AVONDALE INDUSTRIES INC
DEF 14A, 1997-04-17
SHIP & BOAT BUILDING & REPAIRING
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                                 SCHEDULE 14A

               Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of the
                       Securities Exchange Act of 1934

Filed by the Registrant [X]
Filed by a Party other than the Registrant [  ]

Check the appropriate box:

[ ]  Preliminary Proxy Statement
[ ]  Confidential, for Use of the Commission Only (as permitted by Rule 
      14a-6(e)(2))
[X]  Definitive Proxy Statement
[ ]  Definitive Additional Materials
[ ]  Soliciting Material Pursuant to Section 240.14a-11(c) or Section 
      240.14a-12


                          AVONDALE INDUSTRIES, INC.
               (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

               Board of Directors of Avondale Industries, Inc.
     (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement if other than Registrant)


Payment of Filing Fee (Check appropriate box):

[X]  No fee required.
[ ]  Fee computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(4) and 0-11.

      1)    Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:

      2)    Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:

      3)    Per unit price or other underlying value of transaction computed 
            pursuant to Exchange  Act  Rule  0-11 (Set forth amount on which  
            the filing fee is calculated and state how it was determined.):

      4)    Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:

      5)    Total fee paid:


[ ]  Fee paid previously with preliminary materials.
[ ]  Check  box  if  any  part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange 
     Act Rule 0-11(a)(2) and identify  the filing for which  the offsetting 
     fee was paid previously.
      
      Identify the previous  filing  by  registration  statement number, or 
      the Form of Schedule and the date of its filing.

      1)    Amount Previously Paid:

      2)    Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:

      3)    Filing Party:

      4)    Date Filed:
                    
                    
                    Avondale Industries, Inc.
                         5100 River Road
                    Avondale, Louisiana  70094

                  ______________________________


             NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS

                  ______________________________


TO THE SHAREHOLDERS OF AVONDALE INDUSTRIES, INC.:

     The Annual Meeting of Shareholders of Avondale Industries, Inc. will
be held at 10:00 a.m. local time on Friday, May 23, 1997, at the Waldorf-
Astoria  Hotel,  301  Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022, to elect two
directors, consider a stock  incentive  plan,  consider such of the three
shareholder proposals described in the proxy statement  as  are presented
at  the Annual Meeting, and transact such other business as may  properly
come before the meeting or any adjournment thereof.

     Only  shareholders  of  record at the close of business on April 10,
1997, are entitled to notice of,  to  vote  at,  and to attend the Annual
Meeting.

     Shareholders are cordially invited to attend  the  meeting.   If you
are  unable to attend in person and wish to have your stock voted, PLEASE
COMPLETE,  SIGN  AND  DATE  THE  ENCLOSED  PROXY  AND  RETURN  IT  IN THE
ACCOMPANYING  POSTPAID ENVELOPE AS PROMPTLY AS POSSIBLE.  Your proxy  may
be revoked by appropriate  notice  to the Secretary at any time before it
is voted.

                              BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                      /s/ Thomas M. Kitchen

                                       Thomas M. Kitchen
                                           Secretary


Avondale, Louisiana
April 17, 1997


                    Avondale Industries, Inc.
                         5100 River Road
                    Avondale, Louisiana  70094

                          April 17, 1997


                         PROXY STATEMENT

     This Proxy Statement is furnished  to  the  shareholders of Avondale
Industries, Inc. (the "Company") in connection with  the  solicitation on
behalf of its Board of Directors of proxies for use at the Annual Meeting
of  Shareholders  of the Company on Friday, May 23, 1997, at  10:00  a.m.
local time, at the  Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, 301 Park Avenue, New York, New
York 10022, and at any adjournment thereof (the "Annual Meeting").

     Only shareholders  of  record  at the close of business on April 10,
1997 are entitled to notice of, to vote  at,  and  to  attend  the Annual
Meeting.  On that date, the Company had outstanding 14,493,211 shares  of
common  stock,  $1.00 par value per share (the "Common Stock"), with each
share being entitled  to  one vote with respect to each matter considered
at the Annual Meeting.

     The enclosed proxy may be revoked by a shareholder at any time prior
to its exercise by filing with  the  Secretary  of  the Company a written
revocation or duly executed proxy bearing a later date.   The  proxy will
also  be deemed revoked if the shareholder votes in person at the  Annual
Meeting.

     This  Proxy  Statement  is  first being mailed to shareholders on or
about April 17, 1997, and the Company  will  bear  the cost of soliciting
proxies hereunder.  In addition to the use of the mails,  proxies  may be
solicited  by  personal interview, telephone, telegraph, facsimile or  e-
mail.  Banks, brokerage  houses  and  other  institutions,  nominees  and
fiduciaries will be requested to forward the soliciting material to their
principals  and to obtain authorization for the execution of proxies, and
the Company will,  upon  request, reimburse them for their expenses in so
acting.  In addition, proxies  will  be solicited by Georgeson & Company,
Inc.,  an  investor relations firm paid  $8,000  plus  its  out-of-pocket
expenses to assist the Company in the solicitation of proxies.

                      ELECTION OF DIRECTORS
             (Item 1 on the accompanying proxy card)

     The Company's  Articles  of  Incorporation and By-laws provide for a
Board of Directors of seven persons  allocated  among  three  classes  of
directors who serve three-year staggered terms, with one class elected at
each  annual  shareholders'  meeting.   The  term  of  one  class  of two
directors expires at the Annual Meeting.  Accordingly, proxies cannot  be
voted for more than two persons.

     Unless  authority to vote for the election of directors is withheld,
the persons named  in the enclosed proxy will vote all shares represented
by the proxies received  by  them  for the election of each of the below-
named  persons  who have been proposed  for  election  by  the  Board  of
Directors.  In accordance  with the Company's By-laws, if either of these
nominees declines or should  become unable to serve for any reason, votes
will be cast instead for a substitute  nominee designated by the Board of
Directors or, if none is designated, the  number  of authorized directors
will be automatically reduced by the total number of  nominees  withdrawn
from consideration.  Directors are elected by plurality vote.

     The following table sets forth certain information relating  to  the
directors  of the Company as of April 1, 1997, including their beneficial
ownership of shares of Common Stock as determined in accordance with Rule
13d-3 under  the  Securities  Exchange  Act of 1934 (the "Exchange Act").
Unless otherwise indicated, (i) each director  has  been  engaged  in the
principal occupation shown for more than the past five years and (ii) the
shares  shown  as  being beneficially owned are held with sole voting and
investment power.

Proposed Nominees for Election:
                                                        
Name, Age, Principal Occupation    Nominated               
     and Directorships in          For Term  Director    Number of Shares
   Other Public Corporations       Expiring    Since   Beneficially Owned(1)
- --------------------------------   --------- --------  --------------------
                                                      
Albert L. Bossier, Jr., 64            2000     1985          220,410(3)
    Chairman of the Board, Chief
    Executive Officer, and
    President of the Company(2)

Hugh A. Thompson, 62                  2000     1988            2,500
    Emeritus Professor of
    Mechanical Engineering,
    Emeritus Dean of Engineering,
    School of Engineering, Tulane
    University (4)

The Board of Directors  recommends  a  vote  FOR  each  of  the  proposed
nominees.

Other Directors:
                                                        
Name, Age, Principal Occupation      Serving               
     and Directorships in              Term    Director    Number of Shares
   Other Public Corporations         Expiring    Since   Beneficially Owned(1)
- -------------------------------      --------  --------  --------------------  
Vice Admiral Francis R. Donovan, 62    1998      1994            --
     Retired, U.S. Navy; President,
     Designers and Planners,
     Inc.(5)

William A. Harmeyer, 76                1998      1993           500
     Retired; Vice President of the
     Company until 1986

Thomas M. Kitchen, 49                  1998      1987       116,409(6)
     Vice President, Chief
     Financial Officer and
     Secretary of the Company(2)

Anthony J. Correro, III, 55            1999      1988           500
     Partner, Correro Fishman
     Haygood Phelps Weiss Walmsley
     & Casteix, L.L.P. (law
     firm)(7)

Kenneth B. Dupont, 58                  1999      1987        34,033(8)
     Vice President of the             
     Company;(2)

All directors and executive                                 374,344
officers as a group
(7 persons)
_____________________________
(1)  None  of  the  proposed  nominees or directors beneficially owns  in
     excess of one percent of the  Common  Stock, except Mr. Bossier, who
     beneficially owns approximately 1.5%.   The 374,344 shares of Common
     Stock beneficially owned by all directors  and executive officers as
     a group constitute approximately 2.6% of the Common Stock.

