Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

USS Little Rock’s commission­ing in New York sold out

- FRANK E. LOCKWOOD

The commission­ing of the USS Little Rock (LCS 9) in Buffalo, N.Y., next month will be a 10-day-long celebratio­n, as New York’s second-largest city fetes the nation’s newest warship.

Organizers say roughly 9,000 tickets have been reserved for the Dec. 16 commission­ing ceremony, which takes place adjacent to the Buffalo and Erie County Navy and Military Park on the city’s waterfront.

Officials announced this week that “due to overwhelmi­ng demand,” no more tickets are left.

“There has been a tremendous amount of public interest here,” said Daniel Mecca of Buffalo, a member of the commission­ing committee. “It’s a big event for Buffalo, for the crew and everybody involved.”

A delegation of roughly 30 Arkansans, including Little Rock Mayor Mark Stodola and North Little Rock Mayor Joe Smith, will attend, organizers say.

The ship and its crew are to arrive there Dec. 8. Crew members will have a packed agenda once they get there.

The list of activities includes a visit to nearby Veterans Affairs medical centers, two church services, a Buffalo Bills football game, a Buffalo Sabres hockey contest, an enlistment ceremony and an assortment of news conference­s, parties and receptions.

There’ll also be a City of Little Rock Reception at the Hyatt Regency Buffalo on Dec. 15.

A painting of the Little Rock skyline, to be hung on board the vessel, has been commission­ed.

The crew members aren’t strangers to the Natural State. Many of them visited in June, stopping at the MacArthur Museum of Arkansas Military History, the Little Rock Central High School National Historic Site, the USS Razorback

submarine and elsewhere.

The setting for the Dec. 16 commission­ing ceremony is unpreceden­ted, according to Maurice Naylon of Buffalo, the commission­ing committee chairman.

The ceremony will take place beside the older USS Little Rock, which served as a light cruiser and then a guided missile cruiser. It is now a 610-foot-long floating museum that draws roughly 70,000 visitors per year.

“It’s the first time in the 242-year history of the Navy that a ship will be commission­ed right beside its namesake,” he said. U.S. Sen. John Boozman, R-Ark., will speak at the ceremony. Former Navy Secretary Ray Mabus, who served on the original USS Little Rock, also will attend.

The new vessel is a littoral combat ship (abbreviate­d as LCS) — smaller, swifter and capable of operating in shallower waters.

Capable of reaching speeds of 45 knots — more than 50 mph — it will be one of the Navy’s fastest ships.

Lockheed Martin, the defense firm, led the constructi­on team. The contract to build up to 10 ships, announced in December 2010, was valued at up to $3.6 billion.

The new USS Little Rock contains 1,000 tons of aluminum, 2,000 tons of steel and more than 100 miles of cable, both electric and fiber optic.

At top speeds, the new ship “rides above the waves like a speedboat” and leaves in its wake a wall of water nearly 30 feet high, according to a Lockheed Martin promotiona­l video.

It has anti-mine, anti-submarine and anti-surface capabiliti­es and a pad where helicopter­s can land.

The ship, roughly 390 feet long and 57 feet wide, was constructe­d in Marinette, Wis.

Its keel-laying ceremony, which marked the start of constructi­on, took place on June 27, 2013; its christenin­g — complete with speeches and a smashed champagne bottle — was on July 18, 2015.

The ship completed a series of trials in August, satisfying the Navy Board of Inspection and Survey, and clearing the last major hurdle in its path.

Dec. 16 will be the day “when the ship gets brought into the U.S. naval fleet,” Naylon said. “It’s just a piece of metal owned by Lockheed Martin until [that] moment.”

Naval officials selected Janee Bonner, the wife of former U.S. Rep. Josiah R. “Jo” Bonner, R-Ala., to be the ship’s sponsor.

Janee Bonner wielded the champagne bottle at the christenin­g, and she’ll utter the traditiona­l words that accompany naval commission­ing ceremonies: “Man the ship and bring her to life.”

“I’m sorry that she’s not from Arkansas, but she’s a lovely lady,” Naylon said. “I think she’ll discharge her duties in great fashion.”

In his speech at the 2015 christenin­g, Mabus said Janee Bonner was a native of Mobile, Ala., which, like Marinette, has a shipyard for building littoral combat ships.

“Janee Bonner ties those two great communitie­s, two great shipbuilde­rs together,” Mabus said at the 2015 ceremony.

Arkansans who are headed for Buffalo should take along heavy coats — just in case.

“It could be 30 degrees and snowy. It could be 60 degrees and sunny. We’ve had both. Chances are it’s going to be in the 40s,” Mecca said.

“It’ll be cool, but it won’t be our February weather, which gets kind of bad. We’re certainly hoping for the best,” he added.

The Arkansas contingent looks forward to witnessing the commission­ing, said Ron Maxwell, coordinato­r for the USS Little Rock Namesake Committee.

“It is a very big deal, and there’s a lot of protocol and pomp and pageantry,” he said.

Those without tickets to the Buffalo event can watch it electronic­ally. The Navy will livestream the event.

There’ll also be a “big watch party” at the Ron Robinson Theater in Little Rock, Maxwell said. Doors will open at 9 a.m., and the ceremony will begin at 10 a.m.

“It’ll be an opportunit­y for local folks to celebrate this great occasion together,” he added.

 ?? AP/The Eagle Herald/RICK GEBHARD ?? The USS Little Rock splashes into the Menominee River in Marinette, Wis., after its christenin­g on July 18, 2015. The speedy vessel will be commission­ed Dec. 16 in a ceremony in Buffalo, N.Y.
AP/The Eagle Herald/RICK GEBHARD The USS Little Rock splashes into the Menominee River in Marinette, Wis., after its christenin­g on July 18, 2015. The speedy vessel will be commission­ed Dec. 16 in a ceremony in Buffalo, N.Y.

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