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Newport News Shipbuilding
American shipyard
American shipyard

Newport News Shipbuilding (NNS), a division of Huntington Ingalls Industries, is the sole designer, builder, and refueler of aircraft carriers and one of two providers of submarines for the United States Navy, founded as the Chesapeake Dry Dock and Construction Co. in 1886 and located in the city of Newport News, Virginia. Newport News Shipbuilding has built more than 800 ships, including both naval and commercial ships. Its facilities span more than 550 acre.
The shipyard is a major employer for the lower Virginia Peninsula, portions of Hampton Roads south of the James River and the harbor, portions of the Middle Peninsula region, and even some northeastern counties of North Carolina.
The shipyard is building two s: , and .
In 2013, Newport News Shipbuilding began the deactivation of the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier , which it also built.
Newport News Shipbuilding also performs refueling and complex overhaul (RCOH) work on s. This is a four-year vessel renewal program that involves refueling the vessel's nuclear reactors and performing modernization work. The yard has completed RCOH for five Nimitz-class carriers (, , , and ). As of November 2017, this work was underway for the Nimitz-class vessel .
History

Industrialist Collis P. Huntington (1821–1900) provided crucial funding to complete the Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad (C&O) from Richmond, Virginia, to the Ohio River in the early 1870s. Although originally built for general commerce, this C&O rail link to the midwest was soon also being used to transport bituminous coal from the previously isolated coalfields, adjacent to the New River and the Kanawha River in West Virginia. In 1881, the Peninsula Extension of the C&O was built from Richmond down the Virginia Peninsula to reach a new coal pier on Hampton Roads in Warwick County near the small unincorporated community of Newport News Point. However, building the railroad and coal pier was only the first part of Huntington's dreams for Newport News.
The shipyard's early years



In 1886, Huntington built a shipyard to repair ships servicing this transportation hub. In 1891 Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company delivered its first ship, the tugboat Dorothy. By 1897 NNS had built three warships for the US Navy: , and .
When Collis died in 1900, his nephew Henry E. Huntington inherited much of his uncle's fortune. He also married Collis' widow Arabella Huntington, and assumed Collis' leadership role with Newport News Shipbuilding and Drydock Company. Under Henry Huntington's leadership, growth continued.
In 1906 the revolutionary launched a great naval race worldwide. Between 1907 and 1923, Newport News built six of the US Navy's total of 22 dreadnoughts – , , , , and . All but the first were in active service in World War II. In 1907 President Theodore Roosevelt sent the Great White Fleet on its round-the-world voyage. NNS had built seven of its 16 battleships.
In 1914 NNS built SS Medina for the Mallory Steamship Company; as she was until 2009 the world's oldest active ocean-faring passenger ship.
Newport News and the shipyard
In the early years, leaders of the Newport News community and those of the shipyard were virtually interchangeable. Shipyard president Walter A. Post served from March 9, 1911, to February 12, 1912, when he died. Earlier, he had come to the area as one of the builders of the C&O Railway's terminals, and had served as the first mayor of Newport News after it became an independent city in 1896. It was on March 14, 1914, that Albert Lloyd Hopkins, a young New Yorker trained in engineering, succeeded Post as president of the company. In May 1915 while traveling to England on shipyard business aboard , Hopkins died when that ship was torpedoed and sunk by a German U-boat off Queenstown on the Irish coast. His assistant, Frederic Gauntlett, was also on board, but was able to swim to safety. Homer Lenoir Ferguson was company vice president when Hopkins died, and assumed the presidency the following August. He saw the company through both world wars, became a noted community leader, and was a co-founder of the Mariners' Museum with Archer Huntington. He served until July 31, 1946, after World War II had ended on both the European and Pacific fronts.

Just northwest of the shipyard, Hilton Village, one of the first planned communities in the country, was built by the federal government to house shipyard workers in 1918. The planners met with the wives of shipyard workers. Based on their input 14 house plans were designed for the projected 500 English-village-style homes. After the war, in 1922, Henry Huntington acquired it from the government, and helped facilitate the sale of the homes to shipyard employees and other local residents. Three streets there were named after Post, Hopkins, and Ferguson.
Navy orders during and after World War I
The Lusitania incident was among the events that brought the United States into World War I. Between 1918 and 1920 NNS delivered 25 destroyers, and after the war it began building aircraft carriers. was delivered in 1934, and NNS went on to build and .
In 1917, the year the U.S entered World War I, the Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Company was contracted to build several ships for the U.S military. In order to fulfill this contract, the company had to hire thousands of employees from across the country. However, a large problem arose: the city of Newport News did not have the housing to support this large influx of its population. This led to the creation of Hilton Village, a neighborhood still found in Newport News, Virginia, today, that was created to house these workers.