(2)  Messrs. Bossier, Kitchen and Dupont are the  executive  officers  of
     the  Company  for whom compensation information is disclosed in this
     Proxy Statement.

(3)  Includes 8,776  shares  allocated  to Mr. Bossier's ESOP account and
     100,215  shares that he has the right  to  acquire  under  currently
     exercisable stock options.

(4)  From 1991  to  1996, Dr. Thompson was a Professor of Engineering at,
     and from 1976 to  1991  Dr.  Thompson was the Dean of, the School of
     Engineering of Tulane University, from which he retired in 1996.

(5)  Until August 31, 1992, Admiral  Donovan  was on active duty with the
     U.S.  Navy,  most recently as Commander, Military  Sealift  Command.
     Since September  1992,  he  has  served  as  a consultant to various
     companies on maritime issues, and from November 1994 to June 1996 he
     was  employed  as  Strategic  Mobility  Coordinator,  PRC  Inc.,  an
     information technology company.  Since July  1996  he  has served as
     President  of  Designers  and  Planners, Inc., a marine engineering,
     naval architecture and environmental planning firm.

(6)  Includes 4,424 shares allocated  to  Mr.  Kitchen's ESOP account and
     59,160  shares  that  he  has the right to acquire  under  currently
     exercisable stock options.

(7)  For more than five years prior  to  June  1994,  Mr.  Correro  was a
     partner  in  the  law  firm  of  Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent,
     Carrere & Denegre, L.L.P.  Mr. Correro  is  also a director of Campo
     Electronics, Appliances and Computers, Inc.

(8)  Includes  3,829 shares allocated to Mr. Dupont's  Avondale  Employee
     Stock Ownership  Plan ("ESOP") account and 17,000 shares that he has
     the right to acquire under currently exercisable stock options.


     During  1996, the Board  of  Directors  held  nine  meetings.   Each
director attended  at  least 75% of the aggregate number of meetings held
during 1996 of the Board  and  any  committees  of which he was a member.
Members  of  the  Board who are not officers receive  an  annual  fee  of
$12,000 and an additional  fee of $1,500 for each meeting of the Board or
committee thereof attended,  all or a portion of which they are permitted
to defer under a Directors' Deferred  Compensation  Plan.   Deferred fees
earn  interest at a rate of 8.5% per annum compounded annually,  and  are
payable in five equal installments or a lump sum upon the earliest of the
director's  resignation,  removal,  attainment  of age 65, or death.  The
provisions of the plan, including the interest rate  payable  on deferred
fees, may be amended at any time by the Board of Directors.  In  addition
to  the  foregoing  directors'  fees,  each  director  is  reimbursed for
expenses incurred in attending meetings.

     The Board has an Audit Committee, of which Messrs. Correro, Harmeyer
and  Thompson  are members, that coordinates communications between  non-
committee directors  and  the  Company's  management,  independent public
accountants  and internal auditors with respect to financial  accounting,
reporting and  controls,  assists  the  Board in fulfilling its fiduciary
responsibilities as to the accounting policies  and  reporting  practices
and  the  sufficiency  of  auditing relative thereto of the Company,  and
ensures the independence of  the  Company's  independent accountants, the
integrity of management and the adequacy of disclosure  to  shareholders.
The  Audit  Committee  met  twice  during  1996.   The  Board also has  a
Compensation  Committee,  of which Admiral Donovan and Mr.  Thompson  are
members,  that  determines  the  general  compensation  policies  of  the
Company, determines the compensation to be paid to the executive officers
of the Company and administers  the  Company's Performance Share Plan and
Stock  Appreciation  Plan.  The Compensation  Committee  met  five  times
during 1996.

     The Board of Directors  does  not  have a nominating committee.  Any
shareholder desiring to nominate persons  for  election to the Board must
comply  with  the  procedures  set  forth  in the Company's  Articles  of
Incorporation ("Articles") and By-laws.  Such nominations must be made by
written  notice  delivered to the Company's Secretary  at  its  principal
executive offices,  5100  River  Road,  Avondale,  Louisiana   70094, and
generally  must  be  received no later than the close of business on  the
tenth day following the  date  on  which  notice of the annual meeting is
mailed; provided that if notice or public disclosure  of  the date of the
meeting is given or made to shareholders more than 55 days  prior  to the
meeting,  such  nominations  must be delivered to the Company's Secretary
not less than 45 days nor more  than  90  days prior to the meeting.  The
notice must include the following information with respect to each person
the shareholder proposes to nominate: (i) the name, age, business address
and residential address of such person, (ii)  the principal occupation or
employment  of  such  person, (iii) the class and  number  of  shares  of
capital stock of the Company of which such person is the beneficial owner
(determined in accordance  with  Article  VA. of the Company's Articles),
and (iv) any other information relating to  such  person  that  would  be
required  to  be  disclosed  in  solicitations of proxies for election of
directors,  or would be otherwise required,  in  each  case  pursuant  to
Regulation 14A  under the Exchange Act.  The notice must also include the
following information  with respect to the shareholder giving the notice:
(i) the name and address  of  such  shareholder  and  (ii)  the class and
number  of  shares  of  capital  stock  of  the  Company  of  which  such
shareholder  is  the  beneficial  owner  (determined  in  accordance with
Article VA.).


                      PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS

     The following persons are, to the knowledge of the Company, the only
persons  that  beneficially  owned, as of April 1, 1997, more  than  five
percent of the Common Stock, calculated  in  accordance  with  Rule 13d-3
under the Exchange Act.  Unless otherwise indicated, all shares indicated
as beneficially owned are held with sole voting and investment power.

                                      Number of Shares     Percent of
Name and Address                     Beneficially Owned       Class
- ----------------------------------   ------------------    ----------
Blanche S. Barlotta, R. Dean Church      2,953,362(1)         20.4%
 and Rodney J. Duhon, Jr., as 
 Trustees of the Avondale Employee 
 Stock Ownership Trust
 P. O. Box 50280
 New Orleans, Louisiana 70150

Pioneering Management Corporation        1,199,500(2)          8.3%
  60 State Street
  Boston, Massachusetts 02109-1820

Mellon Bank Corporation                  1,119,000(3)          7.7%
  One Mellon Bank Center
  Pittsburgh, PA  15258

____________
(1)  The right to vote shares allocated to an ESOP participant's  account
     is  passed  through  to  the  participant.   There  are currently no
     unallocated shares other than a nominal number of shares  that  have
     been forfeited by participants since January 1, 1997.  Voting rights
     of  unallocated  shares  are  exercised  by the ESOP Trustees at the
     direction of the ESOP Administrative Committee, the members of which
     are the three ESOP Trustees and two other  officers  of the Company,
     Ernest  F.  Griffin,  Jr.  and  Eugene E. Blanchard, Jr.  Investment
     power over the ESOP shares is exercised  by the ESOP Trustees at the
     direction of the ESOP Administrative Committee,  provided  the  ESOP
     Trustees  determine  such  direction  to  be  consistent  with their
     fiduciary duties.

(2)  Based  solely upon information contained in a Schedule 13G filed  by
     Pioneering    Management    Corporation.     Pioneering   Management
     Corporation is an investment adviser registered under the Investment
     Advisers Act of 1940 and shares investment power with respect to all
     of the shares reported.

(3)  Based solely upon information contained in a Schedule  13G  filed by
     Mellon Bank Corporation.  Mellon Bank Corporation shares dispositive
     power with respect to 716,000 of the shares reported.

                             _________________________

                               EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

Summary of Executive Compensation

     The  following  table  sets forth certain information regarding  the
compensation of the Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer  and each of the
Company's other executive officers.

                          SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

                                         Annual
                                      Compensation
                                      ------------
        Name and                                            All Other
  Principal Positions        Year   Salary(1)     Bonus    Compensation
  -------------------        ----   ---------     -----    ------------
Albert L. Bossier, Jr.       1996   $ 684,821   $ 173,870   $ 10,702(2)
 Chairman of the Board,      1995     643,632     216,453     10,820
 Chief Executive Officer     1994     621,864      46,640     12,425 
 and President                       
                                    
Thomas M. Kitchen            1996     320,415      81,351      7,660(3)
 Vice President, Chief       1995     301,152     101,277      8,595
 Financial Officer and       1994     290,952      21,821     10,080
 Secretary

Kenneth B. Dupont            1996     240,231      60,993      6,423(4)
 Vice President              1995     225,768      75,926      5,785
                             1994     218,112      16,358      3,329
______________________________
(1)   Includes a lump sum payment equal to 2.8% of salary in lieu of a general
      increase made to all employees in 1996.

(2)   Consists of $1,902  in medical expense reimbursement and $8,800 in group 
      life and disability insurance premiums.

