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USS Virginia (CGN-38)

Career USN Jack
Laid down:19 August 1972
Launched:14 December 1974
Commissioned:11 September 1974
Decommissioned:10 November 1994
Fate:Scrapped
Struck:10 November 1994
General Characteristics
Displacement:11,000 tons
Length:585 feet
Beam:63 feet
Draught:31 feet
Propulsion:60,000 SHP; 2 G.E. Reactors (D2G), Geared Turbines, 2 screws
Speed:30 knots
Range:
Complement:500
Armament:2 Standard SAM/ASW (66 Missiles) 2 x 5"/54RF, 6 x12.75" TT

The fifth USS Virginia (CGN-38) was a nuclear-powered guided missile cruiser, the lead ship of her class.

She was laid down on 19 August 1972 by the Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company as a nuclear-powered, guided-missile frigate, DLGN-38; launched on 14 December 1974; sponsored by Virginia S. Warner , daughter of the Honorable John Warner, former Secretary of the Navy; reclassified as a nuclear-powered, guided-missile cruiser and redesignated CGN-38 on 30 June 1975; and commissioned on 11 September 1976, Capt. George W. Davis, Jr. , in command.

During the first six months of her commissioned service, Virginia ranged the eastern seaboard of the United States and cruised in the West Indies several times conducting a myriad of post-commissioning tests and shakedown training. On 25 April 1977, she entered the Norfolk Naval Shipyard for a five-month, post shakedown availability. She completed her final sea trials on 28 September and began duty as an operational unit of the Atlantic Fleet. In November, she cruised along the New England and Canadian coasts, participating in anti-submarine warfare exercises. In December, she returned to the West Indies for missile firings on the Atlantic Fleet weapons range. She completed that mission on 13 December and reentered Norfolk three days later to begin holiday leave and upkeep in her home port. The beginning of 1978 found her still in Norfolk; but, by mid-month, she returned to sea in the Virginia capes operating area for a series of local operations. On 28 January, however, she departed Norfolk to return to the area along the Florida coast and in the West Indies for a series of special tests conducted under the auspices of the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations. The guided-missile cruiser returned to Norfolk on 23 March and resumed local operations.

That employment lasted until 23 August when Virginia embarked upon a cruise to northern Europe to participate in Operation "Northern Wedding" , a NATO exercise, the purpose of which was to test the ability to reinforce NATO forces in western Europe. During that deployment, she visited Oslo in Norway, Rotterdam in the Netherlands, and Portsmouth in England. The warship departed the latter port on 3 October and reentered Norfolk on the 12th. On 16 November, she put to sea for training exercises in the Gulf of Mexico. During that voyage, she made a port visit at Mobile, Alabama, and conducted naval gunfire support training at Vieques Island near Puerto Rico. She made another port visit to the island of St. Thomas on 6 and 7 December before heading home. Virginia reentered Norfolk on 11 December and began preparations for her first deployment to the Mediterranean which was scheduled to commence in early 1979.

(Decommissioned and stricken from the Naval Vessel Register on 29 November 1994, VIRGINIA is scheduled to enter the Navy’s Nuclear-Powered Surface Ship and Submarine Recycling Program on 31 March 1999. Naval Institute “Proceedings,” May 1995; May 1997, need to fill in interim better.)

External links

See USS Virginia for other Navy ships of the same name.

Last updated: 06-02-2005 16:25:19
10-26-2009 08:16:03
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