Iowa Port View
Iowa Bow
Iowa Stern
Iowa Stern
Iowa View Forward
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USS Iowa (BB-61) (Custody ship)

The U.S. Navy commissioned USS Iowa in 1943 as the lead ship of its class.  After a shakedown period, the vessel operated off the South American coast before serving as a presidential shuttle, taking President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to and from the Tehran Conference during World War II.  The vessel was outfitted with a bathtub for Roosevelt to use in transit; it is the only bathtub ever installed on a U.S. Navy warship.  After the Tehran conference, Iowa transited the Panama Canal to enter the Pacific theater.  There, it bombarded the shores of Kwajalein and Eniwetok in the Marshall Islands, in advance of Allied assaults there.  Iowa was in Tokyo Bay during the 1945 Japanese surrender ceremony before returning to the United States in the fall of that year.   Iowa was formally decommissioned for the first time and placed in a Navy reserve fleet in 1949, but was reactivated in 1951 as part of the build-up to the Korean War.  During that conflict, the Iowa bombarded the North Korean coast and participated in several raids.  After Korea, the vessel participated in several training exercises and was decommissioned for a second time in 1958.  In 1982, Iowa was reactivated and thoroughly modernized as part of a Department of Defense effort to expand the size of the Navy’s fleet.  The vessel was decommissioned for the final time in 1990 before being struck from the Naval Vessel Register in 2006; the U.S. Navy plans on donating Iowa to a non-profit organization for use as a museum ship.

Naval History and Heritage Command Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships

Iowa at Anchor
Iowa at Anchor Iowa Port View Iowa Bow Iowa Stern Iowa Stern Iowa View Forward