The Navy commissioned USS Cleveland during a ceremony Saturday in Cleveland, placing the last littoral combat ship into active service and closing a shipbuilding program that began in 2002.
Acting Navy Secretary Hung Cao delivered the main address. The USS Cleveland Legacy Foundation said the event was the first commissioning of a Navy warship held in Ohio in the nation’s 250-year history.
“Today, we celebrate the sailors who breathe life into this ship. To the officers and crew of USS Cleveland, today is your day,” Cao said.
Ship sponsor Robyn Modly, a Cleveland native and wife of former acting Navy Secretary Thomas Modly, ordered the crew to “man our ship and bring her to life.” Sailors then boarded the ship, bringing it into commissioned service.
USS Cleveland is the 16th and final Freedom-variant littoral combat ship, built by Lockheed Martin and Fincantieri Marinette Marine in Marinette, Wisconsin. The Navy laid the ship’s keel in June 2021, launched and christened it in April 2023, and accepted delivery on Nov. 26, 2025.
The littoral combat ship program began in 2002. The Navy initially planned up to 55 ships across two variants, but that number was reduced. The Freedom class ended at 16 ships, while the Independence class ended at 19. USS Pierre, the last Independence-variant ship, was commissioned in November 2025.
Several early Freedom-variant ships, including USS Freedom, left service years before their expected 25-year lifespan because of propulsion and combining gear defects.