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Bath Iron Works’ latest destroyer, the USS Carl M. Levin, was commissioned into service Saturday morning during a ceremony in Baltimore Harbor, Maryland.
Bath Iron Works christens latest destroyer, named after Medal of Honor recipient Harvey C. Barnum Jr. told a crowd at Bath Iron Works he was humbled and grateful the ship was named after him ...
At Bath Iron Works, shipbuilders have worked nearly exclusively on Burkes, save for the three Zumwalt-class destroyers, and they have a backlog that'll carry through the end of the decade.
General Dynamics Bath Iron Works laid the first keel of its Flight III Arleigh-Burke guided-missile destroyer, the company announced. The future USS Louis H. Wilson (DDG-126) is named after Marine ...
BATH, Maine (AP) — The first destroyer with the capability of shooting down ballistic missiles and conventional airborne threats at the same time will be built at Bath Iron Works, officials say ...
Hundreds of people attended the christening of the U.S. Navy’s latest guided missile destroyer at General Dynamics Bath Iron Works on Saturday. Nearby, dozens of protesters objected to the ...
Bath Iron Works has requested orders for construction of at least 15 destroyers, beginning in 2023. It currently has six Arleigh Burke-class ships under construction, and one Zumwalt-class ship.
Bath Iron Works has under construction the Arleigh Burke-class destroyers Carl M. Levin (DDG 120), John Basilone (DDG 122), Harvey C. Barnum Jr. (DDG 124) and Patrick Gallagher (DDG 127) as well ...
The Navy awarded General Dynamics’ Bath Iron Works a second destroyer for Fiscal Year 2019, in the first contract option that accelerates DDG buys from the Navy’s previous two-a-year rate.
Dec. 12 (UPI) --Bath Iron Works has been awarded a modified contract from the U.S. Navy for engineering and technical services for Arleigh Burke-class guided missile destroyers.The deal announced ...
The first ever Zumwalt-class destroyer was launched Monday into the Kennebec River next to the Bath, Maine shipyard of General Dynamics Bath Iron Works -- the company that built the ship.