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Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Company (a.k.a. Lockheed Shipbuilding), was a shipyard in Seattle, Washington with Yard 1 on Harbor Island and Yard 2 at what is now Jack Block Park at Seattle Terminal 5, both at the mouth of the West Waterway of Duwamish River . Yard 1 was founded in 1898 as the Puget Sound Bridge and Dredging Company , the company that built Harbor Island, and it was purchased by Lockheed in 1959. Yard 2 began operation in 1943 to build ships for the US Navy. The shipyard was permanently closed in 1988; Yard 2 was sold in 1989, and Yard 1 was sold in 1997, both to Port of Seattle.

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12-565: FDL may refer to: Fast Deployment Logistics Ship (FDL), U.S. Navy shipbuilding program of the middle 1960s, eventually cancelled (see USNS Lynn (T-AG-182) ). Federation of Liberals (Italian: Federazione dei Liberali ), an Italian political party Federal Depository Library , a library in the Federal Depository Library Program File Definition Language - used to describe

24-655: A 45-acre (180,000 m ) shipyard on the North end of Terminal 5 at 2801 SW Florida St (Yard 2). The Lockheed Shipyard was a shipbuilding facility from the 1930s until 1988. Yard 1 was bounded on the north by Southwest Lander Street, on the east by 16th Avenue Southwest, on the south by the Fisher Mill property, and the west by the West Waterway of the Duwamish River and Yard 2 was bordered by Elliott Bay on

36-429: A British video game developer Fonds de Dotation du Libre - Libre Endowment Fund (FDL), French fund to support developers and publishers of Free and Open Source software projects GE FDL , a series of diesel engines GNU Free Documentation License United States Air Force Flight Dynamics Laboratory Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with

48-588: The public domain Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships . The entry can be found here . Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=USNS_Lynn&oldid=1253693871 " Categories : Auxiliary ships of the United States Navy Victory ships 1945 ships Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Misplaced Pages articles incorporating text from

60-460: The Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Company 47°34′36″N 122°21′29″W  /  47.5766°N 122.3581°W  / 47.5766; -122.3581 The Lockheed Shipyard Operable Unit consisted of an 18-acre (73,000 m ) shipyard facility located on the west side of Harbor Island at 2929 16th Avenue Southwest (Yard 1) and

72-641: The US Coast Guard. Lockheed won the largest shipbuilding contract in its history in 1974, when the US Navy ordered two submarine tenders to support the Los Angeles -class nuclear submarines . A subsequent order announced with launch of the lead ship, USS  Emory S. Land in 1977, added a third ship to the class. Emory S. Land and USS  Frank Cable joined the fleet in 1979, with USS  McKee joining in 1981. In 1978, Lockheed won

84-719: The 💕 (Redirected from USNS Lynn (T-AG-182) ) Ship built in 1945 Lynn Victory MCV-847 was one of 12 ships scheduled to be acquired by the Navy in February 1966 and converted into Forward Depot Ships, the forerunners of the Fast Deployment Logistics Ships (FDL). She was scheduled to be renamed Lynn and placed in service with the Military Sea Transport Service as USNS Lynn T-AG-182 . The program, however,

96-470: The mid-1960s and extending into 1971, Lockheed built and delivered seven landing platform dockships (LPDs) of the Cleveland and Trenton classes for the US Navy. These were USS  Denver , USS  Juneau , USS  Coronado , USS  Shreveport , USS  Nashville , USS  Trenton , and USS  Ponce . Between 1971 and 1977, Lockheed built two Polar-class icebreakers for

108-868: The north, the Harbor Island West Waterway Operable Unit on the east, Pacific Sound Resources (PSR) Marine Sediment Unit on the west, and the Port of Seattle Terminal 5 to the south. In the 1960s the shipyard built several of the initial ferries after the formation of the Alaska Marine Highway . Lockheed constructed several Knox -class frigates for the United States Navy in the late 1960s and early 1970s. These ships included USS  Rathburne , USS  Reasoner , USS  Stein , USS  Bagley , and USS  Robert E. Peary . Beginning in

120-544: The structure of a Record Management Services file in the OpenVMS operating system. Firebase Dynamic Links , smart URLs that link to any location within iOS, Android or web apps Firedoglake , a defunct political blog Fleur-de-lis (disambiguation) Flexor digitorum longus muscle Florida Democratic League , an American political advocacy group Fond du Lac (disambiguation) Fossa dei Leoni , an Italian football supporters organisation Four Door Lemon ,

132-507: The title FDL . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FDL&oldid=1117012546 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Articles containing Italian-language text Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages USNS Lynn (T-AG-182) From Misplaced Pages,

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144-671: Was canceled and the ships were not acquired by the Navy. Five companies competed for the Contract Definition Phase of the FDL program: Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Co. , General Dynamics Corporation , Litton Industries Inc. , Todd Shipyards Corporation , Bethlehem Steel Corporation . References [ edit ] ^ Statement of Secretary of Defense McNamara , Hearings on military posture and H.R. 13456, p. 7583. Links [ edit ] [REDACTED]   This article incorporates text from

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