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  2. Norfolk Naval Shipyard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norfolk_Naval_Shipyard

    The Gosport Shipyard was founded on November 1, 1767, by Andrew Sprowle on the western shore of the Elizabeth River in Norfolk County in the Virginia colony. [2] This shipyard became a prosperous naval and merchant facility for the British Crown.

  3. USNS Thomas G. Thompson (T-AGOR-9) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USNS_Thomas_G._Thompson_(T...

    Renamed Gosport and transferred to the Atlantic and the Norfolk Naval Shipyard the ship operated as a multi-purpose research ship available for hire from the shipyard. Gosport was retired, struck from the register 27 February 2004, and sunk in a NATO exercise on 14 November 2004. [5]

  4. Andrew Sprowle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Sprowle

    Andrew Sprowle (1710 – 1776) was a Scottish-born merchant, naval agent, landowner, shipyard owner, slaveholder and slave trader in Portsmouth, Virginia.Today Andrew Sprowle is best remembered for establishing the Gosport Ship Yard, now known as Norfolk Naval Shipyard.

  5. USS Constellation (1854) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Constellation_(1854)

    USS Constellation is a sloop-of-war, the last sail-only warship designed and built by the United States Navy.She was built at the Gosport Shipyard between 1853 and 1855. She was named for the earlier frigate of the same name that had been broken up in 1853.

  6. Elizabeth River (Virginia) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_River_(Virginia)

    The Elizabeth River is the home of the oldest shipyard in the United States, the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Founded as The Gosport Shipyard in 1767, the shipyard is still in use today having survived both the American Revolutionary and Civil wars and fires set to the shipyard within each conflict.

  7. The Navy knows thousands may have been exposed to ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/shipyard-veterans-may-exposed...

    It was the first time Wyand, a Navy veteran who lived and worked at the shipyard in the late 1980s, learned he may have been exposed to radium-226 and strontium-90 — radionuclides that build up ...

  8. Here's how many Americans die from foodborne illnesses each year

    www.aol.com/heres-many-americans-die-foodborne...

    Foodborne illness costs Americans $75 billion annually in premature deaths, medical care and lost productivity, study finds.

  9. Naval Medical Center Portsmouth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_Medical_Center...

    Through the early nineteenth century, both Norfolk (Gosport) Navy Yard and Naval Hospital extensively utilized enslaved labor (see thumbnails 1815 payroll and 1832 hospital muster). On January 2, 1832, in a letter to the Secretary of the Navy, Commodore Lewis Warrington confirmed enslaved labor at the hospital.