(3)   Consists of $560 in medical expense  reimbursement and $7,100  in  group  
      life  and disability insurance premiums.

(4)   Consists of $1,323  in medical expense reimbursement and $5,100 in group 
      life and disability insurance premiums.
                             _________________________

Stock Options and Stock Appreciation Rights

     The following table sets  forth  certain  information concerning the
exercise  of  options  and  stock  appreciation rights  during  1996  and
unexercised options and stock appreciation rights on December 31, 1996.


           AGGREGATED OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR AND
                      FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION/SAR VALUES
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                   Number of securities         Value of Unexercised
                                                  underlying unexercised     In-the-Money Options/SARs
                         Shares                  options/SARs at 12/31/96          at  12/31/96
                        acquired     Value    -----------------------------  --------------------------
      Name             on exercise  realized  Exercisable(1)  Unexercisable  Exercisable  Unexercisable
      ----             -----------  --------  --------------  -------------  -----------  -------------
<S>                       <C>       <C>          <C>                 <C>      <C>            <C>
Albert L. Bossier, Jr.    10,710    $49,121      129,251             0        $ 585,451      $  0

Thomas M. Kitchen              0          0       59,160             0          169,731         0

Kenneth B. Dupont              0          0       17,000             0           78,175         0

</TABLE>
_____________________________
(1) All  options  are in tandem with stock appreciation rights  except  options
    of  Mr. Bossier with respect to 29,036 shares.


Pension Plans

   Messrs.  Bossier,  Kitchen  and  Dupont  participate  in  a  qualified
defined-benefit  pension  plan  (the  "Qualified  Pension  Plan"), a non-
qualified supplemental pension plan (the "Supplemental Pension Plan") and
a non-qualified executive excess retirement plan (the "Excess  Retirement
Plan").

   The  following table reflects the aggregate annual benefits under  the
Qualified  Pension  Plan, Supplemental Pension Plan and Excess Retirement
Plan that an executive  officer  with  the  years  of service and average
annual earnings (as calculated in accordance with the  Qualified  Pension
Plan and Supplemental Pension Plan) indicated can expect to receive under
the  plans  upon  retirement at age 65.  The benefits under the Qualified
Pension Plan and the  Excess Retirement Plan are not subject to reduction
for Social Security but are offset by the actuarially equivalent value of
the shares of Common Stock and other assets allocated to the ESOP account
of each participant.  This offset is not reflected in the table below.

                  Avondale Industries, Inc.
             Estimated Annual Retirement Benefits
             (Before Reduction for ESOP Benefits)
                               Years of Service
Average   -----------------------------------------------------------------
 Annual       15         20         25         30         35         40
Earnings     years      years      years      years      years      years
- --------     -----      -----      -----      -----      -----      -----
$250,000  $  93,750  $ 112,500  $ 131,250  $ 150,000  $ 168,750  $ 187,500
 300,000    112,500    135,000    157,500    180,000    202,500    225,000
 350,000    131,250    157,500    183,750    210,000    236,250    262,500
 400,000    150,000    180,000    210,000    240,000    270,000    300,000
 450,000    168,750    202,500    236,250    270,000    303,750    337,500
 500,000    187,500    225,000    262,500    300,000    337,500    375,000
 550,000    206,250    247,500    288,750    330,000    371,250    412,500
 600,000    225,000    270,000    315,000    360,000    405,000    450,000
 650,000    243,750    292,500    341,250    390,000    438,750    487,500
 700,000    262,500    315,000    367,500    420,000    472,500    525,000
 750,000    281,250    337,500    393,750    450,000    506,250    562,500
 800,000    300,000    360,000    420,000    480,000    540,000    600,000
 850,000    318,750    382,500    446,250    510,000    573,750    637,500
 900,000    337,500    405,000    472,500    540,000    607,500    675,000
 950,000    356,250    427,500    498,750    570,000    641,250    712,500

     Compensation  covered  by the plans consists of salary, bonus and an
automobile allowance.  Covered  compensation for Messrs. Bossier, Kitchen
and Dupont equals the amount reported  in  the Summary Compensation Table
under the heading "Annual Compensation" plus  the  automobile  allowance.
Messrs. Bossier, Kitchen and Dupont have 40, 19 and 33 years of  service,
respectively, under each of the plans.

Employment and Change in Control Agreements

     All  amounts  set  forth  under "Salary" in the Summary Compensation
Table (other than amounts set forth  in  footnote  1  thereto)  were paid
under  employment  agreements  between  the  Company  and  each executive
officer (the "Employment Agreements") which provide for base salaries and
for annual bonuses as determined by the Board of Directors.   The term of
the Employment Agreements has been extended to December 31, 1999.   After
December  31,  1999,  the  Employment Agreement of each executive officer
continues from year to year,  subject  to the right of the Company or the
employee to terminate such Employment Agreement without cause at December
31, 1999 or on any subsequent December 31  (a "normal termination date"),
by  giving  at  least  60  days  prior  written  notice   to  the  other.
Termination of employment that is properly effected by either  party with
respect  to  a  normal termination date is not a breach of the Employment
Agreement.   Under  the  Employment  Agreements,  base  salaries  may  be
increased but  not decreased by the Board and bonuses are fixed from time
to time by the Board,  provided  that Mr. Bossier may not be paid a bonus
in an amount less than the bonus paid for the immediately preceding year.
For fiscal year 1995 and for any year  for which the Management Incentive
Plan adopted by the Compensation Committee  in  early  1995 is in effect,
Mr.  Bossier  has waived his bonus rights under his Employment  Agreement
with the understanding  that  he  would instead receive the bonus that he
may become entitled to receive under the terms of such Plan.

     Under the Employment Agreements,  if  the employment of an executive
officer  is terminated by him for certain specified  reasons  or  by  the
Company (at any time other than a normal termination date) for any reason
other than  cause (as defined therein), the executive officer is entitled
to a lump sum  severance  payment  equal  to  three  times the sum of his
annual salary and annual bonus, which amount is reduced  if the executive
officer's  employment  is terminated after age 62.  If the employment  of
any  of  Messrs.  Bossier,   Kitchen   or   Dupont  is  terminated  under
circumstances giving rise to their entitlement  to  claim their severance
benefits, the lump sum severance payments to which each  would  currently
be   entitled   are  approximately  $224,000,  $1,200,000  and  $885,000,
respectively.

     The severance  benefits payable under the Employment Agreements also
include  the  continuation   of   health   and  insurance  benefits,  and
supplemental  lump  sum  pension  benefits.  These  supplemental  pension
benefits are based upon compensation  and  are reduced by benefits earned
under the Qualified Pension Plan.  If supplemental  pension  benefits are
paid  as  part  of  an  executive  officer's severance benefits under  an
Employment Agreement, benefits otherwise  payable to him under the Excess
Retirement Plan are reduced.  To the extent  that  any  executive officer
had shares of Common Stock withheld from allocation to his  ESOP  account
because  of  the limits imposed by the Internal Revenue Code, the Company
has agreed to  pay  to  him  the  fair  market  value of such shares upon
termination of his employment.

     Each of Messrs. Bossier, Kitchen and Dupont  is  a party to a change
in control agreement with the Company.  The agreements  provide  for  the
payment   of   certain  benefits  upon  an  involuntary  or  constructive
termination of the  officers'  employment, except for cause, within three
years following a change in control.   Benefits  payable under the change
in control agreements include a cash payment in an  amount equal to three
times salary plus bonus, continued health and life insurance benefits for
three years after termination and accelerated vesting under the Company's
supplemental  retirement plans.  To the extent payments  are  made  under
these change in  control  agreements,  no severance payments will be made
under the Employment Agreements.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

     The members of the Compensation Committee  of the Board of Directors
are  Mr.  Thompson  and  Admiral  Donovan, neither of  whom  is,  or  was
formerly,  an  officer  or  employee  of   the  Company  or  any  of  its
subsidiaries, nor has or has had any other significant  relationship with
the   Company.    The   Compensation  Committee  determines  the  general
compensation policies of  the  Company, determines the compensation to be
paid  to  the  executive officers of  the  Company  and  administers  the
Company's  Performance  Share  Plan  and  Stock  Appreciation  Plan.   No
executive officer  of  the  Company  served  in the last fiscal year as a
director or member of the compensation committee  of  another entity, one
of whose executive officers served as a director or on  the  Compensation
Committee.

Compensation Committee Report on Executive Compensation

     The  Compensation  Committee  (the  "Committee")  of  the  Board  of
Directors  furnished  the  following  report with respect to compensation
paid to the executive officers of the Company in 1996.

     Under the By-laws of the Company,  the  Committee, which is required
to be made up of outside independent directors,  determines  the  general
compensation  policies of the Company, determines the compensation to  be
paid  to the executive  officers  of  the  Company  and  administers  the
Company's stock incentive plans.

