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Artifacts of History and Heroes

September 29th, 2008

Filed under: News — admin @ 6:08 am

On the USS Arlington, Pentagon Steel Will Recall the County’s Darkest Day

Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, September 18, 2008; Page VA01

The eight crooked and rusty strips of steel and handful of broken bolts in a pile on a table outside the office of the secretary of the Navy last week looked unremarkable.

But for the Arlington County police, fire and rescue personnel who rushed to the burning Pentagon on Sept. 11, 2001, the survivors of those killed and the people who work in and around the center of the nation’s defense, the scraps — and the journey they are set to take — are powerful artifacts.

The metal pieces, which held up the Pentagon’s stone exterior before American Airlines Flight 77 struck, were dedicated to Arlington officials in a small ceremony on the seventh anniversary of the terrorist attacks and will be displayed aboard the USS Arlington, a vast amphibious assault and transport ship that will soon have its keel laid in Pascagoula, Miss.

“I was here for pretty much two weeks after it hit,” said Arlington police Capt. Kevin M. Reardon, who was among the rush of responders. Seven years later, his son has just finished basic training and his county is being linked even more closely to the memory of the attack.

“We’re tying it to the military and showing our support at the same time,” Reardon said. “Every time they mention the military, it hits a special place in my heart.”

The metal, along with a small piece of limestone from a battered Pentagon corridor, will be placed on the quarterdeck and near the ship’s gangway, where the crew and others will encounter it easily.

“It’s the tangibility of it,” said Sen. James Webb (D-Va.). “It gives them something they can directly touch.”

Webb, a former Navy secretary, had been in the Pentagon having breakfast with the commandant of the Marine Corps., Gen. James L. Jones, on Sept. 11, 2001. In the early confusion of that morning, one of the general’s aides came in and said “it looks like a missile” exploded into the north tower of the World Trade Center.

Jones asked Webb whether he wanted to stay and watch the unfolding events on CNN, but Webb drove to his office overlooking the Iwo Jima Memorial. Once there, “I heard the thunk of the impact of the aircraft. The building smoldered and burned for days,” Webb said. “It was a profound personal experience, as well as a national experience.”

Four years later, Arlington officials took a side trip to the Northrop Grumman shipyard in Pascagoula while doing Katrina relief work and were awed by seeing what the USS Arlington will look like. The San Antonio LPD 17 class ships can carry tanks and helicopters as well as troops and are meant to evade radar.

“I’ve never been on anything that large in my life,” said County Board member Barbara A. Favola. Having a ship named after Arlington brings “an incredible amount of patriotism,” she said.

The idea emerged to include steel from the Pentagon on board, evoking what had been done with the USS New York, another San Antonio class ship that included melted steel from the World Trade Center in its construction. (A third ship named to commemorate the 2001 attacks, the USS Somerset, will include steel from a crane that stood near the crash site in Somerset, Pa.)

But the Pentagon, built in wartime, didn’t use much steel, which went to more urgent needs such as tanks and ships. Finding and retrieving the steel from the area affected by the Sept. 11 attacks became an arduous, bureaucratic task.

“I assumed this would be relatively simple,” said Frank Shafroth, a former Arlington official who is chief of staff to Rep. James P. Moran Jr. (D-Va.).

It took two years. Then he got the call from Ralph Newton, a senior Pentagon facilities official who had managed to secure the rusted pieces.

“When Ralph called me and said, ‘This is sitting on my desk,’ it ended a long, miserable trial. At that point, you’re happy it’s there,” Shafroth said. The effort, he said, builds “a bond between Arlington, the Pentagon, the people on that ship, and the first responders and the family members who lost someone that day.”

“You understand how much meaning this will have for them,” Shafroth said.

washingtonpost.com

Navy Secretary Donald C. Winter, left, Sen. James Webb (D-Va.), Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), Arlington County Board Chairman Walter J. Tejada and Rep. James P. Moran Jr. at the dedication of the steel from the Pentagon to the county.

Navy Secretary Donald C. Winter, left, Sen. James Webb (D-Va.), Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), Arlington County Board Chairman Walter J. Tejada and Rep. James P. Moran Jr. at the dedication of the steel from the Pentagon to the county. (By Michael Laris — The Washington Post)

The Pentagon has the most prominent and public memorial to those who died there, but bits of steel from the building will serve as a reminder on the USS Arlington.

The Pentagon has the most prominent and public memorial to those who died there, but bits of steel from the building will serve as a reminder on the USS Arlington. (By Bill O’leary — The Washington Post)

The USS San Antonio is similar to the Arlington, soon to be built.

The USS San Antonio is similar to the Arlington, soon to be built. (By Mass Communication Specialist 2Nd Class Jason R. Zalasky — U.s. Navy)

washingtonpost.com

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USS New York: Tragic pieces transformed into fighter vessel

September 15th, 2008

Filed under: News — admin @ 5:25 pm
 
Top Photo
Mourners pay their respects during Thursday’s observance at Ground Zero.

