No, it has not been recommissioned by the BBC.
VERY EXPENSIVE; but can happen anytime the gov't wants to spend the money.
HMS K13 sunk in a fatal accident during sea trials in early 1917 and was salvaged and recommissioned as HMS K22.
There are now 10 main dams for Melbourne after Tarago was recommissioned Thomson, Cardinia, Upper Yarra, Sugarloaf, Sylvan, Tarago , Yan Yean, Greenvale, Maroondah and O'Shannassy
The USS Cole was damaged by a suicide bomb attack in 2000 but not sunk. After two years of repairs it was recommissioned and deployed to active service. The U.S Cole was sunk in the Yemen port by Islamic terrorists.
No. The plant has been decommisioned. As of September 30, 2008 all machinery including the nuclear reactor, steam turbine and electrical generator have been removed. All that remains are empty concrete buildings and the cooling towers.
The Guerriere, a 38 gun frigate of the French Navy, was captured by the British and recommissioned as the HMS Guerriere. During its fight with the USS Constitution, the Guerriere became badly damaged. The crew was taken aboard the USS Constitution and the Guerriere was set on fire.
The Guerriere, a 38 gun frigate of the French Navy, was captured by the British and recommissioned as the HMS Guerriere. During its fight with the USS Constitution, the Guerriere became badly damaged. The crew was taken aboard the USS Constitution and the Guerriere was set on fire.
There have been at least two. The Queen Mary served as a troopship in World War 2, and the Queen Elizabeth II (and the Canberra) was refitted as a troopship in the Falklands War. There may have been others in the World Wars. Also, the Brittanic was used as a hospital ship in World War I until she was sunk by a mine.
The largest US battleships produced were the Iowa class, produced at the end of WWII. The ships in the Iowa class were Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, New Jersey.2nd Answer:There were 64 commissioned Battleships (BB 01 - BB 64). Others were built, but not comissioned for varying reasons.There are 3 older-class Battlerships that were kept as museums:USS North Carolina(BB 55) 9 Apr 1941 /27 Jun 1947 Transferred to the state of North Carolina 6 Sep 1961. Dedicated as memorial 29 Apr 1962 at Wilmington, N.C.USS Massachusetts(BB 59) 12 May 1942 /27 Mar 1947 Transferred to the Massachusetts Memorial Committee 8 Jun 1965 and preserved as a memorial 14 Aug 1965.USS Alabama(BB 60) 16 Aug 1942 /9 Jan 1947 Transferred to the state of Alabama 16 Jun 1964 for use as a memorial.Through the years all but 4 others have been scrapped or destroyed.As stated above, the last 4 built were Iowa Class shipsand were the largest of the battleships.All 4 were decommissioned and recommissioned several times, with the last time during the Reagan Administration to combat the "unbelievably ambitious" Soviet program of naval construction.All 4 are still in existence - as museums.USS Iowa(BB 61) 22 Feb 1943 /24 Mar 1949 Recommissioned 25 Aug 1951, decommissioned again 24 Feb 1958. Recommissioned again 28 Apr 1984, decommissioned last time 26 Oct 1990. Berthed in Suisan Bay, San Francisco, Calif., 21 April 2001.USS New Jersey(BB 62) 23 May 1943 /30 Jun 1948 Recommissioned at Bayonne 21 Nov 1950, decommissioned again 21 Aug 1957. Recommissioned at Philadelphia 6 Apr 1968, decommissioned again 17 Dec 1969. Recommissioned at Long Beach, Calif., 28 Dec 1982, decommissioned last time 8 Feb 1991. Towed 12 Sept. 1999 by the tug Sea Victory from Bremerton to Philadelphia, arriving 11 Nov. On 20 Jan. 2000, SECNAV announced donation to Home Port Alliance of Camden, N.J., for use as a museum.USS Missouri(BB 63) 11 Jun 1944 /26 Feb 1955 Recommissioned in San Francisco 10 May 1986, decommissioned again 31 Mar 1992. Located 1,000 yards from the Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor, Missouri was opened as a museum 29 Jan. 1999.USS Wisconsin(BB 64) 16 Apr 1944 /1 Jul 1948 Recommissioned 3 Mar 1951, decommissioned again at Bayonne on 8 Mar 1958. Recommissioned again on 22 Oct 1988, decommissioned for the final time on 30 Sep 1991. Moored at the National Maritime Center, Norfolk, Va., 7 Dec. 2000, the centerpiece of a four-part naval history exhibit. Wisconsin opened to the public on 16 Apr 2001.
When the US Civil Began, William T. Sherman found himself in Baton Rouge Louisiana as head of a military "college" that would later be the Louisiana State University ( LSU ) He had been a graduate from West Point but had resigned his commission. At the beginning of the war, he sought and was recommissioned and became one of the best known generals in the US Civil War.
The name of the boat in the movie The Usual Suspects is "Tanager," which is the name of a small South American bird. The boat was originally the USS Tanager (AM-385), a World War II mine-sweeper. She was decommissioned on December 10, 1954. She was recommissioned the following year and given the designation MSF-385. She carried out minesweeping duties until she was transferred to the U.S. Coast Guard for use as a training vessel. She was commissioned as USCGC Tanager (WRT-885). She was decommissioned again on February 1, 1972 and sold to William A. Hardesty on November 15, 1972.