Florida from Spain, part of the Oregon Country from the United Kingdom, Alta California and New Mexico from Mexico, Alaska from Russia, and annexed the Republic of Texas and the Republic of Hawaii. Disputes between the agrarian South and industrial North over the expansion of the institution of slavery and states\' rights provoked the Civil War of the 1860s. The North\'s victory prevented a permanent split of the country and led to the end of legal slavery in the United States. By the 1870s, its national economy was the world\'s largest.[9] The Spanish–American War and World War I confirmed the country\'s status as a military power. It emerged from World War II as the first country with nuclear weapons and a permanent member of the United Nations Security Council. The end of the Cold War and the dissolution of the Soviet Union left the United States as the sole superpower. The country accounts for 41% of global military spending,[10] and it is a leading economic, political, and cultural force in the worldPolitical divisions of the United States
States
Alabama · Alaska · Arizona · Arkansas · California · Colorado · Connecticut · Delaware · Florida · Georgia · Hawaii · Idaho · Illinois · Indiana · Iowa · Kansas · Kentucky · Louisiana · Maine · Maryland · Massachusetts · Michigan · Minnesota · Mississippi · Missouri · Montana · Nebraska · Nevada · New Hampshire · New Jersey · New Mexico · New York · North Carolina · North Dakota · Ohio · Oklahoma · Oregon · Pennsylvania · Rhode Island · South Carolina · South Dakota · Tennessee · Texas · Utah · Vermont · Virginia · Washington · West Virginia · Wisconsin · Wyoming
Federal district
Washington, D.C. (District of Columbia)
Insular areas
American Samoa · Guam · Northern Mariana Islands · Puerto Rico · U.S. Virgin Islands
Outlying islands
Bajo Nuevo Bank · Baker Island · Howland Island · Jarvis Island · Johnston Atoll · Kingman Reef · Midway Atoll · Navassa Island · Palmyra Atoll · Serranilla Bank · Wake IslandBiggest Cities in the USA1 New York New York 8,175,133 302.6 27,016.3
2 Los Angeles California 3,792,621 468.7 8,091.8
3 Chicago Illinois 2,695,598 227.6 11,843.6
4 Houston Texas 2,099,451 599.6 3,501.4
5 Philadelphia Pennsylvania 1,526,006 134.1 11,379.6
6 Phoenix Arizona 1,445,632 516.7 2,797.8
7 San Antonio Texas 1,327,407 460.9 2,880.0
8 San Diego California 1,307,402 325.2 4,020.3
9 Dallas Texas 1,197,816 340.5 3,517.8
10 San Jose California 945,942 176.5 5,359.4
11 Jacksonville‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Florida 821,784 747.0 1,100.1
12 Indianapolis‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Indiana 820,445 361.4 2,270.2
13 Austin Texas 812,025 297.9 2,653.2
14 San Francisco California 805,235 46.9 17,169.2
15 Columbus Ohio 787,033 217.2 3,623.5
16 Fort Worth Texas 741,206 339.8 2,181.3
17 Charlotte North Carolina 731,424 297.7 2,456.9
18 Detroit Michigan 713,777 138.8 5,142.5
19 El Paso Texas 649,121 255.2 2,543.6
20 Memphis Tennessee 646,889 315.1 2,053.0
21 Baltimore Maryland 620,961 80.9 7,675.7
