USS Missouri (BB-63)
USS Missouri is a well-known warship of the US Navy's last built-up warship, and Japan is well known for signing the surrender documents of the Pacific War in Tokyo Bay. The Missouri is the fourth of the Iowa battleships that the US Navy Department of Construction and Rehabilitation designed in 1938 as the so-called "high-speed battleship." The battleship of this class was designed from the outset to pass through the Panama Canal, The width is narrower. The Missouri was ordered on June 11, 1940, and on January 6, 1941, the keel was installed in a naval window in Brooklyn, New York. It was launched on January 29, 1944, and was deployed on June 11 of the same year. Hamming was named by Mary Margaret Truman, daughter of Harry S. Truman and later a member of the Missouri Senate. During World War II, the Missouri Lake was also put into battle and the battle of Okinawa, with guns shot against the islands of Hokkaido and Honshu. Also, on September 2, 1945, Japan's Foreign Minister Shigemitsu Mamoru officially signed the surrender document.