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TS Kennedy

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USTS Kennedy anchored in Mayaguez Bay, Puerto Rico (2022)
History
United States
NameUSTS Kennedy
NamesakeKennedy Family
OwnerU.S. Maritime Administration
OperatorTexas A&M University at Galveston
Port of registryBuzzards Bay
RouteGalveston, TX
BuilderAvondale Shipyards, New Orleans, Louisiana
Cost$10.5 Million
Yard number1069
Way number182
Laid down24 February 1966
Launched16 July 1966
Acquired15 July 1967 [1]
In service1967
RenamedSS Velma Lykes, SS Cape Bon, TS Enterprise, TS Kennedy
Reclassified2001
Refit2001
HomeportCape Cod, Massachusetts
Identification
FateTraining Vessel Texas A&M University at Galveston
StatusReady Reserve Fleet, Training Vessel
General characteristics
TypeTraining Ship/Troopship
Displacement18,549 long tons (18,847 t)
Length540 ft (160 m)
Beam76 ft (23 m)
Height119 ft 0 in (36.27 m) from keel to radar mast
Draft28 ft 6 in (8.69 m)
Depth42 ft 6 in (12.95 m)
Decks8
Installed power2 x GE ATI Turbine 750kW, ABB Wartsila Diesel 1.3MW, Caterpillar 3406 365bhp
Propulsion2 × Marine D Type 600 PSI Foster Wheeler Boilers, De Laval steam turbine, single screw, 15,500 horsepower
Speed21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph)
Range10,000 nautical miles
Complement710
Crew43
Time to activate3 days
Aircraft carriedNone
Aviation facilitiesWinch-Only Helicopter Deck

USTS Kennedy (T-AK-5059), callsign KVMU, IMO number 6621662, is a former commercial freighter and a current training vessel of the United States Maritime Service.

Construction and Early Years

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Kennedy moored at the Massachusetts Maritime Academy Pier (2021) United States Training Ship Kennedy was laid down in 1964 as Velma Lykes, a Maritime Administration (MARAD) break bulk cargo freighter type (C4-S-66a) hull under Maritime Administration contract (MA 182) at Avondale Industries, New Orleans, LA. She was delivered to Lykes Brothers Steamship Company in 1966. She was known as Velma Lykes until the vessel was reacquired by MARAD and she was renamed Cape Bon.

Government Service

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The SS Cape Bon was acquired by the Maritime Administration on 26 June 1985, and was placed in reserve at Suisun Bay, Benicia, CA, as part of the National Defense Reserve Fleet. In September 1985, she was renamed SS Cape Bon (AK-5059).[2] She served the US Government for over 20 years including several tours to the Persian Gulf as part of the First Gulf War.

In 2001, Cape Bon was moved to Buzzards Bay, MA for preparation to replace Patriot State as the Training Ship for the Massachusetts Maritime Academy. She was converted to be a training ship at Bender Ship Repair in Mobile, Alabama, being delivered and christened Enterprise, after the school's original training ship USS Enterprise, on National Maritime Day 2003. She was renamed Kennedy in January 2009 in honor of the Kennedy Family.[3] The TS Kennedy made 23 training cruises with the Massachusetts Maritime Academy. The ship carried thousands of cadets during her service, calling in many Caribbean Island ports as well as making multiple Panama Canal transits.

TS Kennedy was transferred to the Texas A&M Maritime Academy on the Galveston Campus of Texas A&M University in 2023 and departed Galveston for a 70-day cadet training at sea semester on June 7, 2023.[4][5] She has served as the academy's training ship since and is expected to remain with Texas A&M until 2025, when the new MARAD training ship MV Lone Star State is scheduled to replace her.[6]

Relief Work

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Kennedy was deployed to New York Harbor in support of Hurricane Sandy relief efforts in 2012 and Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico in 2017. Its mission was to house first responders and FEMA SCF personnel [7][8]

