USS San Antonio Steps Mast
By Naval Sea Systems Command Public Affairs
Pascagoula, Miss. -- As part of crew move aboard, the crew
of the future USS San Antonio (LPD 17) officially “stepped” their Advanced Enclosed
Mast/Sensor System (
The ancient custom of “stepping the mast,”
by placing coins under the step or bottom of a ship’s mast during construction,
dates from antiquity. One belief from Greek Mythology is that should the
ship be wrecked during passage, the coins would ensure payment of the crew’s
wages for their return home. Since at least the construction of USS
Constitution, this tradition has been passed on as a symbol of good luck for
U.S. Navy ships.
In keeping with this tradition, prospective Commanding
Officer Cmdr. Jon Padfield placed a box with seventeen cents in U.S coins near
the ship’s Advanced Enclosed Mast/Sensor system. This coinage equals
“As we prepare to move our crew on board this twenty-first
century expeditionary warship, we’re proud to carry on nautical tradition and
heritage, and we do this by ‘stepping the mast,’” said Cmdr. Padfield. “As we
move forward into the future, we also are proud of the traditions that make us
Sailors.”
The coins Cmdr. Padfield placed in the box include two
pennies dated 1990 and 2000 respectively, which signify the start of the LPD 17
Shipbuilding Program at NAVSEA, and the start of ship construction in
A fourth coin is a nickel dated 1876 and was selected for
the citizens of
For the last nickel, Cmdr. Padfield stated, “The year 1962
marks the year when the U.S. Navy commissioned its first amphibious transport
dock, USS Raleigh (LPD 1). Fourteen ships followed in the LPD 1 and LPD 4
classes and this nickel recognizes the outstanding service of those ships and
the contributions of the thousands of Sailors and Marines who served and still
serve aboard those fine ships.”
The LPD 17 Commissioning Committee chaired by Richard M.
Kleberg