The crew of USS Jackson (LCS-6) ushered in a new era in naval warfare, December 5, as the ship was brought to life before a crowd of nearly 10,000. «I hereby place United States Ship Jackson in commission. May God bless and guide this warship and all who sail in it», said Secretary of the U.S. Navy Ray Mabus, who helped name the ship in 2011. «This certainly ranks right up there with great days that I’ve had».

Mississippi Senator Thad Cochran’s daughter, Dr. Kate Cochran, was the ship’s sponsor. It is the first ship to bear the name of Mississippi’s capital city. The name held a special meaning for many of those at the commissioning.
«For it to be named after the city, the capital of the state in which you were born, is even more of a phenomenal feeling», said Command Senior Chief Ken Ballard. Ballard and 52 other crewmembers will man missions aboard the Jackson, one of the fastest and most technologically advanced warships in the world.
«They’re providing incredible presence. They are providing lethality. They’re providing a lot of things that the United States Navy needs today and is going to need for years in the future», said Mabus. For the crew, the commissioning was the culmination of three years of hard work.
A fast, agile, and high-technology surface combatant, Freedom will act as a platform for launch and recovery of manned and unmanned vehicles. Its modular design will support interchangeable mission packages, allowing the ship to be reconfigured for antisubmarine warfare, mine warfare, or surface warfare missions on an as-needed basis.
The littoral combat ship (LCS) will be able to swap out mission packages, adapting as the tactical situation demands. These ships will also feature advanced networking capability to share tactical information with other Navy aircraft, ships, submarines and joint units.
The brand new 417-foot/127-meter ship weighs in at 3,100 tons. It can travel at speeds in excess of 40 knots/46 mph/74 km/h. The USS Jackson will be home ported at Naval Base San Diego.

The Independence Variant of the LCS Class
PRINCIPAL DIMENSIONS | |
Construction | Hull and superstructure – aluminium alloy |
Length overall | 417 feet/127.1 m |
Beam overall | 103 feet/31.4 m |
Hull draft (maximum) | 14.8 feet/4.5 m |
PAYLOAD AND CAPACITIES | |
Complement | Core Crew – 40 |
Mission crew – 36 | |
Berthing | 76 in a mix of single, double & quad berthing compartments |
Maximum mission load | 210 tonnes |
Mission Bay Volume | 118,403 feet3/11,000 m3 |
Mission packages | Anti-Submarine Warfare (ASW) |
Surface Warfare (SUW) | |
Mine Warfare (MIW) | |
PROPULSION | |
Main engines | 2 × GE LM2500 |
2 × MTU 20V 8000 | |
Waterjets | 4 × Wartsila steerable |
Bow thruster | Retractable azimuthing |
PERFORMANCE | |
Speed | 40 knots/46 mph/74 km/h |
Range | 3,500 NM/4,028 miles/6,482 km |
Operational limitation | Survival in Sea State 8 |
MISSION/LOGISTICS DECK | |
Deck area | >21,527.8 feet2/2,000 m2 |
Launch and recovery | Twin boom extending crane |
Loading | Side ramp |
Internal elevator to hanger | |
Launch/Recover Watercraft | Sea State 4 |
FLIGHT DECK AND HANGER | |
Flight deck dimensions | 2 × SH-60 or 1 × CH-53 or multiple Unmanned Aerial Vehicles/Vertical Take-off and Land Tactical Unmanned Air Vehicles (UAVs/VTUAVs) |
Hanger | Aircraft stowage & maintenance for 2 × SH-60 |
Launch/Recover Aircraft | Sea State 5 |
WEAPONS AND SENSORS | |
Standard | 1 × 57-mm gun |
4 × 12.7-mm/.50 caliber guns | |
1 × Surface-to-Air Missile (SAM) launcher | |
3 × weapons modules |