22 Boston Massachusetts 617,594 48.3 12,786.6
23 Seattle Washington 608,660 83.9 7,254.6
24 Washington District of Columbia 601,723 61.0 9,864.3
25 Nashville ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[g]
Tennessee 601,222 475.1 1,265.5
26 Denver Colorado 600,158 153.0 3,922.6
27 Louisville ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[g]
Kentucky 597,337 325.2 1,836.8
28 Milwaukee Wisconsin 594,833 96.1 6,189.7
29 Portland Oregon 583,776 134.3 4,346.8
30 Las Vegas Nevada 583,756 135.8 4,298.6
31 Oklahoma City Oklahoma 579,999 606.4 956.5
32 Albuquerque New Mexico 545,852 187.7 2,908.1
33 Tucson Arizona 520,116 226.7 2,294.3
34 Fresno California 494,665 112.0 4,416.7
35 Sacramento California 466,488 97.9 4,764.9
36 Long Beach California 462,257 50.3 9,190.0
37 Kansas City Missouri 459,787 315.0 1,459.6
38 Mesa Arizona 439,041 136.5 3,216.4
39 Virginia Beach ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[e]
Virginia 437,994 249.0 1,759.0
40 Atlanta Georgia 420,003 133.2 3,153.2
41 Colorado Springs Colorado 416,427 194.5 2,141.0
42 Omaha Nebraska 408,958 127.1 3,217.6
43 Raleigh North Carolina 403,892 142.9 2,826.4
44 Miami Florida 399,457 35.9 11,126.9
45 Cleveland Ohio 396,815 77.7 5,107.0
46 Tulsa Oklahoma 391,906 196.8 1,991.4
47 Oakland California 390,724 55.8 7,002.2
48 Minneapolis Minnesota 382,578 54.0 7,084.8
49 Wichita Kansas 382,368 159.3 2,400.3
50 Arlington Texas 365,438 95.9 3,810.6
51 Bakersfield California 347,483 142.2 2,443.6
52 New Orleans Louisiana 343,829 169.4 2,029.7
53 Honolulu ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[b]
Hawaii 337,256 60.5 5,574.5
54 Anaheim California 336,265 49.8 6,752.3
55 Tampa Florida 335,709 113.4 2,960.4
56 Aurora Colorado 325,078 154.7 2,101.3
57 Santa Ana California 324,528 27.3 11,887.5
58 Saint Louis ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[d]
Missouri 319,294 61.9 5,158.2
59 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 305,704 55.4 5,518.1
60 Corpus Christi Texas 305,215 160.6 1,900.5
61 Riverside California 303,871 81.1 3,746.9
62 Cincinnati Ohio 296,943 77.9 3,811.8
63 Lexington Kentucky 295,803 283.6 1,043.0
64 Anchorage Alaska 291,826 1,704.7 171.2
65 Stockton California 291,707 61.7 4,727.8
66 Toledo Ohio 287,208 80.7 3,559.0
67 Saint Paul Minnesota 285,068 52.0 5,482.1
68 Newark New Jersey 277,140 24.2 11,452.1
69 Greensboro North Carolina 269,666 126.5 2,131.7
70 Buffalo New York 261,310 40.4 6,468.1
71 Plano Texas 259,841 71.6 3,629.1
72 Lincoln Nebraska 258,379 89.1 2,899.9
73 Henderson Nevada 257,729 107.7 2,393.0
74 Fort Wayne Indiana 253,691 110.6 2,293.8
75 Jersey City New Jersey 247,597 14.8 16,729.5
76 Saint Petersburg Florida 244,769 61.7 3,967.1
77 Chula Vista California 243,916 49.6 4,917.7
78 Norfolk ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[e]
Virginia 242,803 54.1 4,488.0
79 Orlando Florida 238,300 102.4 2,327.1
80 Chandler Arizona 236,123 64.4 3,666.5
81 Laredo Texas 236,091 88.9 2,655.7
