USS Bon Homme Richard underway in 1959
| |
History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | Bon Homme Richard |
Namesake | Benjamin Franklin |
Builder | New York Naval Shipyard |
Laid down | 1 February 1943 |
Launched | 29 April 1944 |
Commissioned | 26 November 1944 |
Decommissioned | 9 January 1947 |
Recommissioned | 15 January 1951 |
Decommissioned | 15 May 1953 |
Recommissioned | 6 September 1955 |
Decommissioned | 2 July 1971 |
Reclassified | CVA-31, 1 October 1952 |
Stricken | 20 September 1989 |
Fate | Scrapped, 1992 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Essex-class aircraft carrier |
Displacement | |
Length | |
Beam | 93 ft (28.3 m) |
Draft | 34 ft 2 in (10.41 m) |
Installed power |
|
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 33 knots (61 km/h; 38 mph) |
Range | 14,100 nmi (26,100 km; 16,200 mi) at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) |
Complement | 2,600 officers and enlisted men |
Armament |
|
Armor |
|
Aircraft carried |
|
USS Bon Homme Richard (CV/CVA-31) was the 14th of the 24 Essex-class aircraft carriers completed during or shortly after World War II for the United States Navy. She was the second US Navy ship to bear the name, the first one being named for John Paul Jones's famous Revolutionary War frigate by the same name. Jones had named that ship, usually rendered in more correct French as Bonhomme Richard, to honor Founding Father Benjamin Franklin, the American Commissioner at Paris, whose Poor Richard's Almanack had been published in France under the title Les Maximes du Bonhomme Richard.
Bon Homme Richard was commissioned in November 1944, the last of the Essex class completed in time to serve in what would be the final campaigns of the Pacific Theater of Operations, earning one battle star. Decommissioned shortly after the end of the war, she was recommissioned in 1951 for the Korean War. In her second career she operated exclusively in the Pacific, playing a prominent role in the Korean War, for which she earned five battle stars, and the Vietnam War. She was modernized and recommissioned in 1955. She was decommissioned in 1971, and scrapped in 1992.