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
TS Kennedy is a former training ship that was operated by the Texas A&M University Maritime Academy in Galveston, Texas, from 2023 until its decommissioning in September 2025. Originally constructed in 1964 at Avondale Shipyards in New Orleans as the commercial freighter SS Velma Lykes and launched in 1967 for Lykes Brothers Steamship Company, the vessel underwent multiple renamings and repurposings, including service as SS Cape Bon in 1985, USTS Enterprise in 2003, and its designation as TS Kennedy since 2009.[1] It was transferred to Texas A&M in 2023 after prior operation by the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, and relinquished to the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD) in September 2025.[1][2] Throughout its history, TS Kennedy participated in significant events, marking milestones such as being the first U.S. vessel to call at Whampoa, China, in 1979, and providing support during military activations like Operation Desert Storm in 1991, as well as disaster relief efforts including Hurricane Sandy in 2012 and multiple hurricane responses in 2017.[1] As a steam-powered training vessel—one of the few remaining in service—it facilitated hands-on education for up to 600 cadets alongside a crew of 43, covering topics from navigation and engineering to safety protocols during sea terms.[1] The ship's specifications include a length of 540 feet, a beam of 76 feet, a draft of 28 feet 6 inches, and a displacement of 18,549 long tons, powered by a 15,500 horsepower steam turbine enabling a maximum speed of 21 knots and a range of 10,000 nautical miles.[1] With eight decks and a helicopter pad for winch operations, it supported comprehensive maritime training while maintaining its IMO number 6621662 and callsign KVMU under the U.S. flag.[1][3]

Construction and Commercial Service

Building and Launch

The SS Velma Lykes was laid down in 1964 at Avondale Shipbuilding in New Orleans, Louisiana, as a Maritime Administration type C4-S-66a hull under contract MA 182.[4] This design was part of the Gulf and Far East Clipper class, consisting of twelve subsidized breakbulk cargo freighters built between 1965 and 1968 for Lykes Brothers Steamship Company.[5] The hull was optimized for general cargo transport, featuring a length of 540 feet, a beam of 76 feet, and a summer draft of 33 feet to accommodate versatile loading of palletized goods, containers, and bulk items across six hatches.[6] Construction progressed at the shipyard, known then as Avondale Marine Ways, with the vessel launched on July 16, 1966.[4] The launch marked a key milestone in the build program, reflecting the yard's expertise in modular assembly techniques for efficient production of automated cargo ships. Following outfitting, the Velma Lykes completed builder's sea trials in the Gulf of Mexico, demonstrating reliable performance in speed, stability, and machinery operation prior to acceptance.[4] The completed freighter was delivered to Lykes Brothers Steamship Company on July 15, 1967, entering commercial service as a modern breakbulk carrier capable of 20 knots and designed for routes between U.S. Gulf ports and East Asia.[4] Sister ships in the class, such as the Letitia Lykes, had similar construction costs around $12 million, underscoring the investment in advanced automation and cargo-handling features.[7]

Operations as SS Velma Lykes and SS Cape Bon

The SS Velma Lykes entered service in 1967 as a break-bulk cargo freighter for the Lykes Brothers Steamship Company, operating primarily out of U.S. Gulf Coast ports.[8] Built under a Maritime Administration subsidy as part of the C4-S-66a class, the vessel supported key U.S. export-import trade routes, including those connecting the Gulf Coast to the Caribbean, South America, Europe, and the Far East.[9][8] Her cargo typically consisted of general goods such as steel products, machinery, and perishable items, reflecting Lykes Brothers' focus on versatile break-bulk transport to facilitate American commerce in emerging global markets.[9] Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, the Velma Lykes exemplified the role of subsidized U.S.-flag vessels in sustaining national trade amid economic pressures, including rising fuel costs and competition from foreign-flagged ships with lower operational expenses.[10] Lykes Brothers, as one of the larger U.S. operators with over 40 vessels by the mid-1970s, relied on such ships to maintain routes vital for exporting U.S. agricultural and industrial products while importing raw materials and consumer goods.[11] The vessel's typical crew numbered 30 to 40 members, including officers, engineers, and deckhands, standard for break-bulk freighters of her size during this era.[12] A notable highlight in her commercial career occurred in 1979, when the Velma Lykes became the first U.S.-flag merchant vessel to dock at the Chinese port of Whampoa since the 1949 communist revolution, marking a pivotal moment in normalizing U.S.-China trade relations.[5] This voyage underscored the ship's contribution to expanding American shipping access to Asia amid diplomatic thawing. While no major incidents or extensive refits are documented during her Lykes service, the vessel underwent routine maintenance to meet evolving efficiency standards in an industry shifting toward containerization.[10] By 1985, after nearly two decades of commercial operations, the Velma Lykes was acquired by the Maritime Administration and renamed SS Cape Bon for inclusion in the Ready Reserve Force, transitioning from active trade to strategic reserve status.[8] In this capacity, she conducted limited operational readiness exercises but saw no significant commercial voyages, aligning with the broader U.S. maritime strategy of preserving sealift capability during a period of fleet contraction.[10]

