Flagship FAQ: How Can I Help Save the SS United States?
The global movement to save the SS United States needs all hands on deck! Even one individual can make an extraordinary difference, and...
"Ocean Liners: Speed and Style" Exhibition on Display at V&A Dundee
The extraordinary exhibition "Ocean Liners: Speed and Style," previously on display at the London V&A and at Salem, Massachusetts'...
Conservancy Executive Director Susan Gibbs Speaks in Greenport, Long Island
The story of the SS United States is also the story of a brilliant marine engineer and naval architect who brought her into being. To say...
Gibbs' Fire Fighter, America’s Fireboat, Celebrates 80th Anniversary with Rechristening
The Fireboat Fire Fighter Museum in Greenport, Long Island recently celebrated the William Francis Gibbs-designed vessel's 80th birthday...
Crew Memories: SS United States Radio Operator Paul MacCarthy
The SS United States touched thousands of lives over her prolific seventeen year service career. Today, as we fight to secure a future...
2018 Mid-Year Appeal: Working Together to Save Our Nation's Flagship
The Conservancy is hard at work fighting for the future of our nation's irreplaceable flagship, the SS United States. Today, this...
FINAL WEEK to Order Your Limited-Edition SS United States T-Shirt
Are you passionate about the SS United States? It's not too late to show your support for our nation's greatest and sole-surviving ocean...
Upcoming Event: Fire Fighter, America’s Fireboat, Celebrates 80th Anniversary
The Fireboat Fire Fighter Museum in Greenport, Long Island, is celebrating the William Francis Gibbs-designed vessel's 80th birthday this...
Upcoming Event: Susan Gibbs Presents "The History and Preservation of America’s Flagship"
Conservancy Executive Director Susan Gibbs will be giving an exciting talk on the history and preservation of the SS United States on...
Innovative Design: The Famous Funnels of the SS United States
The SS United States' magnificent red, white and blue "sampan" funnels remain the tallest ever to be installed on a ship — at 65 feet...