I don’t have live access to the latest news right now, but I can summarize the Pennsylvania-class battleships and point you to how to find current updates.
Core facts about the Pennsylvania-class battleships
- They were a pair of early-20th-century U.S. Navy battleships, including USS Pennsylvania (BB-38) and USS Arizona (BB-39), designed as a “standard-type” class with consistent handling in a battle fleet and featuring 14-inch guns in triple turrets. These ships pioneered increased machinery reliability and integrated fire control and armor concepts for the era.
- Their service history is best known for World War II actions, with Pennsylvania serving as the flagship of the Pacific Fleet at times, participating in major operations and surviving significant battle damage before later tests and decommissioning iterations. Arizona’s fate is tied to its Pearl Harbor engagement and subsequent actions, with shells and repairs shaping its wartime timeline.
- In historical overviews, these ships are noted for moving toward “standard-type” concepts, including shared handling and performance expectations across the class, and for the transition to newer propulsion and fire-control arrangements in the post-flagship period.
What counts as “latest news”
- If you want current news specifically about these ships, it would typically appear in naval history outlets, museum sites (e.g., Navy History and Heritage Command, USS Arizona Memorial programs), or defense-oriented news aggregators that cover museum commemorations, restoration projects, or academic analyses. For example, recent discussions often appear around anniversaries, museum exhibits, or updates on surviving hulls or memorials.
- Some outlets also publish retrospective pieces or speculative articles on the ships’ roles in historical triad discussions or in the context of “standard-type” battleships, which can be found in history-focused publications and specialized naval blogs.
If you’d like, I can:
- Narrow to a specific aspect (Pearl Harbor history, propulsion upgrades, or fleet-standardization concepts) and pull the most recent relevant sources.
- Check particular outlets you trust (e.g., History Navy, museum sites) for the latest posts and summarize them with citations.
Would you like me to focus on a particular angle or outlet to fetch current updates?
Note: For precise, up-to-date reporting you’ll want to consult recent naval history releases or museum announcements, which I can summarize with citations once you confirm the preferred sources.
Sources
Movie cameras were used to film the launch to provide data for future launches. After their launches, both ships went through the necessary fitting-out period and sea trials. On *Pennsylvania*'s trials, the ship attained a top speed of 21.75 knots (40.28 km/h; 25.03 mph), averaged 21.38 knots (39.60 km/h; 24.60 mph), and was also able to steam for twelve hours at 21.05 knots (38.98 km/h; 24.22 mph) in 50-mile-per-hour (80 km/h) winds. … Aside from that, *Pennsylvania* and *Arizona* received...
wikipedia.nucleos.comThe Pennsylvania-class—USS Pennsylvania and USS Arizona—marked a U.S. Navy shift toward “standard-type” battleships built to operate together with shared handling and performance. The ships introduced 12 14-inch guns in four triple turrets, paired with all-or-nothing armor that heavily protected magazines, propulsion, and command spaces while leaving less vital areas lighter.
www.19fortyfive.comPennsylvania, second of the original 13 states, ratified the Constitution on 12 December 1787.
www.history.navy.milBattleship Pennsylvania (BB-38)
ww2db.com