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By Jesse Pesta
Jesse Pesta crossed the Atlantic aboard the United States when he was 2 years old and wrote about the ship.
Susan Gibbs wants to quickly locate a new parking area. And any parking area will do.
It will have to be giant enough for an ocean liner.
It is a shipment larger than the Titanic, almost as long as the Chrysler Building is tall. A shipment so sumptuous that it is the first choice of presidents and royalty. A shipment so reliable it once carried the Mona Lisa. Shipping so fast that her gigantic propellers, churning up the sea beneath her grand rides and onboard orchestras, were a Cold War state secret.
A country called America that Mrs. Gibbs came to love. In fact, she committed her to saving him.
Mrs. Gibbs’ grandfather, William Francis Gibbs, a prominent fashion designer and United States her masterpiece. But, surprisingly, she knew almost nothing about it until she reached adulthood.
“I expected it,” she said recently of her role as manager of a rusty steamboat.
Gibbs, 62, works in Washington in his personal capacity, where his main goal is to eliminate female circumcision. Between that and her defense of her ship, she noted, “People are going to have to be through my social media presence. “
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