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A cabin or berthing is an enclosed room generally on a ship or an aircraft. A cabin which protrudes above the level of a ship's deck may be referred to as a "deckhouse."

Contents

[edit] Sailing ships

Grand cabin on the Grand Turk a replica of a three-masted English frigate.

In sailing ships, the officers and paying passengers would have an individual or shared cabin.

The captain or commanding officer would occupy the "grand cabin" that normally spanned width of the stern with large windows. On a warship it would be separated from the rest of the ship, and further subdivided into daytime and night-time cabins with movable panels that could be removed down in time of battle to leave the deck clear the whole length of the ship.

[edit] Modern warships

Bunks of aircraft carrier Clemenceau.

In most modern warships the commanding officer has a main cabin, the in-port cabin, often adjacent to the ship's central control room (operations room), and a sea cabin adjacent to the bridge. Thus, when likely to be called from sleep or attending to administration, the CO can be at the Bridge or Ops room instantly. The sea cabin is sparsely equipped, containing just a bunk, a desk, and basic toilet facilities. The in-port cabin is more lavishly furnished, with separate bedroom and combination sitting room/office, and more elaborate toiletry facilities.[1][2]

For ships intended to act as flagships, like the aircraft carrier the USS Lexington (CV-16), the admiral also has a sea cabin (adjacent to the captain's sea cabin) and an in-port cabin, in addition to the captain. Admiral Fletcher's sea cabin in the USS Yorktown (CV-5) in the Second World War had a bed, an easy chair, a table, and a shower.[3][4]

In the Star Trek science fiction series, the captain's sea cabin is called the "ready room". (On real ships, the ready room is in fact where flight squadron pilots "stand by" their aeroplanes.)

Officers will normally have their own cabins, which doubles as their office. Some senior petty officers may have a cabin for similar reasons.

[edit] Passenger ships

A sky suite on board Celebrity Cruises' Constellation.

In ships carrying passengers, they are normally accommodated in cabins, taking the terminology familiar to seafarers. First class cabins were traditionally referred to as staterooms, and today many cruise lines now prefer to refer to passenger cabins as staterooms or suites.

[edit] References

  1. ^ James L. Holloway III (2007). Aircraft Carriers at War. Naval Institute Press. pp. 201. ISBN 9781591143918. 
  2. ^ C. Snelling Robinson (2000). 200,000 Miles Aboard the Destroyer Cotten. The Kent State University Press. pp. 11. ISBN 0873386981. 
  3. ^ Hugh Irvin Power (1996). Carrier Lexington. Texas A&M University Press. pp. 100. ISBN 9780890966815. 
  4. ^ John B. Lundstrom (2006). Black Shoe Carrier Admiral: Frank Jack Fletcher at Coral Sea, Midway, and Guadalcanal. Naval Institute Press. pp. 83. ISBN 9781591144755. 



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