VT Halter Marine, Inc. and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
launched the second of four planned NOAA fisheries survey vessels. The ship was
christened Henry B. Bigelow by Catherine Silver of Winnacunnet High School in Hampton,
N.H., on behalf of the ship’s sponsor, Mrs. Judd Gregg, wife of the senior senator from New
Hampshire. The ship will be one of the most technologically advanced fisheries survey
vessels in the world when placed in operation in late 2006.
Mrs. Gregg was unable to attend the ceremony at the shipyard in Moss Point, Miss.,
but designated Silver as her representative. Silver was the team leader of students from
Winnacunnet High School who won a regional NOAA contest in 2004 to name the ship. The
students also participated in the ship’s keel laying ceremony in May 2004. The contest was
an educational initiative to help students learn more about their region’s marine and coastal
environment as well as to generate a greater interest in scientific studies.
“The christening of Henry B. Bigelow is a significant milestone in the modernization of
our NOAA fleet,” said retired Navy Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher Jr., Ph.D., under
secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA administrator. “We
appreciate the contribution Mrs. Gregg has made as the ship’s sponsor and we are delighted
that Ms. Silver was able to represent her, maintaining the close connection between the
school and the vessel.”
“We would also like to thank Senators Gregg, Cochran and Lott and Congressman
Taylor for helping us obtain the funds to build this important asset as we carry out NOAA’s
mission to assess and protect the nation’s living marine resources. Henry B. Bigelow and its
sister ships will provide higher quality data to fisheries managers about targeted fish
populations and the environment that sustains them,” added Lautenbacher.
Henry B. Bigelow is the second of four planned 208 ft. fisheries survey vessels to be
built by VT Halter Marine that will either augment or replace aging ships in the NOAA fleet.
Its capabilities will far exceed those of older NOAA ships. It has been built to meet specific
data collection requirements of NOAA’s National Marine Fisheries Service as well as to meet
tough standards for a low acoustic signature set by the International Council for Exploration
of the Seas. This feature will allow the ship to study fish quietly without altering their
behavior. After calibration, the vessel will replace Albatross IV, and will be home ported in
New England.
Construction of the third fisheries survey vessel was kicked off yesterday at VT Halter
Marine’s Moss Point shipyard. The vessel’s base cost exceeds $39 million. Approximately
150 VT Halter Marine employees will be working on the two NOAA ships over the next three
years. This third research ship will be home ported in Pascagoula, Miss.
“VT Halter Marine has a proven global track record of designing and constructing
ships that meet our clients’ specific requirements. We are delighted to be working with
NOAA on this sophisticated new class of quiet fisheries survey vessels that will greatly
increase NOAA’s technical capabilities at sea,” said Boyd E. King, CEO of VT Halter Marine,
Inc. “Work began yesterday on the next ship in this class, which speaks positively of NOAA’s
confidence in our ability to meet their high performance standards.”
The ship’s namesake, Henry B. Bigelow, was a renowned oceanographer who
worked as a researcher, instructor and professor of zoology at Harvard from 1906 to 1962.
He was also a founder of Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in 1931. Bigelow
transformed the Gulf of Maine from a scientific unknown to one of the most thoroughly
studied bodies of water in the world and developed the interdisciplinary, ecosystem-oriented
approach that characterizes modern oceanography. Several grandchildren of Bigelow
attended the ceremony today, including Frederick S. Bigelow Jr. of Pennington, N.J., who
was a speaker.
The NOAA fleet of research and survey ships and aircraft is operated, managed, and
maintained by NOAA Marine and Aviation Operations (NMAO). NMAO includes
commissioned officers of the NOAA Corps and civilians. The NOAA Corps is the nation’s
seventh and smallest uniformed service, and, as part of NOAA, is under the U.S. Department
of Commerce.