Re: Constitution Class Starships under Conmstruction in Trek
The thing with "Starship class" isn't as obvious as it seems to everyone today.
See, back then, the term was SPACE SHIP. Every movie, every book, every novella, every radio play, every TV show... NOBODY used the term "Starship." I can't say with 100% certainty that Roddenberry and crew invented the term (SOMEONE may have used it before) but as far as I'm aware, nobody had ever used the term before.
Today, people say "starship" instead of "spaceship" virtually all of the time. But at the time of Trek, it was really a new word.
As such, it was entirely reasonable to think that this could be the name of a class. (The first ship might have been called the U.S.S. Starship???)
Since then, however, and in almost pure response to Star Trek, the term "starship" has become used to describe ANY faster-than-light vessel capable of going from one solar system to another. And I think we're all pretty comfortable with that... it's a REAL word, now, not just a fictional one (though, as far as any of us know, nobody on Earth has a real, working starship... do they?)
Now, I remember in "Bread and Circuses, Merrick describing Kirk's command. I'm paraphrasing here, from memory, by the way, but he basically said "My ship, it was just a spaceship... but his ship, it's a STARSHIP. You have no idea what it can do." In other words, according to Merrick, in TOS terms, the term "starship" is used to describe the really big, really powerful ships. (I.E, a runabout is NOT a "starship" even though it's FTL.) While I doubt we'd quibble about that in real life, in Trek terms it seems pretty clear.
In some of the Treknology fiction that was published back in the 1970s and 1980s, it was established that the big "ships of the line" were referred to as "Class I Starships" and the smaller, specialized vessels (like Grissom) were "Class II Spaceships." Personally, I really like that approach.
So, the original Constitution class ship fell into a "superclass" of Starships... and since there weren't a lot of actual starships (by the above definition) at that point, it was noteworthy enough to put on the plaque.
Probably the Constitutions were the first ships not to just be called spaceships. In fact, I seem to recall Pike referring to the Enterprise as a "spaceship," didn't he? So, I'll even go a step further...
I've always liked the idea that there were quite a few Constitution-class ships, all of which were "spaceships" with crews of ~200 originally. But that, with the advent of replicator technology (food slots and fabricators in TOS parlance), the ships didn't require as much cargo space, so much of the storage area was converted to habitable space. As a result, the refit Constitutions (refit for TOS, I mean) took on enough extra facilities and crew to make up a full Survey spaceship's capabilities.
At that point, some P.R.-oriented Starfleet Admiral coined the term "starship" to describe those ships that were not just "warships" or "science ships" or whatever. These twelve refit Constitution-class ships were the first STARSHIPS for that reason.
I know, it's pure speculation... but does anyone think that it doesn't fit with any of the facts we know, or with any "real life" concerns? If so, let's hear your arguments.