USS North Carolina
0 sources
USS North Carolina
Summary
USS North Carolina is an armored cruiser[1]. It draws 37 Wikipedia views per month (armored_cruiser category, ranking #33 of 118).[2]
Key Facts
- USS North Carolina's image is recorded as USSNorthCarolinaACR12.jpg[3].
- USS North Carolina's instance of is recorded as armored cruiser[4].
- USS North Carolina's operator is recorded as United States Navy[5].
- USS North Carolina's manufacturer is recorded as Newport News Shipbuilding[6].
- USS North Carolina's vessel class is recorded as Tennessee-class armored cruiser[7].
- USS North Carolina's Commons category is recorded as USS North Carolina (ACR-12)[8].
- USS North Carolina's participated in conflict is recorded as World War I[9].
- USS North Carolina's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/023vn2[10].
- USS North Carolina's significant event is recorded as ship launching[11].
- USS North Carolina's significant event is recorded as keel laying[12].
- USS North Carolina's significant event is recorded as ship commissioning[13].
- USS North Carolina's significant event is recorded as ship decommissioning[14].
- USS North Carolina's pennant number is recorded as ACR-12[15].
- USS North Carolina's location of creation is recorded as Newport News[16].
- USS North Carolina's different from is recorded as USS North Carolina[17].
- USS North Carolina's different from is recorded as USS North Carolina[18].
- USS North Carolina's different from is recorded as USS North Carolina[19].
- USS North Carolina's different from is recorded as USS North Carolina[20].
- USS North Carolina's name is recorded as {'lang': 'mul', 'text': 'USS North Carolina'}[21].
- USS North Carolina's SNAC ARK ID is recorded as w6p325j2[22].
- USS North Carolina's Dreadnought Project page is recorded as U.S.S.North_Carolina(1906)[23].
- USS North Carolina's country of registry is recorded as United States[24].
Why It Matters
USS North Carolina draws 37 Wikipedia views per month (armored_cruiser category, ranking #33 of 118).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 5 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[25] It is known by 5 alternative names across languages and contexts.[26]