131102-N-SF554-009 GROTON, Conn (Nov. 2, 2013) Pre-Commissioning Unit North Dakota (SSN 784) sits moored at the graving dock of General Dynamics Electric Boat prior to its christening ceremony in Groton, Conn., Nov. 2. North Dakota is the 11th Virginia-class attack submarine and is scheduled to be commissioned in early 2014. (U.S. Navy Photo by Lt. j.g. Phillip Chitty/Released)
Tag Archives: Virginia class
USS New Hampshire (SSN 778) at Gibraltar, 2012
US Navy names first 2 attack submarines to have female crew
He who rejects change is the architect of decay. The only human institution which rejects progress is the cemetery.
Navy Names First Two Attack Boats to Have Female Crew
Submarines USS Virginia (SSN-774) and USS Minnesota (SSN-783) will be the first nuclear attack boats (SSNs) to field female crewmembers, the U.S. Navy said in a Tuesday statement.
A total of six female sailors — four nuclear trained officers and two supply officers — will report to Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, Conn. no latter than January 2015, according to the statement.
“My plan is to begin by integrating four Virginia-class attack submarines, with the second set of two units being integrated in Fiscal Year (FY) 2016,” Vice Adm. Michael Connor, commander, Submarine Forces, said in the statement.
“I intend to select two Pacific Fleet submarines, homeported in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii early next year.”
Each ship will receive two nuclear qualified officers and a supply officer — to serve as a mentor— as a first step of integrating the attack boats.
“The female officers will be assigned to the Virginia-class submarines for duty after completing the nuclear submarine training pipeline, which consists of nuclear power school, prototype training and the Submarine Officer Basic Course,” according to the service.
Since the Navy got rid of the prohibition of women on submarines, the Navy has integrated seven Ohio-class nuclear guided missile (SSGN) and nuclear ballistic missile submarines (SSBN):
USS Florida (SSGN-728); USS Georgia (SSGN-729); USS Wyoming (SSBN-742); USS Ohio (SSGN-726); USS Louisiana (SSBN-743); USS Maine (SSBN-741),
The Navy began with the larger Ohios since there was more room and flexibility to provide the material accommodation to allow women to serve on submarines. Virginias have more room than the older Los Angeles-class (SSN-688) attack boats to provide berthing to female sailors.
“Female officers serving aboard Virginia-class submarines is the next natural step to more fully integrate women into the submarine force,” Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus said in a statement.
The Navy has not released a timeline on which platforms or when female enlisted will enter the submarine service.
Since the service rescinded the no-women-on-subs policy in 2010, it has brought 43 women aboard submarines.
news.usni.org/2013/10/15/navy-names-first-two-attack-boats-female-crew
VIDEO: USS Minnesota (SSN 783) is newest Virginia-class submarine
The USS Minnesota (SSN-783) was officially commissioned into the fleet on September 7, 2013.
VIDEO: The Call of Blue Water – CNO SITREP 12 (1976)
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PHOTEX: USS Tucson (SSN-770) departs Pearl Harbor for WESTPAC deployment
130905-N-CB621-035 PEARL HARBOR (Sept. 5, 2013) The Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Tucson (SSN 770), foreground, passes the Virginia-class attack submarine USS Hawaii (SSN 776) as Tucson departs Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam for a deployment to the western Pacific region. (U.S Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Jason Swink/Released)