Ocean liners
After World War I NNS completed a major reconditioning and refurbishment of the ocean liner . Before the war she had been the German liner Vaterland, but the start of hostilities found her laid up in New York Harbor and she had been seized by the US Government in 1917 and converted into a troopship. War duty and age meant that all wiring, plumbing, and interior layouts were stripped and redesigned while her hull was strengthened and her boilers converted from coal to oil while being refurbished. Virtually a new ship emerged from NNS in 1923, and SS Leviathan became the flagship of United States Lines.
In 1927 NNS launched the world's first significant turbo-electric ocean liner: Panama Pacific Line's . At the time she was also the largest merchant ship yet built in the United States, although she was a modest size compared with the biggest European liners of her era. NNS launched Californias sister ships Virginia in 1928 and Pennsylvania in 1929. NNS followed them by launching two even larger turbo-electric liners for Dollar Steamship Company: the in 1930, followed by her sister in 1931. was launched in 1939 and entered service with United States lines shortly before World War II but soon returned to the shipyard for conversion to a troopship, USS West Point.
Navy orders before and during World War II
_at_Newport_News_Shipbuilding_on_20_March_1942_(NH_75592).jpg)
By 1940 the Navy had ordered a battleship, seven more aircraft carriers and four cruisers. During World War II, NNS built ships as part of the U.S. government's Emergency Shipbuilding Program, and swiftly filled requests for "Liberty ships" that were needed during the war. It founded the North Carolina Shipbuilding Company, an emergency yard on the banks of the Cape Fear River and launched its first Liberty ship before the end of 1941, building 243 ships in all, including 186 Libertys. For its contributions during the war, the Navy awarded the company its "E" pennant for excellence in shipbuilding. NNS ranked 23rd among United States corporations in the value of wartime production contracts.
Post-war ships
In the post-war years NNS built the passenger liner , which set a transatlantic speed record that still stands today. In 1954 NNS, Westinghouse and the US Navy developed and built a prototype nuclear reactor for a carrier propulsion system. NNS designed in 1960. In 1959 NNS launched its first nuclear-powered submarine, .
In the 1970s, NNS launched two of the largest tankers ever built in the western hemisphere and also constructed three liquefied natural gas carriers – at over 390,000 deadweight tons, the largest ever built in the United States. NNS and Westinghouse Electric Company jointly formed Offshore Power Systems to build floating nuclear power plants for Public Service Electric and Gas Company.
In the 1980s, NNS produced a variety of Navy products, including nuclear aircraft carriers and nuclear attack submarines. Since 1999 the shipyard has only produced warships for the Navy.
Submarine building problems
In 2007, the US Navy found that workers had used the incorrect metal to fuse together pipes and joints on submarines under construction and this could have eventually led to cracking and leaks. In 2009 it was found that bolts and fasteners in weapons-handling systems on four Navy submarines, , , , and , were installed incorrectly, delaying the launching of the boats while the problems were corrected.
Mergers, realignment, and spin-off
In 1968, Newport News merged with Tenneco Corporation. In 1996, Tenneco initiated a spinoff of Newport News into an independent company (Newport News Shipbuilding). In 2001, General Dynamics made a second bid to purchase the company after a failed bid in 1999. Such a merger would have eliminated competition for the production of Virginia-class submarines, which have only been made by Newport News and GD subsidiary Electric Boat. Northrop Grumman matched GD with a similar bid, and following a Department of Justice anti-trust lawsuit to block GD's bid, GD called off their bid. Now as the sole bidder, Northrop Grumman purchased the company for $2.6 billion and renamed it "Northrop Grumman Newport News". This division was merged with Northrop Grumman Ship Systems in 2008 and given the name "Northrop Grumman Shipbuilding". Three years later, the company was spun off as Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc., which trades under the symbol HII on the New York Stock Exchange.
