At least five United States Navy ships have borne the name Virginia, after the ??th state.
A sixth Virginia is expected to be the lead ship of a new class of attack submarine, and was under construction in 2003.
The CSS Virginia was the Confederate name for the USS Merrimac rebuilt as an ironclad[?].
The first USS Virginia[?],
one of 13 frigates authorized by the Continental Congress,
eventually became HMS Virginia[?].
The second USS Virginia[?],
a schooner built for the United States Revenue Cutter Service[?],
saw action during the Quasi-War.
The third USS Virginia, 74[?], was one of nine ships of the line authorized by Congress in 1816.
The fourth USS Virginia[?], originally known as Pet and as Noe-Daquy, was captured during the American Civil War and commissioned in the Union Navy.
The fifth USS Virginia (BB-13) was the lead ship of her class[?] of battleship.
The sixth USS Virginia (SP-274)[?], a yacht
purchased by the Navy and officially referred to only as SP-274, patrolled Lake Michigan out of Detroit, Michigan during World War I.
The seventh USS Virginia (SP-746)[?], a
motorboat[?] acquired by the Navy and officially referred to only as SP-746, patroled the coast out of Machias, Maine[?] during World War I.
The eighth USS Virginia (SP-1965)[?], a
two-masted auxiliary schooner acquired by the Navy and officially referred to only as SP-1965, patroled the coast out of Norfolk, Virginia during World War I.
The ninth USS Virginia (CGN-38) was the lead ship of her class[?] of nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser.
The tenth USS Virginia (SSN-774)[?], is the
lead ship of her class of nuclear-powered attack submarines.
See also CSS Virginia (ex-Merrimac)
and CSS Virginia II (an ironclad ram)[?].
Ten ships of the United States Navy
(and two ships of the Confederate States Navy[?])
have been named
USS Virginia in honor of the tenth state.