     As  disclosed under the heading "Executive Compensation - Employment
and Change  in Control Agreements," each of the Company's three executive
officers has  an  employment agreement with the Company that, as extended
by the Committee in  December  1996,  may  not  be  terminated  prior  to
December 31, 1999 and that provides among other things, that the Board of
Directors  has  only  the  authority  to increase, and not decrease, each
executive officer's base salary as compared to the amount paid during the
immediately preceding year.  The decision  by the Committee to extend the
contracts  recognized  such  persons' significant  contributions  to  the
improvement in the Company's financial  position  and  performance during
1996,  evidenced by the successful procurement in December  1996  of  the
LPD-17  contract  by  a  Company-led  alliance,  as  well  as  additional
shipbuilding  backlog,  the significant increase in the Company's profits
and the substantial increase  in  shareholder  value  during  1996.   The
Committee  also  believes that the extension of the Employment Agreements
will  assure  that  the  Company  will  continue  to  benefit  from  this
management group's experience  in  order  to  meet  future challenges and
opportunities in the shipbuilding industry, including  opportunities  for
the   Company   to   compete   for   potential   commercial  shipbuilding
opportunities and other shipbuilding initiatives of the U.S. Navy.

     Compensation  paid  to  the  three  executive officers  during  1996
essentially consisted of two components, annual salary and a performance-
based cash bonus payable pursuant to a Management  Incentive Plan adopted
by  the  Committee  in  early  1995  in  which  the  executive   officers
participate.  With respect to salaries, the named executive officers  and
all  other  employees were given an increase of approximately 3.5% during
1996, reflecting  a  cost  of  living  adjustment.   In  lieu of a salary
increase  for  1997,  the  executive  officers  and  all  other employees
received  a  lump-sum  payment equal to 2.8% of salary in December  1996.
The  bonuses  paid  to  the  executive  officers  were  calculated  as  a
percentage of base salary in accordance with a formula established by the
Committee at the beginning  of  1995.   The formula for 1996 was based on
the  Company  achieving certain targets with  respect  to  the  following
criteria (in order  of  weight given by the Committee):  operating profit
less interest charges, profit  estimates  at  contract completion, direct
man hour estimates at contract completion, direct  material  estimates at
contract  completion  and composite labor rates.  The formula called  for
the bonus to be earned  by  the executive officers in increments of 1% of
their base salary based on their  degree  of  success  in  achieving  the
targets.   If all of the targets established at the beginning of 1996 had
been achieved but not exceeded, then the bonuses payable to the executive
officers would  have  been  approximately  25%  of  their respective base
salaries.   Although the Company exceeded certain of the  pre-established
targets, application  of  the  formula resulted in a bonus paid of 25% of
their respective base salaries.   For  future  years,  the  Committee may
establish   different  performance  goals,  criteria  and  formulas   for
calculation of the bonus.

     Although  no  stock options or other stock-based awards were granted
to executive officers  in  1996, each of the executive officers continues
to hold stock options granted in earlier years.  In addition, if the 1997
Stock Incentive Plan is approved  by  shareholders at the Annual Meeting,
the Committee intends to grant options  to executive officers in 1997 and
to  utilize stock compensation as a significant  component  of  executive
compensation  in  the  future.   See  "Proposal  to  Approve the Avondale
Industries, inc. 1997 Stock Incentive Plan."

     Under  Section  162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code,  publicly  held
companies may be prohibited  from  deducting  as compensation expense for
federal income tax purposes total compensation  paid  in a single year to
an  officer  that  is  in excess of $1 million.  When making  its  future
compensation decisions,  the  Compensation  Committee intends to consider
the effects of Section 162(m) on the Company.



          Hugh A. Thompson              Francis R. Donovan


Performance Graph

     The graph and corresponding table below compare the cumulative total
shareholder return on the Company's Common Stock  from  December 31, 1991
to December 31, 1996 with the cumulative total return on  a  NASDAQ index
and a peer group index, in each case assuming the investment of  $100  on
December  31,  1991 at the closing price on that date and reinvestment of
dividends.  The peer group index consists of Bethlehem Steel Co., General
Dynamics Corp.,  Litton  Industries,  Inc., McDermott International Inc.,
Tenneco Inc., Todd Shipyards Corp. and  Trinity  Industries Inc., and the
returns  of  each  issuer  are  weighted  according to its  stock  market
capitalization at the beginning of each period  for  which  a  return  is
indicated.



                       [insert graph here]


                    Cumulative Total Shareholder Return
   Index                        December 31,
   -----       __________________________________________________             
               1991     1992     1993     1994     1995     1996
               ----     ----     ----     ----     ----     ----
The Company   100.00    50.58   178.79   187.88   351.52   521.21
Peer Group    100.00   147.79   235.26   212.12   257.98   288.84
NASDAQ        100.00   100.98   121.13   127.17   164.96   204.98
              ___________________________________________________


                       CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS

     The  law firm of Blue Williams, L.L.P., of which a son of Mr. Albert
L. Bossier,  Jr.,  a  director  and  the  chief  executive officer of the
Company, is one of the partners, was paid $885,285 in 1996 by the Company
for  legal  services rendered.  The law firm of Correro  Fishman  Haygood
Phelps Weiss Walmsley & Casteix, L.L.P., of which Mr. Correro, a director
of the Company,  is  one  of the partners, was retained by the Company to
render a nominal amount of legal services in 1996.

     SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

        Section  16(a)  of  the   Exchange  Act  requires  the  Company's
directors,  executive officers and 10%  shareholders  to  file  with  the
Securities  and   Exchange   Commission  initial  reports  of  beneficial
ownership, and changes in beneficial  ownership,  of  the Common Stock of
the  Company.   In February 1996 the Avondale Industries,  Inc.  Employee
Stock Ownership Plan  ("ESOP")  sold   stock  in a public offering.  As a
result, a Statement of Changes in Beneficial Ownership  on  Form 4 ("Form
4")  was  required  to  have  been  filed  by each of the members of  the
Administrative Committee of the ESOP by March  10,  1996.   However,  the
determination   of   the  actual  number  of  shares  sold  out  of  each
participant's account  was  not  finalized until after March 10, 1996, at
which time a Form 4 was filed by each  of  Blanche S. Barlotta, Eugene E.
Blanchard, Jr., Ronald Dean Church, Rodney J.  Duhon,  Jr.  and Ernest F.
Griffin,  Jr.,  to  report sales of shares of Common Stock from  each  of
their ESOP accounts on February 12, 1996 and February 23, 1996.


        PROPOSAL TO APPROVE THE AVONDALE INDUSTRIES, INC.
                    1997 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN
             (Item 2 on the accompanying proxy card)

General

        The Board of  Directors of the Company strongly believes that the
growth of the Company depends upon the efforts of its directors, officers
and key employees and that directors, officers and key employees are best
motivated to put forth  maximum effort on behalf of the Company if a part
of their financial reward  is  tied  to  the performance of the Company's
Common  Stock.   In  accordance  with  this  philosophy,   the   Avondale
Industries,  Inc.  1997 Stock Incentive Plan (the "Plan") was adopted  by
the Board of Directors,  subject  to  approval by the shareholders at the
Annual Meeting.  The principal features of the Plan are summarized below.
This summary is qualified in its entirety,  however,  by reference to the
Plan, which is attached to this Proxy Statement as Exhibit A.

        Key  employees of the Company (including officers  and  directors
who are also full-time  employees  of  the  Company)  will be eligible to
receive  awards  ("Incentives")  under  the Plan when designated  by  the
Compensation  Committee.   The  Company currently  has  approximately  35
employees eligible to be granted  Incentives  under the Plan.  Incentives
under  the  Plan  may  be  granted  in  any one or a combination  of  the
following  forms:  (a) incentive stock options  and  non-qualified  stock
options; (b) stock appreciation  rights;  (c)  restricted  stock; and (d)
performance shares.

        Directors of the Company who are not also full-time  employees of
the  Company  ("Outside  Directors")  will automatically be granted  non-
qualified stock options through the Plan on an annual basis.  The Company
currently has four Outside Directors.

Purpose of the Proposal

        The Board of Directors is committed to creating and maintaining a
compensation system based to a significant  extent  on  grants of equity-
based awards.  The Board of Directors believes that providing  directors,
members  of  management and key personnel with a proprietary interest  in
the  growth  and   performance   of  the  Company  stimulates  individual
performance while simultaneously enhancing  shareholder value.  The Board
further believes that the Plan will provide the  Company with the ability
to attract, retain and motivate key personnel and  directors  in a manner
that is tied to the interests of shareholders.

