| 
higher
resolution image
Northrop
Grumman Newport News celebrated its first submarine
christening in nearly a decade when Laura Bush,
First Lady of the United States and the ship’s
sponsor, broke a bottle of American-made sparkling
wine across the hull of the Virginia-class
submarine Texas (SSN 775). Also pictured
is U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Texas)
and Tom Schievelbein, Northrop Grumman Newport
News president.
Photo
by Chris Oxley
|
NEWPORT
NEWS, Va. – July 31, 2004 – Northrop Grumman Corporation’s
(NYSE: NOC) Newport News sector celebrated today its
first submarine christening in nearly a decade when
Laura Bush, First Lady of the United States and the
ship’s sponsor, broke a bottle of American-made sparkling
wine across the hull of the Virginia-class
submarine Texas (SSN 775). As she performed
this time-tested toast, she said, “I christen thee
United States Ship Texas. May God bless all
who sail her.”
Mrs.
Bush said the day celebrated the devotion of sailors
and shipbuilders. “She’s built by the finest craftsmen
and engineers in the world,” she said. “This magnificent
ship is a tribute to your skill.”
U.S. Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas was the keynote
speaker for the ceremony and talked about the pride
Texans feel for the first submarine named for the
Lone Star State. “This is a great day for the forces
of good in this world,” she said. “This ship is another
exhibit in our strong national resolve to win the
war on terror.”
Other ceremony participants included Northrop Grumman
Newport News President Tom Schievelbein; Secretary
of the Navy Gordon R. England; Director of Naval Reactors
Adm. Frank “Skip” Bowman; Commander of Naval Submarine
Forces Vice Adm. Kirk H. Donald; Congresswoman Jo
Ann Davis, who represents Virginia's first district;
Electric Boat President John Casey; and crew members
of the Texas who stood together in formation
during the ceremony.
The approximately 4,000 invited guests were entertained
by the U.S. Atlantic Fleet Band and the Texas A&M
Fightin' Aggie Wranglers, a country and western dance
group comprised of Texas A&M University students.
Guests included Newport News and Electric Boat employees
who are building Texas and their families, family
and friends of the Texas crew, U.S. Navy
personnel and government officials.
To
commemorate the christening ceremony and Mrs. Bush’s
role as the ship’s sponsor, Northrop Grumman Newport
News donated nearly 200 books to all of the 28 Newport
News Public Elementary Schools. The books are the
2004 Caldecott Medal and the 2004 Newberry Medal Award
winners and honor books. Jeremiah Brown, a first grader
at Doris Miller Elementary School and the son of Newport
News employee Priest W. Brown together with Allysea
Rivera, a second grader at Briarfield Elementary and
daughter of Newport News employee Heather Wright,
showed the books to Mrs. Bush as part of the ceremony.
Texas
is the second ship of the Virginia class
and one of the first warships designed for the post-Cold
War environment. With improved stealth, sophisticated
surveillance capabilities and special warfare enhancements,
it will provide undersea supremacy well into the 21st
century.
The
keel for Texas was laid on July 12, 2002,
with Laura Bush as the keel authenticator. The submarine
is scheduled for delivery to the Navy in 2005. Northrop
Grumman Newport News is teamed with General Dynamics
Electric Boat to build the first 10 ships of the Virginia
class. Current plans call for 30 Virginia class boats
in the fleet.
For more information about the Texas (SSN
775), please visit www.nn.northropgrumman.com/texas.
Northrop
Grumman Newport News, headquartered in Newport News,
Va., is the nation's sole designer, builder, and refueler
of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and one of only
two companies capable of designing and building nuclear
powered submarines. Newport News also provides after-market
services for a wide array of naval and commercial
vessels. The Newport News sector employs about 19,000
people.
CONTACT: