USS Chafee DDG 90 / John Lester Hubbard
Chafee / Arleigh Burke class Guided Missile Destroyer – US Navy
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s e a f o r c e s – online
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Naval Forces
Technology, History & Information
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Guided Missile Destroyer
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DDG 90 -
USS Chafee
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USS Chafee (DDG 90)
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US Navy photo
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Type,
Class:
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Guided Missile Destroyer; Arleigh Burke – class / Flight
IIA;
planned and built as DDG
90; |
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Builder:
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Bath Iron Works, Bath,
Maine, USA |
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STATUS:
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Awarded: March 6, 1998; Laid down: April 12, 2001; Launched: November 11, 2002; Commissioned:
October 18, 2003; ACTIVE UNIT/ in
commission (Pacific Fleet) |
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Homeport:
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Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, USA
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Namesake:
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Named
after and in honor of John Lester Hubbard Chafee
(1922 – 1999);
> see history, below;
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Ship's
Motto:
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> COMMANDING THE SEAS <
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Technical Data:
(Measures, Propulsion, Armament,
Aviation, etc.)
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see: INFO > Guided
Missile Destroyer / Arleigh Burke - class. |
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Pictures,
photos & more ...
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John
Lester Hubbard Chafee |
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Photo credits: US Navy, US Naval
Historical Center |
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Namesake
& History: |
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John Lester Hubbard Chafee
(October 22, 1922 – October 24, 1999); |
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John Lester Hubbard Chafee (October 22, 1922 - October 24, 1999) was an American
politician. He served as an officer in the U.S. Marines, as governor of Rhode
Island, as the Secretary of the Navy, and as a United States Senator. Chafee was born in Providence,
Rhode Island to a politically active family. His great-grandfather, Henry
Lippitt, was a Rhode Island governor and among his great-uncles were a Rhode
Island governor, Charles Warren Lippitt, and United States senator Henry
Frederick Lippitt. His uncle, Zechariah Chafee, was a Harvard law professor,
and a notable civil libertarian. In 1940, he graduated from
Deerfield Academy in Massachusetts. Chafee served in the Marines during World
War II, spending his 20th birthday on Guadalcanal. He received degrees from
Yale University in 1947 and Harvard University law school in 1950. In 1951,
he was recalled to active service to be a Marine rifle company commander
during the Korean War. Chafee became active in
behind-the-scenes Rhode Island politics by helping elect a mayor of Providence
in the early 1950s. He successfully ran for a seat in the Rhode Island House
of Representatives in 1956 and later became the minority leader. He was
reelected in 1958 and 1960, the latter a year when many Republicans were
swept from office in his state. Chafee was elected governor in
1962, helping create the state's public transportation administration as well
as what was known as the Green Acres program, a conservation effort. Chafee
was head of the Republican Governors Association in the late 1960s. In 1968
he serived as chair of the Republican Governors Association. He served as
governor until 1969. He was appointed Secretary of
the Navy in 1969. His tenure as secretary was marked by a willingness to make
bold decisions and stand by them. Emblematic of this was his decision to
elevate Adm. Elmo Zumwalt as Chief of Naval Operations over 33 more senior
officers, and his judicious handling of the USS Pueblo situation. He served
as Secretary of the Navy until 1972. After an unsuccessful
candidacy for the Senate in 1972, Chafee was elected to that body in 1976,
serving as chairman of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works.
He first joined the committee in 1977 and made environmental matters a chief
concern, often breaking with his party to the delight of conservation groups. Among the bills Chafee
fostered while in the minority was the Clean Water Act of 1986, and the 1990
amendments to the Clean Air Act. He also was an architect of the Superfund
program in 1980 to clean up hazardous waste sites as well as the Oil
Pollution Act of 1990. Frequently following a
moderate path, Chafee was pro-choice on abortion and supported the North
American Free Trade Agreement. He took a moderate stance on taxes and government
assistance to the needy. On social issues, Chafee was among the most liberal
members of the Senate. He opposed the death penalty, school prayer, and the
ban on gays serving in the military. Chafee was one of the few Republicans to
support strict gun control laws. He sponsored a bill that, if passed, would
have prohibited the "manufacture, importation, exportation, sale,
purchase, transfer, receipt, possession, or transportation of handguns and
hand ammunition." "John Chafee proved that
politics can be an honorable profession," President Bill Clinton said in
a statement to the Associated Press, shortly after Chafee died. "He
embodied the decent center which has carried America from triumph to triumph
for over 200 years." Chafee sat on the U.S. Senate
Select Committee on Intelligence and was chairman of the Senate Finance
Committee's Subcommittee on Health Care, but his biggest imprint was on
environmental concerns. His last major act was
authoring and sponsoring the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century,
which authorized funding for transportation programs for the next six years. A few months after declaring
that he would not seek reelection in 2000, he died suddenly from congestive
heart failure in October 1999 at the National Naval Medical Center in
Bethesda, Maryland. His son, Lincoln Chafee was appointed to serve the
remainder of his term. USS Chafee (DDG-90) and the
John H. Chafee Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor were named
in his honor. |
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USS Chafee (DDG
90): |
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Awarded to Bath Iron Works 6 March 1988, DDG 90 was named USS Chafee by President Clinton in honor of deceased Rhode Island Senator John Chafee on 1 November 1999. Chafee (DDG 90) was laid down by Bath Iron Works, Bath ME 12 April 2001; launched 11 November 2002; and commissioned at Newport, RI 18 October 2003 with CDR John W. Ailes in command. Before steaming toward her first homeport, Pearl Harbor HI, Chafee underwent nine days of repair at Norfolk Shipbuilding & Drydock Co. to repair flaws in the hub-and-blade assembly of her propeller system which was completed by 5 November 2003. She arrived at Pearl Harbor 19 December 2003. … more DDG 90
history wanted … |
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… and patches … |
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