![]() ![]() ![]() In the interwar period, USS Nevada undertook goodwill cruises in the Pacific and underwent a large modernization in the late 1920s. USS Nevada was officially commissioned into service in March 1916 as The Great War was raging in Europe, yet the ship only saw brief service during the very end of the conflict after the U.S. Construction of the first ship was approved in March 1911, with USS Nevada being laid down in November 1912 and launched nearly two years later in July 1914. As a result, the ship would be armed with a novel triple turret design, feature oil-fired boilers and introduce the newly developed ‘all or nothing’ armor scheme. Basing its design on the preceding New York-class, the Nevada-class was to incorporate a number of innovations. ![]() Design work on what would become the Nevada-class battleships began in 1910 with the Navy seeking to reduce the complexity and eliminate some of the shortcomings of their previous dreadnought designs. ![]()
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