United States ship naming conventions for the U.S. Navy were established by congressional action at least as early as 1862.
Title 13, section 1531, of the U.S. Code, enacted in that year, reads, in part, The vessels of the Navy shall be named by the Secretary of the Navy under direction of the President according to the following rule: Sailing-vessels of the first class shall be named after the States of the Union, those of the second class after the rivers, those of the third class after the principal cities and towns and those of the fourth class as the President may direct.Further clarification was made by executive order of President Theodore Roosevelt in 1907.
If a ship is reclassified, for example a destroyer is converted to a mine layer, it retains its original name.
[4] Navy Secretary Kenneth Braithwaite stated that he; "...supports naming future submarines after past vessels with historic naval legacies.
A report to Congress on 4 February 2021, advised the Navy had not indicated these exceptions as being a change to the policy for naming ships.