Presidents
- Matt Mulherin (2011–2017)
- Jennifer Boykin (2017–present)
Ships built
File:Northrop Grumman Newport News 032007 tugboat dorothy.png|Dorothy File:USS Virginia LOC npcc 32728.jpg|Virginia File:USS_Texas-2.jpg|Texas File:Moore-McCormack-Good-Neighbor-passenger-liner.jpg|California File:USS Newport News (CA-148) underway in the Mediterranean Sea on 9 September 1957.jpg|Newport News File:USS Shark SSN 591.jpg|Shark File:USS Mississippi (CGN-40).JPG|Mississippi File:USS Montana (SSN-794) conducts initial sea trials in the Atlantic Ocean on 1 February 2022 (220201-O-NO101-150).JPG|Montana File:USS Gerald R. Ford (CVN-78) underway in the Atlantic Ocean on 9 October 2022 (221009-N-TL968-1248).JPG|Gerald R. Ford
| Launch Date | Yard No. | Ship | Class and type | Operator | Notes | Ref | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1891 | '''{{ship | Dorothy | 1891 tug | 2}}''' | Shipyard's first vessel, delivered in 1891, on display in yard. | ||||||||||
| March 24, 1898 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 24, 1898 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| October 4, 1898 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| November 10, 1900 | **** | {{sclass | Arkansas | monitor | warship}} | United States Navy | One of the last monitors built for the United States Navy | ||||||||
| April 18, 1903 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| September 12, 1903 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 6, 1904 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 3, 1905 | '''{{ship | Binghampton | ferryboat | 2}}''' | ferryboat | New York Harbor | New York Harbor | Last surviving steam ferry built to serve New York Harbor when dismantled in 2017. | |||||||
| October 6, 1906 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 15, 1906 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 9, 1907 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| 1908 | '''{{SS | Georgia | 2}}''' | Oil tanker | M.V. Dutch Tanker & Oil Company | ||||||||||
| February 6, 1909 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| 1910 | '''{{ship | J. A. Chanslor | 2}}''' | Oil tanker | Associated Oil Company | ||||||||||
| May 18, 1912 | **** | United States Navy | Only surviving dreadnought battleship | ||||||||||||
| September 14, 1912 | **** | {{sclass | Proteus | collier | ship type}} | United States Navy | |||||||||
| April 26, 1913 | **** | {{sclass | Proteus | collier | ship type}} | United States Navy | |||||||||
| August 22, 1914 | 176 | '''{{SS | Medina | 2}}''' | Cargo ship | Mallory Steamship Company | Oldest passenger vessel at time of retirement in 2009. | ||||||||
| March 16, 1915 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| January 25, 1917 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 30, 1918 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 5, 1918 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 5, 1918 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| May 11, 1918 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| November 29, 1918 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| February 15, 1919 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| February 14, 1920 | **** | United States Navy | title=Abel P. Upshur (Destroyer No. 193) | url=https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/a/abel-p-upshur.html | website=Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships | publisher=Naval History and Heritage Command | access-date=September 11, 2019 | date=February 23, 2016 | quote=Abel P. Upshur (Destroyer No. 193) was laid down on 20 August 1918 at Newport News, Va., by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock Co.; launched on 14 February 1920; sponsored by Mrs. George J. Benson, great-great niece of Secretary Upshur | archive-date=September 6, 2019 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190906164959/https://www.history.navy.mil/research/histories/ship-histories/danfs/a/abel-p-upshur.html | url-status=live }} | |||
| March 20, 1920 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| November 19, 1920 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| October 1, 1927 | 315 | **** | Ocean liner | Panama Pacific Line | Turbo-electric | ||||||||||
| 1928 | **** | Ocean liner | Panama Pacific Line | ||||||||||||
| October 10, 1928 | 328 | '''{{SS | Pennsylvania | 2}}''' | Ocean liner | Panama Pacific Line | |||||||||
| September 7, 1929 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| February 1, 1930 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 9, 1930 | 339 | '''{{SS | President Hoover | 2}}''' | Ocean liner | Dollar Steamship Lines | |||||||||
| February 21, 1931 | 340 | '''{{SS | President Coolidge | 2}}''' | Ocean liner | Dollar Steamship Lines | |||||||||
| August 15, 1931 | '''{{SS | Peten | 2}}''' | Cargo liner | United Fruit Company | ||||||||||
| 1931 | '''{{SS | Talamanca | 2}}''' | Cargo liner | United Fruit Company | ||||||||||
| 1932 | '''{{SS | Chiriqui | 2}}''' | Cargo liner | United Fruit Company | ||||||||||
| February 25, 1933 | **** | United States Navy | First purpose-built aircraft carrier of the United States Navy | ||||||||||||
| April 4, 1936 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| October 3, 1936 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 3, 1936 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 8, 1938 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 8, 1938 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| August 31, 1939 | **** | Ocean liner | United States Lines | ||||||||||||
| December 14, 1940 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| November 21, 1941 | **** | battleship | United States Navy | ||||||||||||
| July 31, 1942 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 15, 1943 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 26, 1943 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| August 30, 1943 | **** | United States Navy | Preserved as the USS Hornet Museum in Alameda, California. | ||||||||||||
