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Navy Airman Recruit Corey Combs attends USS Enterprise ceremony

December 19, 2012

Navy Airman Recruit Corey A. Combs, son of Angelique Combs of Millsboro and Glen A. Combs of Millsboro, along with nearly 12,000 past and current crew members, family and friends, attended the inactivation of aircraft carrier USS Enterprise (CVN 65) on Dec. 1.

Enterprise, the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, recently completed its 25th and final deployment and returned to its home port of Naval Station Norfolk for a scheduled inactivation, held prior to the ship's terminal offload program and subsequent decommissioning.

The inactivation ceremony was the last official public event for the ship, and served as a celebration of life for the ship and the more than 100, 000 sailors who served aboard.

The chief of Naval Operations, the commander of United States Fleet Forces, 9 of 23 prior commanding officers, many decorated war heroes and thousands of Enterprise veterans attended the event.

In honor of that spirit, Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus, in a video message played at the ceremony, announced that the name Enterprise will live on as the officially passed name to CVN-80, the third Ford-class carrier and the ninth ship in the U.S. Navy to bear the name.

Commissioned on Nov. 25, 1961, the eighth ship to bear the illustrious name Enterprise, the "Big E" was the world's first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

A veteran of 25 deployments to the Mediterranean Sea, Pacific Ocean and the Middle East, Enterprise has served in nearly every major conflict to take place during her history. From the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 to six deployments in support of the Vietnam conflict through the Cold War and the Gulf Wars, Enterprise was there. On Sept. 11, 2001, Enterprise aborted its transit home from a long deployment after the terrorist attacks and steamed overnight to the North Arabian Sea. Big E once again took its place in history when it launched the first strikes in direct support of Operation Enduring Freedom.

More than 100,000 sailors and Marines have served aboard Enterprise during its lifetime, which has included every major conflict since the Cuban Missile Crisis. It has been home ported in both Alameda, Calif., and Norfolk, Va., and has conducted operations in every region of the world.

Combs is a 2009 graduate of Sussex Central High School of Georgetown and joined the Navy in November 2011.

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