Normally, I try to avoid the rah-rah feel-good patriotic spiels favored by some pundits. They’re too cheap, too easy, too pandering. But one year from now, the amphibious transport ship USS New York is being commissioned in the city for which it was named, and that simple fact says more about the character of this nation than a thousand country songs.

Truth be told, this landing platform dock (LPD-21) isn’t much of a beauty. She isn’t sleek or especially majestic — in pictures she kind of looks like a big gray box. But she’s a warship, built to hit the beaches with up to 800 Marines as well as both assault vehicles and helicopters. In other words, if you did something stupid and an LPD is coming your way, you’re in for a world of hurt.

Perhaps the most striking feature of the USS New York’s makeup is the approximately 24 tons of steel from the World Trade Center used in her construction. Scrap metal from the center, destroyed during the 9/11 attacks of 2001, was melted down to make the bow of the hull. The ship’s motto, fittingly enough, is “Never Forget.”

I’m sorry to be such a sap, but there’s a lyrical, almost uniquely American perfection to the idea of taking the ruins from one of the worst days in our history to help build an instrument of vengeance. It was welcome news as we approached the seventh anniversary of 9/11, which is for me usually a season of frustration — an annual reminder of the misdirected follies in Iraq and our failure to apprehend Osama bin Laden.

Don’t get me wrong — it’s still pretty annoying to know bin Laden hasn’t been brought to justice. But this year that frustration is tempered somewhat by the existence of the USS New York. It’s not only a ship of war, but a vessel symbolizing for the world our resolve and tenacity. It’s a reassuring reminder of this country’s strength of character, a demonstration of our ability to, quite literally, pick up the pieces and renew the fight.

A Navy captain at the scene later told the media that when the melted metal was poured into the moulds for the ship’s bow section, “those big rough steelworkers treated it with total reverence.”

“It sounds trite, but I saw it in their eyes,” added Philip Teel, head of the ship systems division for Northrop Grumman, the company that built the ship. “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.’

One shipbuilder, a guy named Tony Quaglino, was due to retire after 40 years on the job, but he held off for the opportunity to work on the New York. “This is sacred,” he told a reporter.

The ship’s steel was tested yet again in 2005, by Hurricane Katrina. The New York was built and christened in New Orleans, and during the hurricane many of the workers lost their homes. Some had to live at the shipyard afterward during construction, but the ship survived intact.

The New York is a San Antonio-class vessel, a new-and-improved generation of amphibious assault ship so cutting edge that plans call for 12 of the new LPDs to essentially replace 41 ships of the older classes.

Tempered by stubborn determination, baptized by Mother Nature and designed with bad intent, this is going to be a vessel to be reckoned with.

If you ARE in the mood for some artistry, however, I give you Longfellow’s “O Ship of State,” which includes the lines: “We know what Master laid thy keel/What Workmen wrought thy ribs of steel,/Who made each mast, and sail, and rope,/What anvils rang, what hammers beat,/In what a forge and what a heat/Were shaped the anchors of thy hope!”

 

D. Allan Kerr is such a relic his old ship USS Guam was decommissioned 10 years ago. Kerr may be contacted at the_culling@hotmail.com.

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USS New York on Hero Ships, Sept. 7th at 9pm

September 2nd, 2008

Filed under: Media, News — admin @ 7:41 pm

Please tune in to see the story and history of the greatest ship to sail the seven seas. The USS New York will be on the History Channel this weekend, please let your friends know. The crew at Lou Reda Productions have done a superb job of documenting this ships past, present and possible future. Times like these only come once in a lifetime. She is our ship, borne of our disaster, she needs our support, remember, Never Forget.

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The future USS New York LPD-21 under construction at Northrop Grumman Ship Systems’ shipyard in Avondale, LA, will be the fifth amphibious transport dock of the San Antonio class. The ship was named New York after the state and incorporates in its construction steel salvaged from the World Trade Centers. Her ship motto is "Never Forget." "We're very proud that the twisted steel from the WTC towers will soon be used to forge an even stronger national defense," New York Gov. George Pataki spoke in 2002. "The USS New York will soon be defending freedom and combating terrorism around the globe, while also ensuring that the world never forgets the evil attacks of Sept. 11 and the courage and strength New Yorkers showed.” This will be the seventh U.S. ship named New York.

The purpose of this website is to provide information and news about the USS New York (LPD 21) to the general public. All information on this site is considered public information and may be distributed or copied unless otherwise specified. Use of appropriate byline/photo/image credits is requested. All logos and trademarks are owned by their respective organizations and used with their courtesy. US Navy US Marines US Coast Guard US Army US Air Force

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