Government Acquisition and Conversion

Acquisition by MARAD

In 1985, the Maritime Administration (MARAD) acquired the vessel from Lykes Brothers Steamship Company and integrated it into the Ready Reserve Force (RRF), renaming it SS Cape Bon to serve as a breakbulk cargo ship capable of rapid activation for national defense needs.[13][1] During the 1990–1991 Gulf War, the SS Cape Bon was activated from the RRF and deployed to the Persian Gulf, where it transported military cargo such as vehicles, equipment, and supplies in support of Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm under the U.S. Navy's Military Sealift Command, designated as T-AK-5059.[4][14] After the conflict concluded, the ship was inactivated in 1991 and returned to the Ready Reserve Force for maintenance and preservation within the National Defense Reserve Fleet.[15] There, it participated in routine maintenance programs and readiness drills typical of RRF vessels to ensure operational capability upon recall.[16] Throughout this government service phase, the SS Cape Bon retained its International Maritime Organization (IMO) number 6621662 and was assigned the callsign KVMU.[1][3]

Refitting as a Training Ship

In October 1999, President Bill Clinton authorized the conversion of the SS Cape Bon into a training vessel for the Massachusetts Maritime Academy (MMA), with an initial budget of $25 million.[5] The refit began on January 1, 2001, at Bender Ship Repair in Mobile, Alabama, where the cargo ship underwent extensive modifications to serve as a floating campus.[5] Work included converting cargo holds 3 and 4 into berthing areas for up to 600 cadets, transforming hold 5 into classrooms and laboratories, adding a new superstructure with training facilities, installing a helicopter deck, a 5-ton crane, and a Wartsila emergency generator, and removing much of the original cargo handling equipment to create instructional spaces.[5] Due to delays and unforeseen issues, the project extended beyond initial timelines and costs escalated to over $32 million by completion in 2003.[5] Upon delivery to MMA, the vessel was certified by the U.S. Coast Guard as a Public Nautical School Ship and classed by the American Bureau of Shipping, enabling its integration into state maritime academy training programs.[5] It was christened TS Enterprise in 2003, honoring the academy's first training ship from 1893.[5] In 2009, following a $10 million rehabilitation, the ship was renamed TS Kennedy to honor President John F. Kennedy and his family's maritime legacy.[17][18]

