Visiting an old friend for Mardi Gras
Mobile has long had a “Mardi Gras Ship” tradition with the Navy and Coast Guard, where a transiting surface warfare asset or cutter stops in and ties up downtown by the Civic Center across from Austal for the week of Mardi Gras. The crews participate in the dozen assorted local parades (Mobilians claim to have started the modern MG parade tradition in the Gulf South with Joe Cain in 1868 and the Comic Cowboys in 1884) as well as opening the ship for the locals to tour.
While this duty is often delegated to LCSs coming out of Austal, this year the aging Flight II Burke, USS McFaul (DDG-74) was tapped, so of course I had to go visit her.
All photos by me.
Constructed at Ingalls between 1996 and 1998, I was at the yard at the time and attended her christening, having worked on subassemblies of the ship while I was a much younger man.
Now part of the Greyhounds of Norfolk-based DesRon 2 along with four of her sisterships, she supports CSG-12 centered around the USS Ford, meaning she is very much a working tin can.
Still, at almost 30 years on active duty, she looks great.

Rare to see a twin CIWS Burke these days, but at least they are 1B series guns. However, her Harpoon cans, which were under this mount before the stern VLS cluster, are gone.

Talk about a classic! The old Mk 45 5″/54 Mod 0-2 is getting rare in the fleet. It was installed pre-1999 in no less than 180 mounts across the Tarawa-class LHAs, California and Virginia class CGNs, Ticonderoga class CGs, Spruance class DDs, and Kidd class DDGs. Just the first 27 Burkes (slowly being swapped out for Mod 4s) and the last couple of active Ticos still carry them.

Along with the stbd Mk 38. Note it’s a remote-controlled and stabilized Mod 2 mount, which is far superior to the first series of Mk38s.
Note she is rocking the new AS-4692 passive direction-finding antenna, picked up at NASSCO in a refit in 2021. Keep in mind she is an SM-3 capable ship.

Meanwhile, across the river at Austal, the future USNS Point Loma (EPF 15), which was just recently launched, is fitting out.

And the final Independence-variant littoral combat ship, the future USS Pierre (LCS 38), is also nearing completion. She launched last August.




































