Other short titles |
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Long title | An Act making appropriations for the naval service for the fiscal year ending June thirtieth, nineteen hundred and seventeen, and for other purposes. |
Nicknames | Naval Service Appropriations Act of 1916 |
Enacted by | the 64th United States Congress |
Effective | August 29, 1916 |
Citations | |
Public law | 64-241 |
Statutes at Large | 39 Stat. 556 |
Legislative history | |
The Naval Act of 1916 was also called the "Big Navy Act" was United States federal legislation that called for vastly enlarging the US Navy. President Woodrow Wilson determined amidst the repeated incidents with Germany during the First World War to build "incomparably, the greatest Navy in the world" over a ten-year period with the intent of making the U.S. Navy able to defend itself against any European power. The bill called for the construction of ten 42,000-ton battleships, six battlecruisers, ten scout cruisers, fifty destroyers, and sixty-seven submarines.[1] The plan was to start construction in 1919 and have the fleet completed by 1923.[2]
The bill, signed in the middle of the First World War was not to prepare the United States for entry into that war, but rather to guarantee the security of the United States in what seemed an increasingly dangerous world. It was paralleled by the National Defense Act of 1916 that saw a similar expansion of the Army and National Guard.[3]