LCS-14 Manchester
The littoral combat ship USS Manchester (LCS 14) was commissioned as the Navy's newest surface combatant in a ceremony in Portsmouth, 26 May 2018. The Independence-variant LCS is the Navy's second ship to be named for the city of Manchester, New Hampshire.
"The faces of the Sailors that ran to man this ship are the faces that I've seen day after day for the last 22 months as we worked to bring this ship to life," said Cmdr. Emily Basset, Manchester's commanding officer and a Seattle, Washington native. "They took the city of Manchester's motto - work conquers - and they have personified the spirit of our namesake city. Each Sailor is highly trained and must do the duties that three or four would do on another ship. These Sailors are reasons to make us all proud."
The ship's sponsor, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, gave the traditional order to, "Man this ship and bring her to life," signaling the Sailors to embark and officially begin the ship's service as a U.S. Navy ship.
For the ship's crew, the day was the culmination of months' worth of work to get the Manchester prepared for commissioning, and having the commissioning in the ship's namesake state was a special opportunity for some of Manchester's Sailors. Crew 214 expected to be the on-hull crew for USS Manchester (LCS 14)’s commissioning in early 2018. Unlike other surface Navy communities, littoral combat ship crews have the unique honor of being commissioned as a crew even before their ship is commissioned. An LCS crew must be fully certified before being commissioned and before arriving on-hull. Originally, LCS Crew 214’s commissioning ceremony was about ball caps. The littoral combat ship program has been going through transitions, one of which is assigning a crew to only one ship, and adopting a blue-gold rotation.
Austal officials joined ship sponsor U.S. Senator Jeanne Shaheen and many distinguished guests in celebrating the christening of the nation’s 14th littoral combat ship (LCS), the future USS Manchester, May 7, 2016. Manchester (LCS 14) is the fifth LCS in Austal’s 11-ship, contract worth over $3.5 billion. With its shallow draft of 14 feet, the Austal-built Independence-variant LCS is an advanced high-speed and agile 419-foot aluminium trimaran combat ship that combines superior seakeeping, endurance and speed with the volume and payload capacity needed to support emerging missions.
“On behalf of Austal USA’s shipbuilding team, one of the most talented that I’ve ever worked with, we are proud to provide our sailors with an amazing warship that will honor the great city of Manchester as she defends our nation,” said Austal USA President Craig Perciavalle. “We’re equally excited to share this celebration with an amazing patriot in Senator Shaheen who has served in her role as both Governor and Senator, and now gives her spirit as the sponsor to this awesome ship.”
Shaheen, the only woman in U.S. history to be elected both a Governor and a United States Senator, has served in the Senate since 2009. She has been committed to serving the citizens of New Hampshire for decades and is known for her common-sense leadership, hard work and dedication to improving the lives of the middle class As New Hampshire's Governor, Shaheen helped create nearly 67,000 new jobs while keeping New Hampshire's tax burden the lowest in the country. She and her husband, Bill – a New Hampshire native - live in Madbury and have three daughters, Stefany, Stacey and Molly (Matron of Honor), and seven grandchildren.
Traditionally, the christening of a ship is where the ship's sponsor blesses the ship by breaking the bottle of champagne on the bow of the ship and ceremonially gives the ship its name. The roll of sponsorship represents a lifelong relationship with the ship and her crew.
The future USS Manchester (LCS 14), will launch in mid-May and is scheduled for delivery in 2017. She has a maximum speed of more than 40 knots, a voluminous 28,000 sf mission bay, and a flight deck capable of simultaneously holding two H-60 helicopters.
Austal’s LCS program is in full swing with three ships delivered and seven ships under construction at this time. Montgomery (LCS 8) conducted acceptance trials late last week. Gabrielle Giffords (LCS 10) and Omaha (LCS 12) are preparing for trials. Final assembly is well underway on Tulsa (LCS 16) and modules for Charleston (LCS 18) and Cincinnati (LCS 20) are under construction in Austal’s Module Manufacturing Facility.
The company has also been contracted by the U.S. Navy to build 10 Expeditionary Fast Transports (EPF). Of the 10 ships included in the $1.6 billion block-buy contract, six have been delivered.
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