Tuesday, June 19, 2018

Columbus native serves on a “city at sea” aboard Navy’s largest amphibious warfare ship

By Kayla Turnbow, Navy Office of Community Outreach

Photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Heidi Cheek

SAN DIEGO – A Columbus, Georgia, native and 2014 Olympian High School, in San Diego, graduate is serving in the U.S. Navy aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Makin Island.

Petty Officer 3rd Class DeMarco Spivey is a machinist's mate aboard the amphibious assault ship operating out of San Diego. A machinist's mate is responsible for maintaining air conditioning systems, refrigeration systems, aircraft elevators, and diesel generators.

Spivey credits success in the Navy to many of the lessons learned growing up in Columbus.

“The way we treat each other back home is all about respect,” said Spivey. “It's that southern hospitality. It helps in the Navy because if you don't have that respect for someone else, they won't have it for you.”

Makin Island, one of the Navy’s most advanced and largest amphibious ships, is designed to deliver Marines and their equipment where they are needed to support a variety of missions ranging from amphibious assaults to humanitarian relief efforts.

The ship, which resembles a small aircraft carrier, is longer than two football fields at 847 feet, is 106 feet wide and weighs more than 41,000 tons fully loaded. It has gas turbine engines and two variable speed electric motors that can push the ship through the water in excess of 20 knots. It can carry more than 12 helicopters and six fixed-wing aircraft.

Sailors’ jobs are highly varied aboard Makin Island. More than 1,000 men and women make up the ship's crew, which keeps all parts of the ship running smoothly, from handling weaponry to maintaining the engines. An additional 1,700 Marines can be embarked. It is capable of transporting Marines and landing them where they are needed via helicopters, vertical takeoff and landing aircraft and landing craft.

“Makin Island is one of the most advanced warships on the waterfront, but she’s nothing without her crew,” said Capt. David Oden, commanding officer of Makin Island. “They’ve proved themselves time and time again, and their level of professionalism and dedication is second to none.”

These amphibious assault ships project power from the sea serving as the cornerstone of the amphibious ready group. Makin Island was delivered to the Navy in April 2009 and is the first U.S. Navy amphibious assault ship to be equipped with both gas turbines and auxiliary propulsion system instead of steam boilers.

These ships support special operations and expeditionary warfare missions, transporting U.S. Marines from sea to shore through a combination of aircraft and water landing craft. Because of their inherent capabilities, these ships have been and will continue to be called upon to support humanitarian and other contingency missions on short notice.

Spivey has military ties with family members who have previously served and is honored to carry on the family tradition.

“My dad is in the Navy and I have brothers in the Air Force and Army,” said Spivey. “I joined the Navy for my grandma. She was diagnosed with cancer and had goals for me as a baby. I do it now for my brothers so they can see there is more to the world than Georgia.”

Spivey has found many great rewards in the Navy, and is particularly proud of earning a Community Service Award for volunteering at the Ronald McDonald House

As a member of one of the U.S. Navy’s most relied-upon assets, Spivey and other Makin Island sailors know they are part of a legacy that will last beyond their lifetimes.

“Serving in the Navy means a lot,” added Spivey. “I get to fight for what I think is right. I get to protect the people I love back home. I get to see how other people live all over the world.”