82 Madison Wisconsin 233,209 76.8 3,036.6
83 Winston-Salem North Carolina 229,617 132.4 1,734.3
84 Lubbock Texas 229,573 122.4 1,875.6
85 Baton Rouge Louisiana 229,493 76.9 2,984.3
86 Durham North Carolina 228,330 107.4 2,126.0
87 Garland Texas 226,876 57.1 3,973.3
88 Glendale Arizona 226,721 60.0 3,778.7
89 Reno Nevada 225,221 103.0 2,186.6
90 Hialeah Florida 224,669 21.5 10,449.7
91 Chesapeake ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[e]
Virginia 222,209 340.8 652.0
92 Scottsdale Arizona 217,385 183.9 1,182.1
93 North Las Vegas Nevada 216,961 101.3 2,141.8
94 Irving Texas 216,290 67.0 3,228.2
95 Fremont California 214,089 77.5 2,762.4
96 Irvine California 212,375 66.1 3,212.9
97 Birmingham Alabama 212,237 146.1 1,452.7
98 Rochester New York 210,565 35.8 5,881.7
99 San Bernardino California 209,924 59.2 3,546.0
100 Spokane Washington 208,916 59.2 3,529.0
101 Gilbert Arizona 208,453 68.0 3,065.5
102 Arlington ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Virginia 207,627 26.0 7,985.7
103 Montgomery Alabama 205,764 159.6 1,289.2
104 Boise Idaho 205,671 79.4 2,590.3
105 Richmond ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[e]
Virginia 204,214 59.8 3,414.9
106 Des Moines Iowa 203,433 80.9 2,514.6
107 Modesto California 201,165 36.9 5,451.6
108 Fayetteville North Carolina 200,654 145.8 1,376.2
109 Shreveport Louisiana 199,311 105.4 1,891.0
110 Akron Ohio 199,110 62.0 3,211.5
111 Tacoma Washington 198,397 49.7 3,991.9
112 Aurora Illinois 197,899 44.9 4,407.6
113 Oxnard California 197,899 26.9 7,356.8
114 Fontana California 196,069 42.4 4,624.3
115 Yonkers New York 195,976 18.0 10,887.6
116 Augusta ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Georgia 195,844 302.5 647.4
117 Mobile Alabama 195,111 139.1 1,402.7
118 Little Rock Arkansas 193,524 119.2 1,623.5
119 Moreno Valley California 193,365 51.3 3,769.3
120 Glendale California 191,719 30.5 6,285.9
121 Amarillo Texas 190,695 99.5 1,916.5
122 Huntington Beach California 189,992 26.7 7,115.8
123 Columbus Georgia 189,885 216.4 877.5
124 Grand Rapids Michigan 188,040 44.4 4,235.1
125 Salt Lake City Utah 186,440 111.1 1,678.1
126 Tallahassee Florida 181,376 100.2 1,810.1
127 Worcester Massachusetts 181,045 37.4 4,840.8
128 Newport News ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Virginia 180,719 68.7 2,630.6
129 Huntsville Alabama 180,105 209.1 861.3
130 Knoxville Tennessee 178,874 98.5 1,816.0
131 Providence Rhode Island 178,042 18.4 9,676.2
132 Santa Clarita California 176,320 52.7 3,345.7
133 Grand Prairie Texas 175,396 72.1 2,432.7
134 Brownsville Texas 175,023 132.3 1,322.9
135 Jackson Mississippi 173,514 111.0 1,563.2
136 Overland Park Kansas 173,372 74.8 2,317.8
137 Garden Grove California 170,883 17.9 9,546.5
138 Santa Rosa California 167,815 41.3 4,063.3
139 Chattanooga Tennessee 167,674 137.2 1,222.1
140 Oceanside California 167,086 41.2 4,055.5
141 Fort Lauderdale Florida 165,521 34.8 4,756.4
142 Rancho Cucamonga California 165,269 39.9 4,142.1
143 Port Saint Lucie Florida 164,603 114.0 1,443.9
