Lockheed Martin and Fincantieri Marinette Marine marked the beginning of construction on Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) 29, the future USS Beloit (LCS-29), with a ceremony in Marinette. As part of a ship-building tradition dating back centuries, a shipyard worker welded into the ship’s keel plate the initials of Major General Marcia M. Anderson (U.S. Army, Retired), USS Beloit (LCS-29) ship sponsor and a Beloit, Wisconsin, native. This plate will be affixed to the ship and travel with Beloit throughout its commissioned life.

USS Beloit (LCS-29) will be the 15th Freedom-variant LCS and will join a class of more than 30 ships. To date, four Freedom-variant LCS have deployed to support U.S. Navy presence and peacekeeping missions. In May, LCS-7 (USS Detroit) partnered with a U.S. Navy destroyer and Coast Guard teams to serve interdiction missions in the U.S. Southern Command Area of Responsibility.
«With two deployments so far this year, Freedom-variant LCS have proven that they are capable and can serve a unique role in the U.S. Navy’s fleet», said Joe DePietro, vice president and general manager of Small Combatants and Ship Systems. «LCS’ speed, maneuverability and flexibility allows the ship to serve a multitude of missions by quickly integrating equipment and deploying manned and unmanned aerial, surface or sub-surface vehicles».
In total, there are more than 500,000 nautical miles/575,390 miles/926,000 km under the keel of Freedom-variant LCS. The ship delivers advanced capability in anti-submarine, surface, and mine countermeasure missions, and was designed to evolve with the changing security environment. As near-peer competition from large nation states increases, Lockheed Martin is partnering with the Navy to evolve LCS to meet these threats. Targeted upgrades are already underway with naval strike missiles being installed in support of upcoming deployments. Future installs of improved electronic warfare and decoy launching systems are under development.
USS Beloit (LCS-29) is the first U.S. Navy ship to be named after Beloit, Wisconsin, and the ship’s sponsor has personal ties to Beloit. During a long career with the U.S. military, Major General Anderson became the first African American woman to obtain the rank of major general in the U. S. Army and U. S. Army Reserve. As a citizen-soldier, Anderson was employed for 28 years by the United States Courts, where she served as the Clerk of the Bankruptcy Court, Western District of Wisconsin, located in Madison, Wisconsin, until her retirement in late 2019.
«The construction of the U.S. Navy’s newest Littoral Combat Ship and naming it after the city of Beloit, with its rich and storied history of supporting our nation’s national security, is more than fitting», said Major General Anderson. «When completed, the USS Beloit’s voyages will be part of the tradition of small cities and towns in America sharing our story around the world».
Beloit is one of six LCS in various stages of construction and test at the Fincantieri Marinette Marine shipyard.
«We are proud to celebrate the future USS Beloit today», said Jan Allman, CEO of Fincantieri Marinette Marine. «The Fincantieri Marinette Marine shipyard is honored to build this capable warship, named for another city from the wonderful state of Wisconsin. I think this is a true testament to the hard work and patriotism of Midwesterners, and we look forward to working with the City of Beloit as we continue building LCS-29 for our U.S. Navy partner».
Ship Design Specifications
Hull | Advanced semiplaning steel monohull |
Length Overall | 389 feet/118.6 m |
Beam Overall | 57 feet/17.5 m |
Draft | 13.5 feet/4.1 m |
Full Load Displacement | Approximately 3,200 metric tons |
Top Speed | Greater than 40 knots/46 mph/74 km/h |
Range at top speed | 1,000 NM/1,151 miles/1,852 km |
Range at cruise speed | 4,000 NM/4,603 miles/7,408 km |
Watercraft Launch and Recovery | Up to Sea State 4 |
Aircraft Launch and Recovery | Up to Sea State 5 |
Propulsion | Combined diesel and gas turbine with steerable water jet propulsion |
Power | 85 MW/113,600 horsepower |
Hangar Space | Two MH-60 Romeo Helicopters |
One MH-60 Romeo Helicopter and three Vertical Take-off and Land Tactical Unmanned Air Vehicles (VTUAVs) | |
Core Crew | Less than 50 |
Accommodations for 75 sailors provide higher sailor quality of life than current fleet | |
Integrated Bridge System | Fully digital nautical charts are interfaced to ship sensors to support safe ship operation |
Core Self-Defense Suite | Includes 3D air search radar |
Electro-Optical/Infrared (EO/IR) gunfire control system | |
Rolling-Airframe Missile Launching System | |
57-mm Main Gun | |
Mine, Torpedo Detection | |
Decoy Launching System |
Freedom-class
Ship | Laid down | Launched | Commissioned | Homeport |
USS Freedom (LCS-1) | 06-02-2005 | 09-23-2006 | 11-08-2008 | San Diego, California |
USS Fort Worth (LCS-3) | 07-11-2009 | 12-07-2010 | 09-22-2012 | San Diego, California |
USS Milwaukee (LCS-5) | 10-27-2011 | 12-18-2013 | 11-21-2015 | San Diego, California |
USS Detroit (LCS-7) | 08-11-2012 | 10-18-2014 | 10-22-2016 | San Diego, California |
USS Little Rock (LCS-9) | 06-27-2013 | 07-18-2015 | 12-16-2017 | San Diego, California |
USS Sioux City (LCS-11) | 02-19-2014 | 01-30-2016 | 11-17-2018 | Mayport, Florida |
USS Wichita (LCS-13) | 02-09-2015 | 09-17-2016 | 01-12-2019 | Mayport, Florida |
USS Billings (LCS-15) | 11-02-2015 | 07-01-2017 | 08-03-2019 | Mayport, Florida |
USS Indianapolis (LCS-17) | 07-18-2016 | 04-18-2018 | 10-26-2019 | Mayport, Florida |
USS St. Louis (LCS-19) | 05-17-2017 | 12-15-2018 | ||
USS Minneapolis/St. Paul (LCS-21) | 02-22-2018 | 06-15-2019 | ||
USS Cooperstown (LCS-23) | 08-14-2018 | 01-19-2020 | ||
USS Marinette (LCS-25) | 03-27-2019 | |||
USS Nantucket (LCS-27) | 10-09-2019 | |||
USS Beloit (LCS-29) | 07-22-2020 | |||
USS Cleveland (LCS-31) |