I don’t currently have live-access to the latest news feeds in this chat, but I can summarize the Pennsylvania-class battleship topic and point you to likely sources for up-to-the-minute updates.
Direct answer
- The Pennsylvania-class battleships were the lead U.S. Navy dreadnoughts built in the 1910s, with BB-38 USS Pennsylvania being the lead ship of the class. They saw limited action in World War II and are now historical vessels; active combat use ended decades ago.
Key background
- Design and features: Pennsylvania-class ships carried heavy 14-inch guns, improved fire control, and updated anti-aircraft defenses for their era. They were modernized in the interwar period and again during World War II, but by the end of the war they were older designs relative to newer battleships and carriers.[3][8][9]
- Notable moments: Pennsylvania (BB-38) is famous for surviving the Pearl Harbor attack while in drydock, then serving in the Pacific theater for the remainder of WWII. This contrasted with her sister ship Arizona, which was destroyed at Pearl Harbor.[2][8][3]
- Postwar status: After the war, these ships were progressively retired and scrapped or converted in various ways; they do not have active service today.[9][3]
Suggested sources for the latest news
- Reputable naval history sites and museum pages often publish commemorations or new scholarship about the Pennsylvania-class ships.
- Major encyclopedias and history outlets (e.g., Wikipedia’s Pennsylvania-class pages) provide consolidated histories and references to primary sources.
- If you’re looking for contemporary discussions, try searches focused on “USS Pennsylvania BB-38 history,” “Pennsylvania-class battleships modernization,” or “Arizona and Pennsylvania Pearl Harbor references” in established outlets.
If you want, I can perform a fresh, focused search and pull the latest reliable articles or museum pages, then summarize with a short timeline and notable trivia.
Sources
Aside from that, *Pennsylvania* and *Arizona* received similar treatment: the elevation of the main batteries was increased to 30°, new fire control systems on tripod masts were added, the secondary armament and directors were replaced and overhauled, eight 5-inch/25 caliber anti-aircraft guns (four per side) were mounted on the weather deck which was above the secondary anti-ship 5-inch gun battery, and their bridges were enlarged to hold elevated anti-aircraft directors. … The propulsion...
wikipedia.nucleos.comKey Points – The USS Pennsylvania (BB-38), lead ship of its class of super-dreadnought battleships, was commissioned in 1916. -Though missing combat in World War I, it served as a fleet flagship during the interwar period. Famously, the Pennsylvania was in drydock during the Pearl Harbor attack on December 7, 1941, suffering relatively minor damage. […]
www.19fortyfive.comBattleship Pennsylvania (BB-38)
ww2db.comPennsylvania, second of the original 13 states, ratified the Constitution on 12 December 1787.
www.history.navy.mil