Showing posts with label Fort Lauderdale in the 2000s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fort Lauderdale in the 2000s. Show all posts

Sunday, September 28, 2025

USS Fort Lauderdale highlights bond between city and U.S. Navy

 

USS Fort Lauderdale 8.14.2025. Photo by Petty Officer
 2nd Class Joseph Miller (PHIBRON)


USS Fort Lauderdale leaving Norfolk, VA 8.14.2025
Photo by Seaman Andrew Eggert, 


By Jane Feehan

The city of Fort Lauderdale and the U.S. Navy have shared a strong connection since World War II. That link served as catalyst for naming a ship the USS Fort Lauderdale.    

The Navy Air Operational Training Command (Naval Air Station) in Fort Lauderdale  trained more than 1,700 pilots and crew members for that war, including young Ensign and later President George H. W. Bush. 

Fort Lauderdale was also departure site of U.S. Navy Flight 19 with its five aircraft, and a search plane before mysteriously disappearing Dec. 5, 1945. Today the NAS operates as a museum and salute to Flight 19 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1998.

Decades later, a relationship with the U.S. Navy continues with Fleet Week in Fort Lauderdale when the city celebrates the Navy, Marines and the U.S. Coast Guard. Ships offer tours and displays of military equipment, drawing visitors from all of South Florida.

Mayor Jack Seiler (2009-2018) and Charles “Chuck” Black (d. 2016), U.S. Navy (retired), were instrumental in leading efforts for naming a ship for the city. Seiler brought a delegation to Washington, D.C. in 2011 that led to a green light in March 2016 from the U.S. Department of the Navy.

It was announced then that a ship would bear the name Fort Lauderdale, specifically a San-Antonio class ship, an amphibious transportation dock vessel. (It was reported by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel that city officials mistakenly thought the name would be assigned to a coastal combat ship.)

San Antonio-class vessels support a landing force with supplies and personnel. They are named for cities such as New Orleans and New York. Three ships also bear names as tribute to each of the three cities attacked on September 11, 2001.

The USS Fort Lauderdale LDP 28, the U.S. Navy’s 12th such vessel at the time, was built in Pascagoula, MS by Huntington Ingalls Industries. In 2025, 14 sail out of a planned 26. The vessel features advanced weapons, helicopter platforms that can also facilitate vertical takeoff and landings of other aircraft, and holds about 700 sailors and marines.

Launched on March 28, 2020, and christened Aug. 21, 2021, the USS Fort Lauderdale was delivered to the U.S. Navy Nov. 30, 2021. Its port is Naval Station Norfolk. 

The ship made national news when it was deployed to the Caribbean Sea in support of operations near Venezuela in September 2025.

No doubt locals will line up to see the first ship named for Fort Lauderdale during a future Fleet Week.

Characteristics:

684 feet long

105-foot beam

Draft 23 feet

Speed -22 knots


Sources

South Florida Sun Sentinel, March 11, 2016

South Florida Sun Sentinel, July 12, 2016

Dvidshub.net or the Defense Visual Information Distribution Service  

U.S. Navy - James L. McQuiniff CDR USN LPD28




Tags: USS Fort Lauderdale, Fort Lauderdale in the 2000s