Terms of the Plan

        Shares Issuable through the Plan.  A total of 1,430,000 shares of
Common  Stock  is  authorized  to  be issued under the Plan, representing
approximately 10% of the outstanding  shares of Common Stock.  Incentives
with respect to no more than 45,000 shares of Common Stock may be granted
through the Plan to a single participant  in  a calendar year.  There are
currently  options  to  acquire  197,368  shares  outstanding  under  the
Company's Stock Appreciation Plan, substantially all  of  which expire in
mid-1999,  and  no  additional  awards  may  be granted thereunder.   The
Committee intends that the total of outstanding options granted under the
Stock Appreciation Plan plus Incentives outstanding  under  the Plan will
at  no  time  exceed 10% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.   The
closing sale price  of a share of Common Stock, as reported by the Nasdaq
National Market on April 1, 1997,  was $16.75.

        The number and kind of shares of Common Stock subject to the Plan
and subject to outstanding  Incentives would be appropriately adjusted in
the event of any change in the  capital  structure  of  the Company.  The
Compensation Committee may also amend the terms of any Incentive  to  the
extent  appropriate to provide participants with the same relative rights
before and after the occurrence of such an event.  Shares of Common Stock
subject to  Incentives  that  are  cancelled, terminated or forfeited, or
shares of Common Stock that are issued  as  Incentives  and  forfeited or
reacquired by the Company will again be available for issuance  under the
Plan.  Incentives that are paid in cash are not counted against the total
number of shares issuable through the Plan.

        Administration   of   the   Plan.    The  Compensation  Committee
administers  the  Plan and has authority to award  Incentives  under  the
Plan, to interpret  the  Plan,  to  establish  any  rules  or regulations
relating  to the Plan that it determines to be appropriate, to  make  any
other determination  that  it  believes  necessary  or  advisable for the
proper  administration  of  the  Plan  and  to delegate its authority  as
appropriate.

        Amendments to the Plan.  The Board may  amend  or discontinue the
Plan  at  any  time,  except  that  any  amendment  that would materially
increase the benefits under the Plan, materially increase  the  number of
securities  that may be issued through the Plan or materially modify  the
eligibility requirements  must  be  approved  by  the  shareholders.   In
addition,  no  amendment  or discontinuance may change or impair, without
the consent of the recipient thereof, an Incentive previously granted.

        Types of Incentives  to  Employees.   The  Compensation Committee
will  be  authorized  under  the Plan to grant stock options,  restricted
stock, stock appreciation rights and performance shares, each of which is
described further below.

        Stock  Options.   The  Compensation   Committee  may  grant  non-
qualified stock options or incentive stock options  to purchase shares of
Common Stock.  The Compensation Committee will determine  the  number and
exercise  price  of  the  options, and the time or times that the options
become exercisable, provided  that  the  option exercise price may not be
less than the fair market value of the Common Stock on the date of grant.
The  term  of  an  option  will also be determined  by  the  Compensation
Committee, provided that the  term  of  an incentive stock option may not
exceed  10  years.   The  Compensation  Committee   may   accelerate  the
exercisability  of  any  stock  option  at  any  time.   The Compensation
Committee may also approve the purchase by the Company of  an unexercised
stock  option  from  the  optionee by mutual agreement for the difference
between the exercise price  and  the  fair  market  value  of  the shares
covered by the option.

        The  option  exercise  price  may  be paid in cash, in shares  of
Common Stock held for six months, in a combination  of cash and shares of
Common  Stock or through a broker assisted exercise arrangement  approved
in advance by the Company.

        Incentive  stock  options  will  be subject to certain additional
requirements necessary in order to qualify  as  incentive  stock  options
under Section 422 of the Code.

        Restricted  Stock.  Shares of Common Stock may be granted by  the
Compensation Committee  to  an  eligible  employee  and  made  subject to
restrictions  on  sale,  pledge  or other transfer by the employee for  a
certain period (the "Restricted Period").   A  Restricted  Period  of  at
least  three  years  is required, except that if vesting of the shares is
subject to the attainment  of  specified  performance goals, a Restricted
Period of one year or more is permitted.  All  shares of restricted stock
will  be subject to such restrictions as the Compensation  Committee  may
provide in an agreement with the employee, including, among other things,
that the  shares are required to be forfeited or resold to the Company in
the  event of  termination  of  employment  or  in  the  event  specified
performance  goals  or  targets are not met.  Subject to the restrictions
provided  in  the  agreement   and  the  Plan,  a  participant  receiving
restricted stock shall have all of the rights of a shareholder as to such
shares.

        Stock Appreciation Rights.   A  stock appreciation right or "SAR"
is a right to receive, without payment to the Company, a number of shares
of Common Stock, cash or any combination  thereof, the amount of which is
determined pursuant to the formula described below.  A SAR may be granted
in  conjunction with a stock option or alone  without  reference  to  any
stock  option.   A  SAR granted in conjunction with a stock option may be
granted concurrently  with the grant of such option or at such later time
as determined by the Committee and as to all or any portion of the shares
subject to the option.

        The Plan confers  on  the  Committee  discretion to determine the
number of shares to which a SAR will relate as  well  as the duration and
exercisability terms of a SAR.  In the case of a SAR granted with respect
to a stock option, the number of shares of Common Stock  to which the SAR
pertains will be reduced in the same proportion that the holder exercises
the  related option.  Unless otherwise provided by the Committee,  a  SAR
will be exercisable for the same time period as any stock option to which
it relates.  The Committee may accelerate the exercisability of an SAR.

        Upon  exercise  of  an  SAR, the holder is entitled to receive an
amount which is equal to the aggregate  amount of the appreciation in the
shares  of  Common  Stock as to which the SAR  is  exercised.   For  this
purpose, the "appreciation" in the shares consists of the amount by which
the fair market value  of the shares of Common Stock on the exercise date
exceeds (a) in the case  of a SAR related to a stock option, the purchase
price of the shares under  the option or (b) in the case of a SAR granted
alone without reference to a  related  stock option, an amount determined
by the Committee at the time of grant.

        Performance Shares.  Performance  Shares  consist of the grant by
the  Company  to an eligible employee of a contingent  right  to  receive
shares of Common  Stock  or  cash  with  or  without  any  payment by the
employee.   Each performance share will be subject to the achievement  of
performance  objectives   by  the  Company,  a  subsidiary,  division  or
department  by the end of a  specified  period.   The  number  of  shares
granted  and  the   performance   criteria  will  be  determined  by  the
Compensation Committee.  The award of performance shares shall not create
any rights in a participant as a shareholder  of  the  Company  until the
issuance of shares of Common Stock with respect to an award.  Performance
shares  may  be  awarded  in  conjunction  with  the  grant  of  dividend
equivalent payment rights that entitle a participant to receive an amount
equal  to  the cash dividends paid on an equal number of shares of Common
Stock during  the  period  beginning on the date of grant of an award and
ending on the date on which the award is paid or is forfeited.

        Grant of Options to Outside Directors.  The Plan provides for the
automatic grant to each Outside  Director  of  an option to acquire 1,065
shares  of  Common  Stock  on  the day following the  annual  meeting  of
shareholders  beginning  with the  1997  annual  meeting  and  each  year
thereafter that the Plan remains  in  effect  and  shares of Common Stock
remain available for grant under the Plan on such dates.

        The options granted to Outside Directors become  exercisable  25%
per   year  beginning  one  year  after  grant,  but  become  immediately
exercisable in full in the event of a change of control of the Company or
in the  event  of  the Outside Director's retirement from the Board on or
after reaching age 65,  death  or disability.  No stock option granted to
an Outside Director may be exercised more than 10 years after the date of
grant or more than one year after  termination  of  Board  service.   The
exercise  price  of  stock  options granted to Outside Directors shall be
equal to the fair market value  of a share of Common Stock on the date of
grant.

        Termination of Employment.  If an employee  participant ceases to
be  an  employee of the Company for  any  reason,  including  death,  any
Incentive  may  be exercised or shall expire at such time or times as may
be determined by the Committee in the Incentive agreement.

        Change of  Control.   In  the event of a change of control of the
Company, as defined in the Plan, all  outstanding  options and Incentives
granted  pursuant  to  the  Plan  shall  become  fully  exercisable,  all
restrictions  or  limitations  on  any  Incentives  shall lapse  and  all
performance  criteria  and other conditions relating to  the  payment  of
Incentives will be deemed  to be achieved.  Furthermore, the Compensation
Committee  may take such other  action  with  respect  to  an  option  or
Incentive as shall be provided in an agreement with the holder thereof.

