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  1. USS Texas (BB-35) is a museum ship in Galveston and former United States Navy New York -class battleship. She was launched on 18 May 1912 and commissioned on 12 March 1914.

  2. The most powerful weapon in the world in 1914. Battleship Texas was on the front line of innovations in gunnery, aviation, and radar throughout her career. A veteran of both World Wars, today she is the world's last surviving Dreadnought.

  3. 50.5K subscribers ‧ 71 videos. The official YouTube channel of the Battleship Texas. Feel free to suggest topics for videos and, of course, thank you for supporting the Mighty T!

  4. Mar 5, 2024 · GALVESTON, Texas (KTRK) -- The historic Battleship Texas began the process of undocking on Tuesday morning and will be back in the water for the first time in 18 months. The re-floating process...

  5. Battleship Texas will permanently reopen at Pier 20 in Galveston, Texas no earlier than late 2025, but we are working on other touring opportunities in the meantime. You can follow our social media or check out our news page for the latest updates.

  6. battleshiptexas.org › about › battleship-texas-historybattleshiptexas.org

    Learn about the history of Battleship Texas, the world's last surviving Dreadnought and a veteran of both World Wars.

  7. Let's explore the power, history, and future of the mighty USS Texas https://battleshiptexas.org/ Battleship Texas YouTube https://www.youtube.com/c/Battlesh...

  8. www.history.navy.mil › photography › us-navy-shipsTexas (BB 35) - NHHC

    USS Texas, a 27,000-ton New York class battleship built at Newport News, Virginia, was commissioned in March 1914. In May, she steamed to Vera Cruz to support the occupation of that Mexican...

  9. An exhibit that celebrated the USS TEXAS battleship--with images, artifacts and oral histories about the only USN vessel to survive battles in WWI and WWII.

  10. Commissioned at the height of battleship supremacy, BB35 was a witness to its decline. Replaced by new technology. Many ship areas today are as they were in 1914.