Posted on 07/30/2009 2:19:50 PM PDT by real saxophonist
July 28, 2009
Navy Christens New Guided Missile Destroyer Jason Dunham
The Navy will christen the newest Arleigh Burke class guided-missile destroyer, Jason Dunham, Aug. 1, 2009, during a 10 a.m. EDT ceremony at Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine.
Designated DDG 109, the new destroyer honors Cpl. Jason L. Dunham, the first Marine awarded the Medal of Honor for Operation Iraqi Freedom. Dunham was born in Scio, N.Y., Nov. 10, 1981, sharing the same birthday as the U.S. Marine Corps.
On April 14, 2004, Dunhams squad was conducting a reconnaissance mission in Karabilah, Iraq, when his battalion commanders convoy was ambushed. When Dunhams squad approached to provide fire support, an Iraqi insurgent leapt out of a vehicle and attacked Dunham. As Dunham wrestled the insurgent to the ground, he noticed that the enemy fighter had a grenade in his hand and immediately alerted his fellow Marines. When the enemy dropped the live grenade, Dunham took off his Kevlar helmet, covered the grenade, and threw himself on top to smother the blast. In an ultimate selfless act of courage, in which he was mortally wounded, he saved the lives of two fellow Marines.
Retired Gen. Michael W. Hagee, former commandant of the U. S. Marine Corps, will deliver the ceremony's principal address. Debra Dunham will serve as sponsor of the ship named for her late son. In accordance with Navy tradition, she will break a bottle of champagne across the ships bow and christen the ship.
Jason Dunham, the 59th Arleigh Burke class destroyer, will be able to conduct a variety of operations, from peacetime presence and crisis management to sea control and power projection. Jason Dunham will be capable of fighting air, surface and subsurface battles simultaneously and contains a myriad of offensive and defensive weapons designed to support maritime warfare in keeping with A Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower, the new maritime strategy that postures the sea services to apply maritime power to protect U.S. vital interests in an increasingly interconnected and uncertain world.
Cmdr. M. Scott Sciretta, born in South Amboy, N.J., is the prospective commanding officer of the ship and will lead the crew of 276 officers and enlisted personnel. The 9,200-ton Jason Dunham is being built by Bath Iron Works, a General Dynamics company.
The ship is 509 feet in length, has a waterline beam of 59 feet, and a navigational draft of 31 feet. Four gas turbine engines will power the ship to speeds in excess of 30 knots.
Additional information on Arleigh Burke class destroyers is available online at http://www.navy.mil/navydata/fact_display.asp?cid=4200&tid=900&ct=4.
God bless him...
Oorah.
Goes without saying, we all are sure she would rather have her son back, but what an honor for a Mom. Dunham. Where else have I heard that name recently?
I read this book about him a couple years ago. Debra is not his birth mother, but was his “real” mom. His biological mother did not raise him.
I cannot remember the name of the book.
I am glad you posted this. I am teaching a logistics/configuration management class next week and happened on this information about the Dunham. I will be using this ship as my example to make the class more interesting.
“Where else have I heard that name recently?”
I think if you can get hold of a certain birth certificate in Hawaii that is currently under high security in a vault in Honolulu you will find that name as the mother of an individual who would like to keep some other info on that document from ever seeing the light of day.
Please don’t soil this thread with that crap.
Thanks. I figured that would happen when I posted it.
Semper fi is right.
Awesome!
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