        In the  event  of  any merger, consolidation or reorganization of
the Company with any other corporation,  there  shall  be substituted for
each  of  the shares of Common Stock subject to the Plan and  subject  to
outstanding  Incentives,  the number and kind of shares of stock or other
securities to which the holders  of  Common Stock will be entitled in the
transaction.

        Transferability of Incentives.   Options,  SARs  and  performance
shares   are  not  transferable  except  (a) by will, (b) by the laws  of
descent  and  distribution, or (c) only in the  case  of  stock  options,
pursuant to a domestic  relations  order,  to family members, to a family
partnership, to a family limited liability company  or to a trust for the
benefit of family members, if permitted by the Committee  and so provided
in the Incentive Agreement.

Awards To Be Granted

        If the Plan is approved by shareholders, the Committee  currently
intends  to  grant  non-qualified  stock  options  soon  after the Annual
Meeting to officers and employees as described in the table  below.   The
size  of the grants to officers and employees is within the discretion of
the Committee  and may change based upon future developments.  The grants
to Outside Directors will be made on the day following the Annual Meeting
and grants of the same size will automatically be made under the terms of
the Plan on the  day  following  future  annual  meetings  while the Plan
remains  in  effect  and  shares  of  Common  Stock remain available  for
issuance through the Plan.

                             New Plan Benefits
                     Under the Avondale Industries, Inc.
                           1997 Stock Incentive Plan

                                                         Number of Shares
     Name and Position                                  Underlying Options
     -----------------                                  ------------------
     Albert L. Bossier, Jr., Chairman of the Board,           27,826
       Chief Executive Officer and President

     Thomas M. Kitchen, Vice President, Chief Financial       13,019
       Officer, Secretary and Director

     Kenneth B. Dupont, Vice President and Director            9,761

     Anthony J. Correro, III, Director                         1,065

     Francis R. Donovan, Director                              1,065

     William A. Harmeyer, Director                             1,065

     Hugh A. Thompson, Director                                1,065

     All Executive Officers                                   50,606

     All Outside Directors                                     4,260

     All Employees Other Than Executive Officers             135,073

Federal Income Tax Consequences

     Under  existing  federal income tax provisions,  a  participant  who
receives stock options,  SARs,  performance shares or who receives shares
of  restricted  stock that are subject  to  restrictions  that  create  a
"substantial risk of forfeiture" (within the meaning of Section 83 of the
Code) will not normally realize any income, nor will the Company normally
receive any deduction  for  federal  income tax purposes in the year such
Incentive is granted.

     When a non-qualified stock option  granted  pursuant  to the Plan is
exercised, the option holder will realize ordinary income measured by the
difference between the aggregate purchase price of the shares  of  Common
Stock  as  to which the option is exercised and the aggregate fair market
value of the  shares of Common Stock on the exercise date and, subject to
the limitations  of  Section  162(m)  of  the  Code,  the Company will be
entitled to a deduction in the year the option is exercised  equal to the
amount the option holder is required to treat as ordinary income.

     An  employee  generally  will  not  recognize  any  income upon  the
exercise of any incentive stock option, but the excess of the fair market
value of the shares at the time of exercise over the option price will be
an  item  of  tax preference, which may, depending on particular  factors
relating to the employee, subject the employee to the alternative minimum
tax imposed by  Section  55  of the Code.  The alternative minimum tax is
imposed in addition to the federal  individual  income  tax,  and  it  is
intended  to  ensure  that  individual  taxpayers do not completely avoid
federal income tax by using preference items.  An employee will recognize
capital gain or loss in the amount of the difference between the exercise
price  and  the  sale  price on the sale or exchange  of  stock  acquired
pursuant to the exercise  of  an  incentive  stock  option,  provided the
employee does not dispose of such stock within two years from the date of
grant  and  one  year  from  the date of exercise of the incentive  stock
option (the "required holding  periods").   An employee disposing of such
shares  before  the  expiration  of  the  required  holding  period  will
recognize ordinary income generally equal to  the  difference between the
option  price  and  the fair market value of the stock  on  the  date  of
exercise.  The remaining gain, if any, will be capital gain.  The Company
will not be entitled to a federal income tax deduction in connection with
the exercise of an incentive  stock  option,  except  where  the employee
disposes of the Common Stock received upon exercise before the expiration
of the required holding period.

     If  the  exercise  price  of  an option is paid by the surrender  of
previously owned shares, the basis of the previously owned shares carries
over to the shares received in replacement  therefor.  If the option is a
non-qualified option, the income recognized on  exercise  is added to the
basis.   If  the  option is an incentive stock option, the optionee  will
recognize  gain if the  shares  surrendered  were  acquired  through  the
exercise of  an  incentive  stock  option  and have not been held for the
applicable holding period.  This gain will be  added  to the basis of the
shares received in replacement of the previously owned shares.

     When a SAR is exercised, the employee will recognize ordinary income
in the year of exercise equal to the value of the appreciation  to  which
the employee is entitled, and subject to Section 162(m) of the Code,  the
Company  will be entitled to a deduction in the same year and in the same
amount.

     An employee who receives restricted stock or performance shares will
normally  recognize   taxable  income  on  the  date  the  shares  become
transferable or no longer subject to substantial risk of forfeiture or on
the date of their earlier disposition.  The amount of such taxable income
will be equal to the amount  by which the fair market value of the shares
of Common Stock on the date such  restrictions lapse (or any earlier date
on which the shares are disposed of)  exceeds  their  purchase  price, if
any.  An employee may elect, however, to include in income in the year of
purchase  or  grant the excess of the fair market value of the shares  of
Common Stock (without regard to any restrictions) on the date of purchase
or grant over its  purchase price.  Subject to the limitations imposed by
Section 162(m) of the  Code,  the Company will be entitled to a deduction
for compensation paid in the same  year  and in the same amount as income
is realized by the employee.  Dividends currently paid to the participant
will be taxable compensation income to the  participant and deductible by
the Company.

     If, upon a change in control of the Company,  the  exercisability or
vesting of an Incentive granted under the Plan is accelerated, any excess
on  the  date  of the change in control of the fair market value  of  the
shares or cash issued  under  accelerated  Incentives  over  the purchase
price of such shares, if any, may be characterized as Parachute  Payments
(within  the  meaning  of  Section  280G  of the Code) if the sum of such
amounts and any other such contingent payments  received  by the employee
exceeds  an  amount  equal  to  three  times  the "Base Amount" for  such
employee.   The  Base  Amount  generally  is the average  of  the  annual
compensation of such employee for the five years preceding such change in
ownership or control.  An Excess Parachute  Payment,  with respect to any
employee, is the excess of the Parachute Payments to such  person, in the
aggregate,  over  and  above  such person's Base Amount.  If the  amounts
received by an employee upon a  change  in  control  are characterized as
Parachute Payments, such employee will be subject to a  20% excise tax on
the Excess Parachute Payment pursuant to Section 4999 of  the  Code,  and
the  Company  will  be  denied  any deduction with respect to such Excess
Parachute Payment.

     The Company has entered into  change  of control agreements with its
three executive officers in which the Company has agreed, in the event of
a change of control, to pay each such officer  the  amounts  necessary to
place  the  officer in the same position after payment of federal  income
and excise taxes as the officer would have been in if Section 4999 of the
Code had not  been  applicable  to  him.   See "Executive Compensation --
Change of Control Agreements."  Such payment  by the Company would not be
deductible for federal income tax purposes.

     This  summary  of federal income tax consequences  of  non-qualified
stock  options,  incentive  stock  options,  stock  appreciation  rights,
restricted stock and  performance shares does not purport to be complete.
Reference should be made  to the applicable provisions of the Code. There
also  may  be  state and local  income  tax  consequences  applicable  to
transactions involving Incentives.

Vote Required

     Approval of  the  Plan requires the affirmative vote, cast in person
or by proxy, of the holders  of  at  least  a  majority  of the shares of
Common Stock present and entitled to vote at the Meeting.

     The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR approval  of  the  1997
Stock Incentive Plan.


                      SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS
            (Items 3-5 on the accompanying proxy card)

     Set forth under this heading are three shareholder proposals, all of
which  are  unanimously  opposed by the Company's Board of Directors.  As
noted in further detail below  all  of  these proposals were submitted to
the Company pursuant to Rule 14a-8 of the Exchange Act, and therefore, in
accordance with such rule, each of those  proposals  is set forth in full
below and is accompanied by the proponent's statement in support thereof.

     The Board of Directors unanimously recommends a vote AGAINST each of
the shareholder proposals.

