cthia wrote:But that didn't last long...wiki wrote:
The naming of United States Navy vessels for living people was common in early decades of American history, but by World War II, the Navy had firmly established a practice of naming ships for people only after they had died. In 1969, a Navy panel decreed that warships would no longer be named after living persons. That lasted until 1974, when President Richard Nixon announced the naming of an aircraft carrier after United States Representative Carl Vinson. Since then, ships such as the Arleigh Burke, Henry M. Jackson, Bob Hope, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, George Bush, and Gabrielle Giffords have been named for people still alive at the time.
And a precedent has already been set with the GSN Honor Harrington. The cat and her person's out of the bag now. May as well roll-ship with it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_U ... _Americans
Yeah, but they thought they were naming the GSN Honor Harrington after a dead person. Honor was just impolite enough to come back and prove they were in error on that point.
So I'm not sure that actually counts as a proper precedent - or at least that's what the ship naming purist within the Admiralties will argue.