Service as Training Vessel

Operations with Massachusetts Maritime Academy

Upon completion of its conversion, the TS Kennedy was assigned to the Massachusetts Maritime Academy (MMA) in 2003 as its primary training vessel, serving in this capacity until 2023.[2] Initially christened TS Enterprise, it was renamed TS Kennedy in January 2009 to honor the Kennedy family.[2] Owned by the Maritime Administration (MARAD) and operated in partnership with MMA, the vessel integrated directly into the academy's hands-on maritime education programs.[19] The TS Kennedy facilitated annual Sea Term cruises, typically lasting six to eight weeks during the summer or winter semesters, where cadets gained practical experience in navigation, marine engineering, and seamanship.[20] These voyages emphasized essential skills such as watchstanding, ship operations, and maintenance drills, transforming the ship into a floating classroom with onboard labs and simulators.[21] Cadets majoring in marine transportation or engineering were required to complete multiple Sea Terms aboard the vessel to meet U.S. Coast Guard licensing standards.[22] Routes varied annually but commonly included transatlantic crossings to ports in Europe, such as Halifax, Nova Scotia, and voyages through the Caribbean Sea and Gulf of Mexico with stops at key international and domestic harbors.[23][20] Over its two decades with MMA, the ship conducted numerous such cruises, training thousands of cadets and contributing to the academy's strong outcomes, including an 82% overall graduation rate.[24][2] During the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the TS Kennedy conducted a limited test training cruise from Mobile, Alabama, to Cape Cod, Massachusetts, carrying 44 cadets from multiple academies to demonstrate safe at-sea operations.[25] In 2010, the TS Kennedy underwent significant maintenance, entering drydock at the Brooklyn Navy Yard for $3.5 million in upgrades and repairs to ensure continued operational reliability.[26][27] This refit supported its role in the academy's curriculum without major disruptions to training schedules.

Training Cruises and Cadet Programs

The training cruises of the TS Kennedy during its tenure with the Massachusetts Maritime Academy typically lasted 52 to 60 days, departing from the academy's campus in Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts. These voyages served as intensive at-sea components of the cadets' education, combining practical shipboard duties with academic instruction to meet U.S. Coast Guard licensing requirements. Cadets rotated through structured schedules that included watchstanding, maintenance, and emergency drills, fostering skills essential for professional mariners.[22][28] Each cruise carried approximately 600 cadets, organized into rotating watches—typically four sections—to maintain 24-hour operations while allowing time for training rotations. The program emphasized hands-on learning in core areas such as celestial navigation, where cadets completed projects using onboard equipment and lectures; damage control, involving firefighting, flooding response, and equipment familiarization; and adherence to international regulations, including the International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea (COLREGS) during bridge watch duties. Laboratory sessions and port operations further reinforced these skills, with cadets handling navigation, engineering, and cargo simulations representative of commercial maritime environments.[29][30][31][32] Itineraries varied but often included U.S. East Coast and Caribbean ports, such as Charleston, South Carolina; San Juan, Puerto Rico; and Tampa, Florida, providing opportunities for international exposure and compliance with port protocols. Over its tenure with MMA, the TS Kennedy trained thousands of cadets, contributing to the academy's strong outcomes in U.S. Coast Guard licensure exams, with pass rates reaching 71% for marine transportation and 81% for marine engineering in 2023. Logistical elements, including international clearances for foreign ports, were integrated into cadet responsibilities, teaching procedures for customs, immigration, and safety inspections to ensure seamless operations.[33][34][25][35]

Relief and Special Missions

Hurricane Sandy Response

In November 2012, following the devastation caused by Hurricane Sandy along the U.S. East Coast, the Training Ship (TS) Kennedy was activated by the Maritime Administration (MARAD) at the request of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to serve as a floating base of operations in New York Harbor.[36] The vessel departed from its home port at Massachusetts Maritime Academy in Buzzards Bay on November 1, arrived at Staten Island on November 5, and remained operational until its departure on December 15, providing critical logistical support during the immediate recovery phase.[36] The TS Kennedy functioned as a temporary dormitory and cafeteria, housing up to approximately 1,200 federal workers, including FEMA personnel, Department of Homeland Security Surge Capacity Force volunteers, and first responders such as power restoration crews and foresters.[37] It offered essential utilities including berthing in shared cabins with stacked bunks, hot showers, electricity, potable water, and two daily hot meals served in the mess hall, accommodating varying shift schedules among the responders.[36] The ship's professional crew, augmented by additional officers, managed these services while docked at the Navy Home Port pier on Staten Island, ensuring a safe and functional environment despite the responders' lack of prior maritime experience, which required basic onboard orientation.[38] Operational challenges included rapid activation—completed in about 18 to 24 hours, half the typical preparation time—and adapting to unexpected influxes of personnel, such as 40 foresters arriving on November 6, which necessitated flexible meal timing and resource allocation amid the broader post-storm disruptions in the harbor area.[36][38] In recognition of their humanitarian efforts, the officers and crew of the TS Kennedy received the Admiral of the Ocean Sea Mariners Plaque from the American Overseas Marine company, nominated for their exemplary service in housing relief workers during the disaster response.[39] Additionally, the crew was awarded the U.S. Merchant Marine Medal for Outstanding Achievement by MARAD for their contributions to the relief mission.[36]