Statement  by  the  Board  of  Directors  in  Opposition  to  all   three
shareholder proposals

     The   proposals   submitted   under  Rule  14a-8  (the  "Rule  14a-8
Proposals"), and the statements in support  thereof,  were  submitted  by
three  Company  employees,  Messrs.  Angus  Fountain, Steve Rodriguez and
Roger McGee, Sr., each of whom holds his shares  of  the Company's Common
Stock as a participant in the Avondale Employee Stock Ownership Plan (the
"ESOP").   All  three  of  the  proposals submitted for the  1997  Annual
Meeting are substantially identical  to  proposals  submitted by the same
nominal proponents for the 1995 and 1996 Annual Meetings (and two of them
are   also   substantially   identical  to  proposals  submitted   by   a
"Shareholders Committee" for the  1994  Annual  Meeting),  and  all  were
overwhelmingly  rejected  by the Company's shareholders at the 1994, 1995
and 1996 Annual Meetings.   The  Board  believes  that  the submission of
these three proposals is a continuation of the "corporate campaign" waged
against the Company by the United Brotherhood of Carpenters  and  Joiners
of  America  (the  "UBC") and its affiliate, the Metal Trades Department,
AFL-CIO (the "AFL-CIO",  and collectively with the UBC, the "Union"), and
follows  upon  similar  campaigns  sponsored  by  the  Union  during  the
Company's last three annual meetings.

     The  Board  of Directors  unanimously  opposes  each  of  the  three
shareholder proposals  that are described below.  The specific "corporate
governance" reasons for the Board's opposition to these proposals are set
forth under "Board of Directors'  Statement  in  Opposition" that follows
each of the proposals.  Each of these proposals attempts to undermine the
authority of the Board of Directors to manage the  Company,  and  thereby
diminish the ability of the Board to deal resolutely with the Union.  The
Board  believes  that  it  is  the Union's hope that success in obtaining
support  for  any  of the three proposals  will  demonstrate  a  lack  of
confidence by the Company's shareholders in the Board of Directors.

     It is apparent to your Board of Directors that the proposals and the
Union's corporate campaign are not in any sense motivated by a legitimate
desire to advance the  best  interests  of  the  Company's  shareholders.
Instead,   the  Union's  tactics  are  a  misguided  effort  to  pressure
management to  accede  to  the  Union's demands as well as to give to the
Company's employees the appearance  that the Union is actively working on
their behalf.  The Board of Directors  asks for your vote against each of
the three shareholder proposals in order  to  discourage  the  Union from
continuing  to  employ  its  abusive  tactics.   However, in addition  to
objecting  to  these proposals because the Board and  management  believe
they are Union-sponsored, the Board and management also believe that each
of the proposals  should  be rejected by the shareholders for the reasons
set forth under the Company's  specific  "Statements in Opposition" which
immediately  follow  each  of  the three proposals  and  the  proponent's
statement in support thereof.

Shareholder Proposals

     The following three shareholder  proposals were submitted by Messrs.
Angus Fountain, Steve Rodriguez and Roger  McGee, Sr., respectively, each
of whom has notified the Company that he is  the beneficial owner of more
than  $1,000  of  the  Company's Common Stock and  intends  to  remain  a
beneficial holder of these  shares  through  the  date of the 1997 Annual
Meeting.    Information  regarding  the  addresses  of  each   of   these
shareholders will be furnished by the Company to any person, orally or in
writing as requested,  promptly  upon  the receipt of any oral or written
request  therefor.   For  the  reasons  set forth  in  its  Statement  in
Opposition above and its individual Statements  in Opposition immediately
following  each proposal, none of these proposals  is  supported  by  the
Board of Directors  and  the  Board of Directors unanimously urges you to
vote AGAINST each of the three proposals.

A.   Shareholder Proposal Regarding Shareholder Rights Plan
     (Item 3 on the accompanying Proxy Card)

     The resolution submitted by Mr. Fountain is as follows:

          RESOLVED:  That the shareholders  of  Avondale Industries, Inc.
     ("Company") urge the Board of Directors to redeem  the rights issued
     pursuant  to  the  Stockholder  Protection Rights Plan (unilaterally
     adopted by the Board of Directors  on  September  26, 1994) unless a
     majority of voting shares approve of these rights at  a  meeting  of
     shareholders held as soon as is practical.

Shareholder's Supporting Statement

     This  proposal  received  49%  of  the  vote  last year.  Avondale's
Stockholder Protection Rights Plan, commonly referred  to  as  a  "poison
pill,"  is  an  extremely  powerful anti-takeover device that effectively
prevents a buyout or replacement  of  the  board of directors without the
prior  approval  of  the incumbent board of directors.   The  purpose  of
Avondale's poison pill  is to force shareholders interested in purchasing
the Company to negotiate  with the board of directors instead of making a
tender offer directly to shareholders that would allow them to receive an
above market price in exchange for their shares.

     Under Avondale's Stockholder  Protection  Rights  Plan, the board of
directors may designate a shareholder owning 15% or more of the Company's
stock a hostile bidder and trigger the poison pill.  Once  triggered, all
shareholders,  except  the  shareholder designated a hostile bidder,  can
purchase one new share at half the market price for each share previously
owned.   Triggering a poison pill  would  largely  deplete  the  retained
earnings of  the  Company  and reduce the value of the potential bidder's
investment in Avondale by half.   It  is this draconian financial penalty
that forces a potential bidder to negotiate with the board.

     We  believe poison pills hurt long-term  shareholder  value  in  two
ways:

     1.   We  believe  a  poison pill is a powerful anti-takeover defense
          that  makes  it extremely  difficult  to  replace  a  board  of
          directors and  senior  management  team  whose  performance  is
          deemed inadequate by shareholders.

     2.   We  believe poison pills force potential buyers to work through
          the board,  making  it  more  difficult  to prepare an offer to
          shareholders.   We  believe  this  added obstacle  reduces  the
          probability  that  a  potential buyer will  make  an  offer  to
          shareholders to buy the Company.

     We strongly believe that it  is the shareholders (who are the owners
of the Company), not the directors and managers (who merely act as agents
for the owners), who should have the  right to decide what is or is not a
fair price for their shareholdings.  Poison pills take this decision away
from  shareholders  by  forcing potential  acquirors  to  negotiate  with
management through the threat of severe dilution.

     In the past five years, precatory shareholder proposals to redeem or
allow shareholder votes on poison pills have received majority support at
24  U.S.  publicly-traded companies  including  Advanced  Micro  Devices,
Community Psychiatric  Centers,  Intel,  Ryder and Wellman in 1994 alone.
Furthermore, since 1990 Philip Morris, Time  Warner, United Technologies,
Lockheed and La Quinta Inns have voluntarily redeemed their poison pills.
None  of these companies have experienced coercive  or  abusive  takeover
tactics after the redemption of their poison pills.

Board of Directors' Statement in Opposition

     The  Board  first  notes  that there are several inaccuracies in the
proponent's supporting statement,  including  his  report  of last year's
vote.   In  fact,  as reported in the Company's Form 10-Q for the  second
quarter of 1996, over  65% of the vote present at the 1996 Annual Meeting
was cast against the proposal  regarding the redemption of  rights issued
pursuant to the Avondale Stockholder  Protection  Rights Plan.  Moreover,
although  the  proponent  has  listed  a  handful of companies  at  which
shareholder  proposals  requesting  the  redemption   of  a  rights  plan
apparently received a majority of the votes cast, most of these companies
did not redeem their rights plans and several re-adopted  rights plans to
replace  existing  rights  plans  that  were  expiring.   Moreover,  some
companies listed by the proponent as having redeemed their  rights  plans
in fact have current rights plans or simply allowed their rights plan  to
expire  in  accordance  with  its terms.  While a number of companies may
have  redeemed  their  rights,  there   is   no   indication  as  to  the
circumstances  that  may  have  led  the  Boards  of Directors  of  those
companies to conclude that such action was in the best  interest of their
respective company's shareholders.

     In  adopting  a  shareholder  protection  rights  plan (the  "Rights
Plan"), the Board's goal was (and still is) to protect the  interests  of
the Company and all shareholders.  The Rights Plan is designed to protect
against  attempts  to  acquire the Company for an inadequate price and to
protect against abusive  practices  that  do  not  treat all shareholders
equally,  such  as  coercive,  partial  or  two-tiered  bids   and  stock
accumulation  programs  in  which  all  shareholders do not share in  the
premium associated with a change in control.  Such practices can, and are
often intended to, pressure shareholders into tendering their investments
prior to realizing the full value or total potential of such investments.
The  Rights Plan also permits the Board to  deal  more  effectively  with
"greenmail"  transactions  where an acquiring person seeks a large short-
term profit at the expense of the Company and its shareholders.

