On
November 16, General Dynamics Bath Iron Works held a keel-laying ceremony
for the Thomas Hudner (DDG 116), the company’s 36th Arleigh Burke-class
guided-missile destroyer. The ship is named for Captain Thomas Hudner
Jr., U.S. Navy (ret.), a Korean War aviator and Medal of Honor recipient. |
Captain
Hudner intentionally crash-landed his plane during the battle of the
Chosin Reservoir on December 4, 1950, in an attempt to save his wingman,
Ensign Jesse L. Brown, who had been shot down. Captain Hudner attempted
to pull Ensign Brown from the wreckage, but was unable to do so. He
packed snow around the ship’s fuselage to keep flames at bay,
while taking enemy fire. Ensign Brown succumbed to his wounds, and Captain
Hudner was evacuated from the site.
Captain Hudner, a resident of Concord, Mass., has visited the shipyard
on numerous occasions. He was on-hand for the keel-laying ceremony,
accompanied by numerous friends and family members. Captain Hudner had
previously signed his initials onto a steel plate that will be mounted
on the ship bearing his name.
At the keel-laying ceremony, ship’s sponsor Mrs. Barbara Miller
added her initials to the plate, authenticating it by striking welding
arcs onto it, assisted by Matt Perkins, a 34-year Bath Iron Works welder.
The keel unit is the 3,000-ton, heavily outfitted mid-section of the
ship which contains its main machinery spaces, and is the “heart”
of the ship. The unit is roughly a third of the entire ship, and was
recently moved from the shipyard’s Ultra Hall construction facility
onto the building ways.
Ed Kenyon, DDG 51 Program Manager for Bath Iron Works, hosted the ceremony
and welcomed the audience of several hundred employees, Navy personnel
and representatives from other major subcontractors in the program.
“Over the coming months, we will continue to build the Thomas
Hudner with knowledge and expertise honed over the decades,” said
Kenyon. “She will be a true and steady vessel, the pride of our
Navy. She will, sir, reflect your spirit – the spirit of an American
Hero.”
The Arleigh Burke-class destroyer is a multi-mission combatant that
offers defense against a wide range of threats, including ballistic
missiles. It operates in support of carrier battle groups, surface action
groups, amphibious groups and replenishment groups, providing a complete
array of anti-submarine (ASW), anti-air and anti-surface capabilities.
Designed for survivability, the ships incorporate all-steel construction
and have gas turbine propulsion. The combination of the ships’
AEGIS combat system, the Vertical Launching System, an advanced ASW
system, two embarked SH-60 helicopters, advanced anti-aircraft missiles
and Tomahawk anti-ship and land-attack missiles make the Arleigh Burke
class one of the most powerful surface combatants ever put to sea. |