The Day

USS Constituti­on returns to waters

- By CRYSTAL HILL

Boston — The USS Constituti­on, the world’s oldest commission­ed warship still afloat, returned Sunday to Boston’s waters.

The undocking of the “Old Ironsides” will mark the end of restoratio­n work that started two years ago, officials said. A celebratio­n will be held at the USS Constituti­on Museum.

The wooden ship was launched in 1797 and earned its famous nickname notching victories in the War of 1812.

“The ship has been the cornerston­e of the Navy for a long time,” said Robert Gerosa, the Constituti­on’s commanding officer. “To be a part of the ship is truly an honor.”

The restoratio­ns extend the life of the nearly 2-feet-thick vessel — the last remaining survivor of six ships created when President George Washington signed the Naval Armament Act — said Margherita Desy, a historian at Naval History & Heritage Command Detachment Boston.

Hundreds gathered about the ship Sunday as workers prepared for its return to the water, The Boston Globe reported. The ship was set to be floated off its blocks around 10 p.m. and into the harbor around 11:30 p.m.

The ship enters dry dock about every 20 years for below-the-waterline repairs. The most recent work included replacing 100 hull planks and installing 2,200 new copper sheets, 500 of which were signed by nearly 100,000 museum visitors, according to USS Constituti­on Museum President Anne Grimes Rand, who called the ship “a wonderful symbol for our democracy.”

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