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How a professional ship-sinker is about to turn a famous ocean liner into the world’s largest artificial reef The SS United ...
The SS United States, a record-breaking 1950s ocean liner, may soon sail from Philadelphia to the Gulf. NPR explored this ship, a relic of the grand liners that once connected North America with ...
Numerous companies and individuals tried and failed to repurpose the ship in the intervening decades, with much of the ship's interior being stipped and sold. The SS United States Conservancy ...
In her heyday in the 1950s, the superliner SS United States broke all records by crossing the Atlantic Ocean in three and a half days. Looking rusty and every bit of 75 years old, the former ...
Plans to move the SS United States out of Philadelphia have been delayed, officials said Tuesday.
The new owners of the SS United States have set another date to move the iconic ocean liner out of Philadelphia.
The SS United States, the historic ocean liner that decayed at a Philadelphia pier for nearly 30 years before finally being tugged away recently, will arrive in Mobile, Alabama, on Monday.
Divers are getting excited about the planned sinking of the SS United States. The once glorious luxury ocean liner is slated to become an artificial reef. Alabama Public Radio’s Cori Yonge reports.
The SS United States has been cleared to sail from south Philadelphia to Mobile, Ala., in preparation for its eventual sinking in northwest Florida to become the world's largest artificial reef.
On Monday, a federal judge ruled the SS United States Conservancy cannot remain at the South Philadelphia pier beyond Sept. 12.
SS United States to be towed from Phila., launching transition into artificial reef The 1,000-foot vessel, hailed in the 1950s as America's Greatest Ocean Liner, is scheduled to be towed from a ...
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