USSEagle may refer to the following ships of the United States Navy: USSEagle (1798), was a 14-gun schooner in service from 1798 to 1801 USSEagle (1812)...
USSEagle 56 (PE-56) was a United States Navy World War I-era patrol boat that remained in service through World War II. On 23 April 1945, while towing...
USS Captor (PYc-40), briefly the seventh ship to bear the name USSEagle (AM-132), was a Q-ship of the United States Navy. Built as Harvard, a steel-hulled...
August 1942. After 11 days at sea, she was sighted by the American submarine USS Flying Fish, which fired four torpedoes, all of which missed; Yamato arrived...
into the Coast Guard in 1946; she is still in active service USRC EagleUSSEagle This article includes a list of ships with the same or similar names...
75km 50miles Desert One Operation Eagle Claw was a failed operation by the United States Armed Forces ordered by U.S. President Jimmy Carter to attempt...
Continental Navy purchased in 1777. USS Surprise was a brig built in 1814 and renamed USSEagle later that year USS Surprise (1815) was a ketch purchased...
The USS Lancaster Eagle is a figurehead that was carved in 1880-1881 by John Haley Bellamy for the USS Lancaster. The eagle is currently owned by and...
received orders to execute Operation Eagle Pull.: 116 At 06:00 on 12 April, 12 CH-53s of HMH-462 launched from the deck of USS Okinawa and then at 10-minute...
the Battle of Plattsburgh, the Americans also completed the 20-gun brig USSEagle. The loss of their former supremacy on Lake Champlain prompted the British...
2 November 1842, 3 killed USS Constellation (1854) USS Cyane (1837) USS Dale (1839) USS Decatur (1839) USSEagle (1812) USS Epervier (1814), lost in July...
Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 978-0-312-31100-1. Marshall, Francis L. (1994). Sea Eagles: The Operational History of the Messerschmitt Bf 109T. Walton on Thames:...
World War II. The seal of USS Carl Vinson shows an eagle, wings spread and talons extended, carrying a banner in its beak. The eagle is emblematic of the nation...