Hands-on training has always been a staple of numerous courses at the SIU-affiliated school in Piney Point, Maryland, dating to its founding in 1967.
For nearly the past eight years, one of the most visible tools that’s utilized for practical instruction at the school is the Freedom Star, a training ship based at the Paul Hall Center for Maritime Training and Education (PHC). Built in Florida in 1981, the ship underwent a major refurbishment and conversion in 2012 upon being transferred from NASA to the U.S. Maritime Administration. Four years later, the agency assigned it to the PHC, where it routinely is used for both entry-level instruction (as part of the apprentice program) and in upgrading courses.
“Having a live platform to train on makes our already-stellar program second to none,” a PHC spokesperson stated.
The Freedom Star is 176 feet long and 37 feet wide. According to its Operation and Familiarization Manual, the molded-steel ship can accommodate a crew of 50 for 12-hour day voyages and a crew of 36 for three-day overnight deployments. The ship is powered by two main diesel engines “providing a total of 2,900 horsepower turning two seven-foot propellers with controllable pitch. Maneuverability is enhanced with a water jet stern thruster and bow thruster of conventional propeller/tunnel design. The ship’s cruising speed is 12 knots, with a range of 6,900 nautical miles….”
PHC instructors conduct segments of many classes – across all three shipboard departments – on the Freedom Star. Those courses include (among others) Able Seafarer-Deck, Advanced Firefighting, Junior Engineer, Marine Reefer Tech, Chief Steward, Galley Operations, and more, plus apprentice training.
More information about PHC courses is available online at www.seafarers.org
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