| October 14, 1943 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| February 7, 1944 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| June 28, 1944 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 14, 1944 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 20, 1945 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| August 23, 1945 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| April 2, 1946 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 6, 1948 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| June 23, 1951 | '''{{SS | United States | 2}}''' | Ocean liner | United States Lines | Holder of the Blue Riband. | |||||||||
| December 11, 1954 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| September 29, 1956 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| December 18, 1959 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| March 16, 1960 | **** | United States Navy | Yard's first nuclear-powered submarine. | ||||||||||||
| September 24, 1960 | **** | United States Navy | World's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. | ||||||||||||
| September 16, 1961 | '''{{ship | TS | Empire State VI | 2}}''' | Troopship | United States Maritime Administration | |||||||||
| February 1, 1964 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| May 27, 1967 | **** | United States Navy | |||||||||||||
| May 13, 1972 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered. | ||||||||||||
| December 14, 1974 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered. | ||||||||||||
| August 9, 1975 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered. | ||||||||||||
| October 11, 1975 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered. | ||||||||||||
| July 31, 1976 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| October 21, 1978 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| March 15, 1980 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| October 27, 1984 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| February 13, 1988 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| July 21, 1990 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| November 13, 1993 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| September 7, 1996 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| March 4, 2001 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| October 9, 2006 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| October 11, 2013 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered | ||||||||||||
| October 29, 2019 | **** | United States Navy | Nuclear-powered |
Other ships built at the Newport News yard include:
- nuclear-powered aircraft carriers:
- , under construction
- USS Doris Miller (CVN-81), under construction
- Liberty ship transports for the Allies during World War II
- nuclear-powered submarines
- nuclear-powered submarines
Gallery
USS Ronald Reagan christening.jpg|Ronald Reagan Christening Northrop Grumman Newport News 032007 015.png|North Yard Crane F-A-18F Super Hornet approaches to USS Gerald R. Ford.jpg| NNSX 41809 June 10 2008.JPG|Newport News Shipbuilding Foundry & Switch Engine
Ships rebuilt
- , the first sea-going electric power plant for emergencies
- , wrecked ship that was salvaged and her still-operational stern and machinery spaces rebuilt and used in the construction of a new chemical tanker, the Chemical Discoverer, later renamed Chemical Pioneer
World War II Shipbuilding Facilities
| Shipway | Width | Length | Type | Date | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 76 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 76 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 76 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 76 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 96 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 76 ft | 628 ft | Inclined Slipway | ||||||||||||
| 111 ft | 1000 ft | Semi-submerged Inclined Slipway | 1919 | |||||||||||
| 111 ft | 1000 ft | Semi-submerged Inclined Slipway | 1919 | |||||||||||
| 128 ft | 960 ft | Graving Dock | 1941 | |||||||||||
| 140 ft | 1100 ft | Graving Dock | 1941 |
References
References
- "Enterprise (CVN 80) Advanced Planning Contract Awarded".
- (December 28, 2018). "HII gets additional $228m for ''Enterprise'' (CVN-80) long lead time materials". navaltoday.com..
- "HII Awarded $745 Million Contract to Inactivate USS ''Enterprise'' (CVN 65)".
- "Refueling and Complex Overhaul (RCOH)". Huntington Ingalls Industries, Inc..
- [http://nns.huntingtoningalls.com/videos/uss-george-washington-cvn73-arrives-rcoh/ USS George Washington CVN73 arrives for RCOH] {{Webarchive. link. (May 13, 2018 , Newport News Shipbuilding, Access date May 10, 2018)
- (July 25, 2011). "Mr. Albert Lloyd Hopkins". The Lusitania Resource.
- Ruegsegger, Bob. "Authenticity Regs & More". Great War Association.
- (August 13, 1915). "Ferguson Becomes Head of Shipbuilding Plant". Richmond Times-Dispatch.
- "Hilton Village 1969 Nomination Form, p2-3". US Department of the Interior.
- Mulrooney, M. M. (1990). Hilton Village, Virginia: The Government’s First Model Industrial Community. ProQuest Dissertations & Theses.
- (May 9, 1938). "Panama Pacific Lines finished". Michael L Grace.
- (1962). "The Weapons Acquisition Process: An Economic Analysis". [[Harvard Business Press]].
- "Ships Built By Newport News Shipbuilding". Huntington-Ingalls.
- Frost, Peter, "Northrop Moving Forward On Submarine Investigation", ''[[Newport News Daily Press]]'', September 30, 2009.
- "Our Heritage".
- "Shipbuilding deal floated".
- "General Dynamics calls off Newport bid".
- "Northrop to buy Newport News for $2.6B – Nov. 8, 2001".
- "Photo Release -- Northrop Grumman Announces Key Leadership and Organizational Changes".
- link. (May 30, 2011)
- "Newport News Shipbuilding president Matt Mulherin to retire".
- "The Power List - Jennifer Boykin, president, Newport News Shipbuilding".
- (February 23, 2016). "Abel P. Upshur (Destroyer No. 193)". Naval History and Heritage Command.
- "Pacific marine review".
- (1949). "A Statistical Summary of Shipbuilding Under the U. S. Maritime Commission During World War II". U.S. Government Printing Office.
- (1941). "National Defense Migration: Washington, D. C., hearings, March 24-26, 1941. pt.12. San Diego, June 12-13, 1941". U.S. Government Printing Office.
- (1949). "The Ports of Hampton Roads, Virginia". U.S. Government Printing Office.
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