Quote:
Originally Posted by roadhog
Thanks, I just noticed the number on the bow.
I could be wrong, but if you saw the two ships side-by-side, and the numbers covered, you would have a very hard time trying to tell which one was which. They're made from prints that are basically the same. Maybe a few modifications that you would have to be inside to see. It still gives you the idea of what she looks like. For that matter, it is the
STORY, not the picture that counts. For that matter, blame me for the wrong pic. I forwarded an email I got about it to him. I didn't notice the number either.
Press release from April 4, 2006
Quote:
NEW YORK - With a year to go before it even touches the water, the Navy's amphibious assault ship USS New York has already made history - twice. It was built with 24 tons of scrap steel from the World Trade Center, and it survived Hurricane Katrina.
That combination of disasters gives the ship a unique standing among the 500 or so Avondale, La., shipyard workers building it, said Tony Quaglino, a crane superintendent who postponed retirement to have a hand in the New York's construction. "I think Katrina made us more aware of the tragedy in New York," said the 66-year-old Quaglino. "One was manmade, one was natural, but they're both a common bond."
The New York is about 45 percent complete and should be ready for launch in mid 2007. Katrina disrupted construction when it pounded the Gulf Coast, but the 684-foot vessel escaped serious damage and workers were back at the yard near New Orleans two weeks after the storm.
The ship led many of the yard's thousands of workers to return to the job even though hundreds lost their homes, Quaglino and others said.
Northrop Grumman employed 6,500 at Avondale before Katrina. Today, roughly 5,500 are back, working on the New York and three other vessels. More than 200 employees who lost their homes to Katrina are living at the shipyard, some on a Navy barge and others in bunk-style housing.
"Their dedication and devotion to duty has been, to say the least, epic," Philip Teel, a vice president for Northrop Grumman Corp. and head of its ship systems division, told a Navy League dinner audience in New York on March 22.
"It sounds trite, but I saw it in their eyes," Teel said in a separate interview. "These are very patriotic people, and the fact that the ship has steel from the trade center is a source of great pride. They view it as something incredibly special. They're building it for the nation."
Two more ships are scheduled for the future.
Arlington - Where the Pentagon is located
Somerset - the place where the fourth plane went down in PA