144 Ontario California 163,924 49.9 3,285.1
145 Vancouver Washington 161,791 46.5 3,479.4
146 Tempe Arizona 161,719 39.9 4,053.1
147 Springfield Missouri 159,498 81.7 1,952.2
148 Lancaster California 156,633 94.3 1,661.0
149 Eugene Oregon 156,185 43.7 3,574.0
150 Pembroke Pines Florida 154,750 33.1 4,675.2
151 Salem Oregon 154,637 47.9 3,228.3
152 Cape Coral Florida 154,305 105.7 1,459.8
153 Peoria Arizona 154,065 174.4 883.4
154 Sioux Falls South Dakota 153,888 73.0 2,108.1
155 Springfield Massachusetts 153,060 31.9 4,798.1
156 Elk Grove California 153,015 42.2 3,625.9
157 Rockford Illinois 152,871 61.1 2,502.0
158 Palmdale California 152,750 106.0 1,441.0
159 Corona California 152,374 38.8 3,927.2
160 Salinas California 150,441 23.2 6,484.5
161 Pomona California 149,058 23.0 6,480.8
162 Pasadena Texas 149,043 42.8 3,482.3
163 Joliet Illinois 147,433 62.1 2,374.1
164 Paterson New Jersey 146,199 8.4 17,404.6
165 Kansas City Kansas 145,786 124.8 1,168.2
166 Torrance California 145,438 20.5 7,094.5
167 Syracuse New York 145,170 25.0 5,806.8
168 Bridgeport Connecticut 144,229 16.0 9,014.3
169 Hayward California 144,186 45.3 3,182.9
170 Fort Collins Colorado 143,986 54.3 2,651.7
171 Escondido California 143,911 36.8 3,910.6
172 Lakewood Colorado 142,980 42.9 3,332.9
173 Naperville Illinois 141,853 38.8 3,656.0
174 Dayton Ohio 141,527 55.7 2,540.9
175 Hollywood Florida 140,768 27.4 5,137.5
176 Sunnyvale California 140,081 22.0 6,367.3
177 Alexandria ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Virginia 139,966 15.0 9,331.1
178 Mesquite Texas 139,824 46.0 3,039.7
179 Hampton ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
[f]
Virginia 137,436 51.4 2,673.9
180 Pasadena California 137,122 23.0 5,961.8
181 Orange California 136,416 24.8 5,500.6
182 Savannah Georgia 136,286 103.2 1,320.6
183 Cary North Carolina 135,234 54.3 2,490.5
184 Fullerton California 135,161 22.4 6,034.0
185 Warren Michigan 134,056 34.4 3,897.0
186 Clarksville Tennessee 132,929 97.6 1,362.0
187 McKinney Texas 131,117 62.2 2,108.0
188 McAllen Texas 129,877 48.3 2,689.0
189 New Haven Connecticut 129,779 18.7 6,940.1
190 Sterling Heights Michigan 129,699 36.5 3,553.4
191 West Valley City Utah 129,480 35.6 3,637.1
192 Columbia South Carolina 129,272 132.2 977.9
193 Killeen Texas 127,921 53.6 2,386.6
194 Topeka Kansas 127,473 60.2 2,117.5
195 Thousand Oaks California 126,683 55.0 2,303.3
196 Cedar Rapids Iowa 126,326 70.8 1,784.3
197 Olathe Kansas 125,872 59.7 2,108.4
198 Elizabeth New Jersey 124,969 12.3 10,160.1
199 Waco Texas 124,805 89.0 1,402.3
200 Hartford Connecticut 124,775 17.4 7,171.0
201 Visalia California 124,442 36.2 3,437.6
202 Gainesville Florida 124,354 61.3 2,028.6
203 Simi Valley California 124,237 41.5 2,993.7
204 Stamford Connecticut 122,643 37.6 3,261.8
205 Bellevue Washington 122,363 32.0 3,823.8
206 Concord California 122,067 30.5 4,002.2
207 Miramar Florida 122,041 29.5 4,137.0
208 Coral Springs Florida 121,096 23.8 5,088.1
209 Lafayette Louisiana 120,623 49.2 2,451.7
