FACTOID # 125: India’s criminal courts acquitted over a million defendants in 1999, more than the next 48 surveyed countries combined.
 
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Encyclopedia > Puget Sound Navy Yard

Puget Sound Naval Shipyard (PSNS) is a United States Navy shipyard covering 179 acres (0.7 km²) of property bordered on the south by Sinclair Inlet, on the west by the Bremerton Annex of Naval Base Kitsap, and on the north and east by the city of Bremerton, Washington. It is the Pacific Northwest's largest naval shore facility and one of Washington state's largest industrial installations. PSNS provides the Navy with maintenance, modernization, and technical and logistics support.


Puget Sound Naval Shipyard was established in 1891 as a Naval Station and was designated Navy Yard Puget Sound in 1901. During World War I, the Navy Yard constructed ships, including 25 subchasers, seven submarines, two minesweepers, seven sea-going tugs, and two ammunition ships, as well as 1,700 small boats. During World War II, the shipyard's primary effort was the repair of battle damage to ships of the U.S. fleet and those of its allies.


Following World War II, Navy Yard Puget Sound was designated Puget Sound Naval Shipyard. It engaged in an extensive program of modernizing carriers, including converting conventional flight decks to angle decks. During the Korean War, the shipyard was engaged in the activation of ships. In the late 1950s, it entered an era of new construction with the building of a new class of guided missile frigates. In 1965, USS Sculpin (SSN 590) became the first nuclear-powered submarine to be worked on at PSNS.


In 1990 the Navy authorized the Ship-Submarine Recycling Program (SRP) to recycle nuclear-powered ships at PSNS. Approximately 25% of the shipyard's workload involves inactivation, reactor compartment disposal, and recycling of ships. It has pioneered an environmentally safe method of deactivating and recycling nuclear-powered ships. This process places the U.S. Navy in the role of being the world's only organization to design, build, operate, and recycle nuclear-powered ships.


External links

  • Puget Sound Naval Shipyard website (http://www.psns.navy.mil)

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Mesothelioma SOS - Asbestos Exposure at Puget Sound Shipyard (502 words)
Many questioned why a Navy Yard was needed on the west coast but threats from Japan to take over the Philippines and other Pacific islands fueled the desire to have such a facility located near the Pacific Ocean.
Employment at Puget Sound fell after the war and rose again during the Korean conflict.
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Puget Sound Naval Shipyard (307 words)
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard (PSNS) covers 179 acres of property bordered on the south by Sinclair Inlet[?], on the west by Naval Station Bremerton[?], and on the north and east perimeters by the city of Bremerton, Washington.
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard provides the United States Navy with maintenance, modernization, and technical and logistics support.
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard was established in 1891 as a Naval Station and was designated Navy Yard Puget Sound in 1901.
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