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USS Portland during her sea trials in June 2017
| |
History | |
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United States | |
Name | Portland |
Namesake | Portland, Oregon |
Awarded | 27 July 2012[1] |
Builder | Ingalls Shipbuilding[1] |
Laid down | 2 August 2013[2] |
Launched | 13 February 2016[1] |
Sponsored by | Bonnie Amos[2] |
Acquired | 18 September 2017[1] |
Commissioned | 14 December 2017[1] |
Homeport | San Diego |
Identification |
|
Status | in active service |
Badge | |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock |
Displacement | 25,000 long tons (25,000 t) full |
Length | |
Beam |
|
Draft | 7 m (23 ft 0 in) |
Propulsion | Four Colt-Pielstick diesel engines, two shafts, 40,000 hp (30,000 kW) |
Speed | 22 knots (41 km/h) |
Boats & landing craft carried | |
Capacity | 699 (66 officers, 633 enlisted); surge to 800 total. |
Complement | 28 officers, 333 enlisted |
Armament |
|
Aircraft carried | 4 CH-46 Sea Knight helicopters or 2 MV-22 tilt rotor aircraft may be launched or recovered simultaneously. |
USS Portland (LPD-27) is a San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship of the United States Navy, named after the U.S. city of Portland, Oregon. The ship was laid down in 2013, launched in 2016 and commissioned in 2018. The ship was armed with a Laser Weapon System for testing.
Portland's keel was laid down on 2 August 2013, at the Ingalls Shipbuilding yard in Pascagoula, Mississippi. The ship's sponsor is Bonnie Amos, wife of U.S. Marine Corps Commandant General James F. Amos.[2] Portland was launched on 13 February 2016,[1][3][4] and she was delivered to the Navy on 18 September 2017.[5] She was commissioned on 14 December 2017,[1] but her commissioning ceremony was not held until 21 April 2018, when she was in the city of Portland for the festivities.[6][7][8] The commissioning ceremony was protested by a number of local anti-war groups, who opposed a warship being named after the city.[3][9]
A next-generation follow-on to the AN/SEQ-3 Laser Weapon System (LaWS) was slated for integration onto Portland as a technology demonstration[10] after the decommissioning of USS Ponce, which carried the LaWS before it, and was installed at the end of 2018.[11] In May 2020, Portland successfully destroyed an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) with the solid-state laser, Technology Maturation Laser Weapon System Demonstrator (LWSD) MK 2 MOD 0[12] with a power level of 150 kW.[13] On 14 December 2021, the LaWS successfully destroyed a marine target floating in the Gulf of Aden.[14]
On 27–30 May, Portland and USS Essex were open to the public as a part of Los Angeles Fleet Week 2022, in San Pedro, California.[15]
Portland was assigned as the recovery ship for the Orion capsule of the Artemis 1 uncrewed Moon-orbiting mission, successfully completed on 11 December 2022. The spacecraft's floating Orion capsule was pulled into the flooded well deck at the stern of the vessel off the coast of Baja California.[16]