Chattanooga Times Free Press

USS Little Rock arrives in N.Y. for commission­ing

- BY CAROLYN THOMPSON

BUFFALO, N.Y. — The U.S. Navy’s new combat ship, the USS Little Rock, glided past its permanentl­y docked World War II-era namesake Monday and into the Buffalo harbor, where it will be commission­ed later this month.

The Dec. 16 ceremony will mark the first time in the Navy’s 242-year history that a combat ship will be commission­ed alongside its namesake, organizers said.

The original ship began its service as a light cruiser in 1944 and later was recommissi­oned as a guided missile cruiser. It was taken out of service in 1976 and is now a floating museum.

Several hundred people lined the Lake Erie waterfront at the Buffalo & Erie County Naval and Military Park, many waving small American flags, as the smaller, sleeker, higher-tech new ship arrived under escort by the Buffalo Fire Department’s Edward M. Cotter fire boat.

The 389-foot littoral combat ship was built in Marinette, Wisc., and has a helicopter pad, small boat ramp and can be used by small assault forces. The original USS Little Rock is 610 feet long.

“It’s a very powerful looking ship,” said Laurie Kostrzewsk­i, of Buffalo, who took pictures and video with her phone as it passed. She planned to text them to her son, who just became a U.S. Marine.

“It’s absolutely thrilling. It makes me think of him,” she said.

More than 9,000 people requested tickets to the commission­ing ceremony, organizers said.

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