210 Charleston South Carolina 120,083 109.0 1,101.7
211 Carrollton Texas 119,097 36.3 3,280.9
212 Roseville California 118,788 36.2 3,281.4
213 Thornton Colorado 118,772 34.8 3,413.0
214 Beaumont Texas 118,296 82.8 1,428.7
215 Allentown Pennsylvania 118,032 17.5 6,744.7
216 Surprise Arizona 117,517 105.7 1,111.8
217 Evansville Indiana 117,429 44.2 2,656.8
218 Abilene Texas 117,063 106.8 1,096.1
219 Frisco Texas 116,989 61.8 1,893.0
220 Independence Missouri 116,830 77.6 1,505.5
221 Santa Clara California 116,468 18.4 6,329.8
222 Springfield Illinois 116,250 59.5 1,953.8
223 Vallejo California 115,942 30.7 3,776.6
224 Victorville California 115,903 73.2 1,583.4
225 Athens ‹The template Cref2 is being considered for deletion.›
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Georgia 115,452 116.4 991.9
226 Peoria Illinois 115,007 48.0 2,396.0
227 Lansing Michigan 114,297 36.0 3,174.9
228 Ann Arbor Michigan 113,934 27.8 4,098.3
229 El Monte California 113,475 9.6 11,820.3
230 Denton Texas 113,383 88.0 1,288.4
231 Berkeley California 112,580 10.5 10,721.9
232 Provo Utah 112,488 41.7 2,697.6
233 Downey California 111,772 12.4 9,013.9
234 Midland Texas 111,147 72.1 1,541.6
235 Norman Oklahoma 110,925 178.8 620.4
236 Waterbury Connecticut 110,366 28.5 3,872.5
237 Costa Mesa California 109,960 15.7 7,003.8
238 Inglewood California 109,673 9.1 12,052.0
239 Manchester New Hampshire 109,565 33.1 3,310.1
240 Murfreesboro Tennessee 108,755 55.3 1,966.6
241 Columbia Missouri 108,500 63.1 1,719.5
242 Elgin Illinois 108,188 37.2 2,908.3
243 Clearwater Florida 107,685 25.6 4,206.4
244 Miami Gardens Florida 107,167 18.2 5,888.3
245 Rochester Minnesota 106,769 54.6 1,955.5
246 Pueblo Colorado 106,595 53.6 1,988.7
247 Lowell Massachusetts 106,519 13.6 7,832.3
248 Wilmington North Carolina 106,476 51.5 2,067.5
249 Arvada Colorado 106,433 35.1 3,032.3
250 Ventura California 106,433 21.7 4,904.7
251 Westminster Colorado 106,114 31.6 3,358.0
252 West Covina California 106,098 16.0 6,631.1
253 Gresham Oregon 105,594 23.2 4,551.5
254 Fargo North Dakota 105,549 48.8 2,162.9
255 Norwalk California 105,549 9.7 10,881.3
256 Carlsbad California 105,328 37.7 2,793.8
257 Fairfield California 105,321 37.4 2,816.1
258 Cambridge Massachusetts 105,162 6.4 16,431.6
259 Wichita Falls Texas 104,553 72.1 1,450.1
260 High Point North Carolina 104,371 53.8 1,940.0
261 Billings Montana 104,170 43.4 2,400.2
262 Green Bay Wisconsin 104,057 45.5 2,287.0
263 West Jordan Utah 103,712 32.5 3,191.1
264 Richmond California 103,701 30.1 3,445.2
265 Murrieta California 103,466 33.6 3,079.3
266 Burbank California 103,340 17.3 5,973.4
267 Palm Bay Florida 103,190 65.7 1,570.6
268 Everett Washington 103,019 33.4 3,084.4
269 Flint Michigan 102,434 33.4 3,066.9
270 Antioch California 102,372 28.3 3,617.4
271 Erie Pennsylvania 101,786 19.1 5,329.1
272 South Bend Indiana 101,168 41.5 2,437.8
273 Daly City California 101,123 7.7 13,132.9
274 Centennial Colorado 100,377 28.7 3,497.5
275 Temecula California 100,097 30.2 3,31