USS Forrestal supercarrier on final trip to scrap heap

USS Forrestal: The massive aircraft carrier left under tow early Tuesday to begin its 17- or 18-day trip.

Tugboat Alex McAllister pushes the USS Forrestal into the Delaware River on the aircraft carrier's final voyage from Navy Shipyard in south Philadelphia for a dismantling and recycling facility in Brownsville, Texas, Tuesday, Feb. 4.

Alejandro A. Alvarez/The Philadelphia Inquirer/AP

February 6, 2014

The Navy's first post-World War II supercarrier has left Philadelphia on a final trip to a scrapping facility in Texas.

The Philadelphia Inquirer says the massive aircraft carrier USS Forrestal left under tow early Tuesday to begin its 17- or 18-day trip.

The 60-year-old ship is being taken to a Brownsville, Texas, recycling facility owned by All Star Metals, which was paid 1 cent to haul away and dismantle it.

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

The USS Forrestal was decommissioned in September 1993, after more than 38 years of service.

It's best known for a 1967 fire on its flight deck that killed 132 crewmen and injured 62 others.

The Navy made the USS Forrestal available for donation as a museum or memorial but says it received no feasible applications for reuse.