From NY1:
A five-blade propeller on board the SS United States helped to thrust America's flagship into the maritime history books, shattering transatlantic speed records.
Sadly, the fast ship has been dying a slow death, despite an ongoing multi-million-dollar fundraising effort to turn the iconic ocean liner into a New York-based tourist attraction.
"It's a national monument, just like the Washington Monument or the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State Building," says Jim Pollin, a cruise industry executive. "We need to SOS. Save our Ship."
Pollin recently saved the propeller by donating $120,000 and pledging another $100,000.
"Without additional support from public officials, private donors, we really are only months away from the unthinkable," says Susan Gibbs, executive director of the SS United States Conservancy. "Nothing this big and this important that bears the name of our great nation should be left to rust, or worse, scrapped."
In her heyday, the SS U.S. was a fixture in New York City, and now, the hope is that she will relocate from Philly, possibly to Brooklyn.
Friday, July 4, 2014
Historic ship may be Brooklyn-bound
Labels:
Brooklyn,
historic preservation,
ship,
USS United States
3 comments:
They should make it a homeless shelter. That way you can move it around and have it bother all the hipsters by the water.
Hipsters will just turn it into a monument hating on America.
It has been welded to the pier in Philly for at least 40 years or more. Yea, put all the illegal chilluns that are overrunning our border, with Bathhouse Barry's backing, on this thing and send it out to sea, forever, with Barry on it too.
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