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The referenced book Park, Carl D. (2007). Ironclad Down: USS Merrimack-CSS Virginia from Design to Destruction. Naval Institute Press. ISBN978-1591146599. explains why Merrimack, Wabash, Roanoke, Colorado, and Minnesota should be considered Franklin-class. The class has been listed by several different names: Roanoke in Register of U.S. Navy Ships, Merrimack in The Old Steam Navy, and Wabash on the model at the David Taylor Model Basin. Merrimack was the first ship to commission, and would give its name to the class under the European system of class nomenclature, and the Roanoke's individual plans are believed to have been completed among the first five ships, which gives some credence to that name. The standard system for naming American ship classes is to give the name of the earliest ship ordered to the class. In the case of these ships, all five were completed to the design of the Franklin, built from the materials of the ship-of-the-line some years earlier. Thus, standard American practice terms the class Franklin. --Columbia clipper (talk) 21:27, 4 August 2009 (UTC)[reply]