Northrop Grumman Participates
in Ceremonial Christening of
Full-Scale USS Monitor Replica
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(From left) The Mariners'
Museum President and CEO John Hightower and famed
author Clive Cussler lean in to watch as Nancy Petters,
the ship’s sponsor and wife of Northrop Grumman
Newport News President Mike Petters, christens the
USS Monitor replica with a bottle of American
sparkling wine.
Photo by: John Whalen
Higher
Resolution Image

During the christening
ceremony, 40 apprentices from the sector’s
apprentice school manned the ship. Apprentices built
the replica in 22 steel sections using data provided
by engineers from the CVN 21 aircraft carrier program.
Photo by: John Whalen
Higher
Resolution Image
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NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – June 12, 2006
– Northrop Grumman Corporation (NYSE: NOC) partnered
with the Mariners’ Museum, the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Navy
to christen the full-scale replica of the Civil War ironclad
USS Monitor on June 11.
More than 100 Northrop Grumman Newport News
employees were involved with the design and construction
of the 173-foot-long replica. Apprentices from the sector’s
Apprentice School built it in 22 steel sections using
data provided by engineers from the CVN 21 aircraft carrier
program. The Navy donated the structural material for
the project.
In keeping with the time-tested shipbuilding
tradition, Nancy Petters, the ship’s sponsor and
wife of Northrop Grumman Newport News President Mike Petters,
broke a bottle of American sparkling wine across the ship’s
hull. She also spoke about the important lessons the ship
has provided and will continue to provide.
“As an exact replica, she provided
the shipyard apprentices with the perfect teaching tool,”
Nancy Petters said. “One where engineers learned
how to calculate, designers learned how to draw, fitters
learned how to piece materials together, and welders learned
how to make it all permanent. And now she stands completed
before us, ready to continue to reach out to generations
of people to help them learn, not only about the Civil
War, but also about a turning point in the history of
shipbuilding itself.”
American action-adventure novelist Clive
Cussler was the keynote speaker for the ceremonial christening.
Other speakers included Newport News Mayor Joe Frank;
Capt. Craig McLean, NOAA corps officer; Rear Adm. Frederic
R. Ruehe, commander, Navy region, mid-Atlantic; Mariners’
Museum President and CEO John B. Hightower; and Mike Petters.
“Watching the hard-working men and
women of Northrop Grumman and its Apprentice School construct
this full-scale replica of the USS Monitor has
been nothing short of amazing,” Hightower said.
“The replica will provide future generations a unique
experience unmatched anywhere – a chance to imagine
first-hand what standing on board one of this country’s
greatest warships of all time must have been like. This
replica is truly an icon of the USS Monitor Center,
the City of Newport News, the state and of America’s
history.”
Since 2000, Northrop Grumman Newport News
employees have volunteered their help and expertise to
the USS Monitor recovery project by off-loading
artifacts at shipyard piers and docks, constructing conservation
tanks at the Mariners’ Museum and performing topographical
ultrasonic inspections and X-rays of the recovered items.
Northrop Grumman Newport News has donated $1 million in
financial and in-kind support to the USS Monitor Center
Capital Campaign. For more information, visit www.nn.northropgrumman.com/USSMonitor.
Mike Petters spoke about the company’s
long history with the museum and the importance of preparing
for the future by understanding the past. “We are
a company dedicated to learning,” he said. “And
we pass this knowledge from one ship to another –
from one generation to the next. Our Apprentice School
provides for that path at Newport News.”
Launched on Jan. 30, 1862, the ironclad
USS Monitor featured some of the latest advancements
in ship propulsion, vessel construction and weaponry.
The Monitor’s designer, John Ericsson,
produced an ingenious ship with a low freeboard and ship
silhouette, primary iron ship construction, below-the-waterline
operating systems, and a rotating gun turret. Though revolutionary
in design, its exterior was so simplistic it was often
referred to as a “cheese box on a raft.”
Northrop Grumman Corporation is a global
defense company headquartered in Los Angeles, Calif. Northrop
Grumman provides technologically advanced, innovative
products, services and solutions in systems integration,
defense electronics, information technology, advanced
aircraft, shipbuilding and space technology. With approximately
125,000 employees and operations in all 50 states and
25 countries, Northrop Grumman serves U.S. and international
military, government and commercial customers.