Hurricane Maria Deployment

In the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, which struck Puerto Rico on September 20, 2017, the TS Kennedy was activated by the Maritime Administration (MARAD) under a Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) mission assignment to support recovery operations. The vessel, operated by the Massachusetts Maritime Academy, sailed from its prior deployment in Texas following Hurricane Harvey and arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on September 27, 2017.[40] Moored at the Luis A. Ayala Colon pier, it served as a floating base for up to 600 FEMA-approved personnel and first responders, providing essential berthing and logistical support amid widespread infrastructure damage.[41] The TS Kennedy's primary role was to house and feed relief workers, enabling them to focus on distributing aid and restoring services across the island.[42] By October 30, 2017, the ship had delivered nearly 12,000 berthing nights and served 26,515 meals to support ongoing response efforts. This effort complemented broader federal operations, including those by the U.S. Navy's USNS Comfort, by freeing up land-based resources strained by the disaster.[42] The deployment lasted approximately six weeks, with FEMA extending the ship's presence until November 10, 2017, to maintain continuity in recovery support. Upon completion, the TS Kennedy underwent standard post-mission procedures before returning to Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, on November 17, 2017.[41] Throughout the operation, the vessel's contributions helped sustain the influx of federal responders, facilitating faster aid distribution in a region where power outages and damaged ports had severely hampered logistics.[43]

Transfer and Decommissioning

Move to Texas A&M Maritime Academy

In 2023, the Training Ship (TS) Kennedy was transferred from the Massachusetts Maritime Academy to the Texas A&M Maritime Academy at Texas A&M University at Galveston to replace the academy's smaller and aging training vessel, the TS General Rudder, thereby enhancing hands-on training capacity for cadets in navigation, engineering, and maritime operations.[44] The handover, facilitated by the U.S. Maritime Administration (MARAD), which owns the federally managed vessel and allocates it among state maritime academies, occurred following successful legislative advocacy in Washington, D.C., with operational authority officially passed to Texas A&M around April 20, 2023.[44][45] The ship, already designated as TS Kennedy since its service with Massachusetts, required no renaming, and MARAD provided oversight to ensure compliance with federal training standards during the transition.[44] Integration into the Texas A&M program involved aligning the vessel's operations with the academy's curriculum, which emphasizes Gulf Coast maritime needs, while transitioning the crew through a mix of retained personnel and new hires to meet Texas-specific licensing and safety protocols.[46] The inaugural voyage under Texas A&M command was a 70-day Summer Sea Term cadet training cruise departing Galveston on June 7, 2023, which sailed to ports including Curaçao, Georgia, Puerto Rico, and Louisiana, providing practical experience in seamanship and international navigation before returning in August.[44][47]

