Naval Review
- This page describes reviews of the US Fleet. For Fleet Reviews of the Royal Navy, see Fleet Review, or for reviews of other national navies, see Review (disambiguation). For the magazine 'Naval Review', see Naval Review (magazine).
A Naval Review is an event, where the whole (or a very large part) of the US Navy is paraded to be reviewed by the president or the Secretary of the Navy. It often includes delegates from other national navies. It is more regular and frequent than its British equivalent, the Fleet Review, and often occurs on a Navy Day.
Following is a list, by president. (Each was reviewed by the president, unless otherwise noted)
Nineteenth century
Before World War One
- 1903 at Oyster Bay, New York - Presidential Fleet Review
- 2 September–4 September 1906, Oyster Bay, N.Y. - U.S. naval vessels included:
- 16 December 1907, Hampton Roads - Send-off for the Great White Fleet, which included the USS Georgia, 15 other battleships, a torpedo boat squadron and transports, USS Truxtun
- 10 June 1907 - Presidential Review, from Fort Monroe as part of Jamestown Exposition which laid the groundwork for Naval Station, Norfolk - U.S. naval vessels included USS Georgia, from which 11 June was proclaimed "Georgia Day"
- 6 May–8 May 1908, San Francisco Bay, reviewed by Secretary of the Navy, which included the following units of the Pacific Fleet:
- 22 February 1909, Hampton Roads - Return of the Great White Fleet, which included the following vessels:
1914–1919: Woodrow Wilson
Inter-war
- June 1927, Hampton Roads - Naval vessels included:
1940 to 1945
- Navy Day, 27 October 1940
- Navy Day Fleet Review in New York Harbor, 27 October 1945
Post-war to present
References