In 2013, after AFSB conversion
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | Ponce |
Namesake | Ponce, Puerto Rico |
Ordered | 17 May 1965 |
Builder | Lockheed Shipbuilding |
Laid down | 31 October 1966 |
Launched | 20 May 1970 |
Commissioned | 10 July 1971 |
Decommissioned | 14 October 2017 |
Stricken | 13 November 2017 |
Homeport | Norfolk, Virginia |
Identification |
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Nickname(s) | Proud Lion |
Fate | Scrapped in Brownsville 2022 |
Badge | |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Austin-class amphibious transport dock |
Displacement | 8883 tons light, 16591 tons full, 7708 tons dead |
Length |
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Beam |
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Draft |
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Speed | 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph) |
Complement | 29 officers, 487 men |
Armament |
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USS Ponce (AFSB(I)-15) (formerly LPD-15) (/ˈpɒnseɪ/ PON-say), was an Austin-class amphibious transport dock, formerly in service with the United States Navy. She has been the only ship of the Navy named for Ponce in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, which in turn was named after the Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León, the first governor of Puerto Rico and the European discoverer of Florida. Her keel was laid down on 31 October 1966 by the Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Company of Seattle, Washington. She was launched on 20 May 1970 sponsored by Florence W. Hyland, the wife of Admiral John J. Hyland, and commissioned on 10 July 1971.[3] She spent most of her career based on the East Coast and operating in the Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea, serving in Operation Desert Shield and supporting US operations in the 2011 Libyan Civil War.
It was intended that the ship would be decommissioned in 2012, but she gained a reprieve to be converted at short notice into a testbed for the Afloat Forward Staging Base (AFSB) concept, in which she would act as a base for mine-sweeping MH-53E Sea Dragon helicopters in the Persian Gulf. Following the conversion, Ponce had been used to test other initiatives and technologies, such as the Laser Weapon System and operating US Army attack helicopters at sea. After the arrival of USS Lewis B. Puller as a permanent AFSB (now designated as Expeditionary Mobile Base (ESB)),[4] Ponce was decommissioned in October 2017 after 46 years of service and 27 deployments.[5]