John Cabot is a shipname. Several ships have held this name:
- SS John Cabot (hull number: 0395), a U.S. World War II Liberty ship;[1] see List of Liberty ships (Je–L)
- CCGS John Cabot (2020) (id: 843969; callsign: CGDJ), a Canadian Coast Guard ship launched 2020,[2] participated in the search for the 2023 Titan submersible disappearance as the deep sonar search ship;[3]
- CS John Cabot (id: 320951),[4] a Canadian ship launched in 1965, an icebreaker and cable ship, as a Canadian Coast Guard Ship CCGS John Cabot, involved in the 1973 rescue of the crew and raising the sunken Pisces III submarine,[5] the deepest submarine rescue ever,[6] as a Teleglobe ship CS John Cabot, laying down the CANTAT-3 transatlantic cable.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Liberty Ships built by the United States Maritime Commission in World War II". usmm.org. American Merchant Marine at War. 4 May 2002.
- ^ Department of Fisheries and Oceans. "CCG Fleet: Vessel Details - CCGS JOHN CABOT". Government of Canada. Retrieved 23 June 2023.
- ^ Helen Regan; Adam Renton; Rob Picheta; Aditi Sangal; Elise Hammond; Matt Meyer; Tori B. Powell; Maureen Chowdhury (23 June 2023). "Missing Titanic sub crew killed after 'catastrophic implosion'". CNN.
- ^ Maritime History Archive (2005). ""John Cabot" (Ship) at St. John's, Newfoundland". Maritime History Archive Public Photo Catalogue. Memorial University. PF-055.2-D40.
- ^ Bill Glover (9 April 2021). "CCGS John Cabot / CS Certamen". Atlantic Cable: History of the Atlantic Cable & Undersea Communications.
- ^ Rebecca Sayce (21 June 2023). "What is the deepest undersea rescue ever and how does it compare to missing Titanic sub?". London, UK: Metro.