Final Service and Repossession by MARAD

During its final years of operation under the Texas A&M Maritime Academy, the TS Kennedy conducted two full sea terms in 2024 and 2025, departing from Galveston, Texas, and training approximately 500 cadets combined through hands-on instruction in navigation, engineering, and maritime operations along routes in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean.[48][49] The vessel's concluding voyage, known as the "Final Summer of Steam," commenced on May 18, 2025, from Galveston, with a key stop in New York City on May 28, 2025, followed by international ports including Belfast, Northern Ireland; Halifax, Nova Scotia; and Portland, Maine, before concluding with a stop in Port Houston in August 2025. This joint sea term included cadets from both the Texas A&M Maritime Academy and the Maine Maritime Academy.[49][50][51] On September 16, 2025, the Maritime Administration (MARAD) repossessed the TS Kennedy from Texas A&M, as the academy prepared for the delivery of its replacement vessel, the TS Lone Star State, in 2026; the ship was subsequently placed in reserve status at the Beaumont Reserve Fleet in Beaumont, Texas.[2][52] The decommissioning marked the end of 58 years of active service for the TS Kennedy in merchant marine training and national security missions, during which it supported the education of thousands of cadets and participated in disaster relief efforts. A farewell ceremony featured cadets saluting the vessel as it departed Galveston, honoring its legacy as a cornerstone of U.S. maritime education.[2][52]

Technical Specifications

Dimensions and Capacity

The TS Kennedy measures 540 feet (165 m) in length overall, with a beam of 76 feet (23 m) and a design draft of 28 feet 6 inches (8.7 m).[1] These dimensions reflect its origins as a C4-S-66a breakbulk freighter, providing a stable platform for maritime training operations. The vessel's height from the baseline to the radar mast stands at 119 feet (36 m), depth is 42 feet 6 inches (12.95 m), and it has 8 decks, accommodating extensive deck space for educational facilities and lifeboats.[1] In terms of displacement, the Kennedy has a light ship displacement of 12,892 long tons and a full load displacement of 18,549 long tons, with gross registered tonnage listed at 13,886.[8] Its deadweight tonnage (DWT) is 14,897 long tons, which originally supported substantial cargo operations as a commercial freighter.[53] Following its conversion to a training ship, cargo capacity was significantly reduced, with former hold spaces repurposed for educational and living quarters; for instance, the #3 hold's lower tween deck was transformed into berthing for 90 cadets, and aft boat deck areas into staterooms for 18 officers.[54] The vessel's accommodation capacity supports up to 600 cadets and 43 crew members (total approximately 643), distributed across multiple berthing layouts including double-occupancy cabins, mess halls, and recreational gyms.[1] These arrangements were enhanced during the 2003 refit to prioritize training functionality over original freighter configurations, which featured limited crew quarters focused on cargo handling. The maximum berthing capacity is 710.[8]
SpecificationValue
Length Overall540 ft (165 m)
Beam76 ft (23 m)
Draft (Design)28 ft 6 in (8.7 m)
Displacement (Full Load)18,549 long tons
Gross Tonnage13,886
Deadweight Tonnage14,897 long tons
Personnel Capacity643 (600 cadets + 43 crew)

Propulsion and Performance

The TS Kennedy is powered by a steam propulsion system featuring two Foster Wheeler D-type boilers rated at 600 PSI, which generate steam for a single De Laval reduction gear steam turbine connected to a single screw propeller.[1][8] This configuration produces 15,500 shaft horsepower, enabling reliable operation as one of the last steam-driven training vessels in the U.S. Merchant Marine fleet.[1][55] The vessel's maximum speed is 21 knots (39 km/h; 24 mph), with a reported service speed around 20 knots.[1][8] At cruising speeds, it achieves a range of 10,000 nautical miles, supported by a fuel oil capacity of 2,503 tons of bunker fuel.[1][8] Auxiliary power is provided by two GE ATI turbines (750 kW each), an ABB Wärtsilä diesel generator (1.3 MW), and a Caterpillar 3406 generator, ensuring operational redundancy during training voyages.[1] The engine room layout emphasizes educational access, allowing up to 600 cadets to gain practical experience in steam boiler operations, turbine maintenance, and propulsion engineering under supervised conditions.[1][46] Following its 2003 conversion from the commercial freighter SS Cape Bon, the propulsion systems were integrated into a training-oriented design, though detailed performance metrics such as fuel consumption rates remain primarily documented in internal service logs rather than public sources. As of September 2025, the vessel was returned to MARAD following its service with Texas A&M Maritime Academy.[8][54][2]

References

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