     The Rights Plan is intended  to  create an incentive for a potential
acquiror to negotiate in good faith with  the Board.  The Plan also gives
the Board a greater period of time within which it can properly evaluate,
and respond in an orderly and considered manner  to,  an unsolicited bid.
This additional time is important because hostile bidders frequently seek
to "stampede" shareholders into accepting their offer at an unfair price.
The Rights Plan positions the Board to negotiate a higher  price  for the
shareholders, from the original bidder or a third party, when the sale of
the Company is considered to be in the best interests of the Company  and
its  shareholders.   Even  though  a  bidder may offer a premium over the
current market price of the target company's stock, that premium does not
necessarily recognize the inherent value  of  the  target  company.   The
bidder,  of  course,  can be expected to act in its own self interest; in
other words, to try to  acquire the target company at the lowest possible
price  and  to  pressure shareholders  into  selling.   The  Rights  Plan
provides, in the Board's opinion, valuable shareholder protection against
that happening.

     The Board's  overriding  objective  in  adopting  the  Plan  was  to
preserve  and obtain the Company's long-term value for the benefit of all
of its shareholders.   The  Board  believes  there  is  strong  empirical
evidence  that  such  plans  better  position  the  Board  to  meet  this
objective.

     The   Rights  Plan  is  not  intended  to,  and  will  not,  prevent
unsolicited,  non-abusive  offers to acquire the Company at a fair price.
The Rights Plan simply strengthens  the  ability  of the Board to fulfill
its fiduciary responsibilities to the Company's shareholders  because  it
provides  the  Board with the opportunity to evaluate the fairness of any
unsolicited offer and the credibility of the bidder.  The Board's ability
to negotiate with  a  potential acquiror on behalf of all shareholders is
significantly greater than  that  of  the  shareholders individually.  Of
course, in deciding whether to redeem the rights  in  connection with any
unsolicited  offer, the Board will be bound by its fiduciary  obligations
to act in the best interests of the Company and its shareholders.

     The Board  of  Directors  adopted  the Rights Plan in September 1994
following its review of comprehensive analytical  materials  presented to
the  Board  by  a  well-regarded independent investment banking firm  and
special outside legal  counsel  and  a  face-to-face presentation made by
such investment banking firm and legal counsel  to  the  Board.  Based on
such  review and the respective advice of such firms, the Board  believes
that the  adoption  and continuing existence of the Rights Plan is in the
best interests of the  Company  and  shareholders  and  will  not deter a
suitably-financed offer that is made at a fair price to all shareholders.
The  success of any such offer will of course depend on various  factors,
including  the  source  of  the bidder's financing.  More than 1,000 U.S.
corporations, including other  companies engaged in businesses similar to
the Company's, have adopted shareholder  protection  plans similar to the
Rights  Plan,  including  Western  Atlas,  Inc., Litton Industries  Inc.,
McDermott  International  Inc.,  McDonnell  Douglas  Corporation,  Reebok
International,  Inc.,  Georgia  Pacific  Corporation,   General  Dynamics
Corporation, Martin Marietta Corporation, Tenneco, Inc. and  Walt  Disney
Co.

     Under Louisiana law, the Board has the responsibility to manage  and
direct  the  Company's  business and affairs, and the Board believes that
the  adoption  of  the  Rights   Plan   was  a  valid  exercise  of  that
responsibility.  The Board believes that  the  proper  time  to  consider
redemption  of  the rights is at the time a specific acquisition proposal
is made.  Redemption  of the rights prior to that time would be premature
and would remove any incentive for a potential acquiror to negotiate with
the Board so that the shareholders are treated fairly and, in the Board's
view, would potentially reduce the long-term value for all shareholders.

     The Board of Directors  unanimously  recommends  a vote AGAINST this
shareholder proposal.

B.   Shareholder Proposal Regarding Confidential Voting
     (Item 4 on the accompanying Proxy Card)

          The resolution submitted by Mr. Rodriguez is as follows:

          RESOLVED:  To amend Section 2.7 of Avondale Industries,  Inc.'s
     ("Corporation")  by-laws by adding the following language after  the
     existing language:

          The voting of  all  proxies,  consents  and  authorizations  be
     secret,  and no such document shall be available for examination nor
     shall the vote or identity of any shareholder be disclosed except to
     the extent  necessary to meet the legal requirements, if any, of the
     Corporation's   state   of  incorporation.   Further,  the  receipt,
     certification and tabulation  of  such  votes  shall be performed by
     independent election inspectors.

Shareholder's Supporting Statement

     It is the proponent's believe that it is vitally  important  that  a
system  of  confidential  proxy voting be established at our Corporation.
Confidential balloting is a  basic  tenet  of  our  political  electorial
process  that  ensures  its integrity.  The integrity of corporate  board
elections should also be  protected  against  potential  abuses given the
importance  of corporate policies and practices to corporate  owners  and
our national economy.

     The implementation  of  a  confidential  voting system would enhance
shareholder rights in several ways.

     First, absent confidential voting, incumbent  managers and directors
have the power to review incoming proxies prior to a  tabulation of votes
and  resolicit  proxies  from  shareholders  voting  against  management.
Independent   board  candidates  and  shareholders  submitting   advisory
proposals or by-law  changes  are  not  allowed to see proxy votes.  This
non-confidential system provides an unfair advantage to incumbents.

     Second, in protecting the confidentiality  of  the corporate ballot,
shareholders  would  feel  free to oppose management nominees  and  issue
positions without fear of retribution.   This is especially important for
professional  money  managers  whose  business   relationships   can   be
jeopardized by their voting positions.

     Finally,  it  is our belief that the enhancement of the proxy voting
process would change  the  system where too often shareholders vote "with
their feet," not with their ballots.  This change would help to develop a
long-term  investment  perspective   where   corporate  assets  could  be
deployed, and used in a more effective and efficient manner.

     Confidential voting is gaining popularity.   Approximately 156 major
U.S.  publicly-traded  companies  had adopted confidential  proxy  voting
procedures for corporate elections.   The  list  of Fortune 500 companies
with  confidential  voting  includes  AT&T,  US  West, American  Express,
American  Brands,  Coca  Cola, CitiCorp, Gillette, Exxon,  Sara  Lee,  JP
Morgan, Bear Stearns, General  Electric,  General  Mills, General Motors,
Colgate-Palmolive, American Home Products, Honeywell,  Avon Products, 3M,
Du Pont, Boeing, Lockheed, Rockwell International, Amoco,  Mobil, Eastman
Kodak, IBM, Xerox and many others.  It's time for our Corporation  to  do
the same.

     For  the  reasons  outlined  above,  we  urge  you  to VOTE FOR THIS
PROPOSAL.

Board of Directors' Statement in Opposition

     The Board does not believe that the implementation of  this proposal
is justified.  Any shareholder desiring to have his or her ownership  and
vote  confidential  has  a  means  readily  available  to do so merely by
placing his or her shares in a nominee account.  Additionally,  the Board
believes  that  it  is  to the Company's benefit that the Board have  the
ability  to know the opinion  of  the  Company's  major  shareholders  on
important  initiatives because it enables the Board to better communicate
with the Company's  shareholders  with  respect  to  initiatives it deems
important to the Company and its shareholders as a whole,  as  well as to
better  understand the reasons for any opposition to such initiatives  by
major shareholders.  Moreover, under the terms of the ESOP, employees and
other participants  in  the  ESOP already vote confidentially, with their
votes tabulated by a "Big Six"  auditing  firm.  The participant's voting
cards  are  returned directly to the auditing  firm  and  no  information
regarding how  individual  participants vote is provided to the Company's
management.  Finally, the Board  believes  that the proponent's expressed
concern  that  the  absence  of  confidential  voting  protection  has  a
potentially chilling effect on the free exercise  of voting rights by the
Company's  shareholders  is naive and misplaced.  It  has  not  been  the
experience  of  the  Company's   management  that  its  shareholders  are
reluctant  to  communicate with management  because  of  the  absence  of
confidential voting  procedures.   Thus,  the Board of Directors does not
believe the adoption of a system of confidential voting is warranted.

     The Board of Directors unanimously recommends  a  vote  AGAINST this
shareholder proposal.

C.   Shareholder Proposal Regarding Board Declassification

     (Item 5 on the accompanying Proxy Card)

     The resolution submitted by Mr. McGee, Sr., is as follows:

          RESOLVED:  To amend Section 3.3 of Avondale Industries,  Inc.'s
     ("Company")   bylaws   by   replacing  existing  language  with  the
     following:

          All directors shall stand for election annually.

Shareholder's Supporting Statement

     Avondale Industries currently  divides its board into three classes.
Each class of directors has three year  terms and the terms are staggered
so that only one-third of the board of directors  is elected at any given
time.

     The  election of corporate directors is the primary  avenue  in  the
American  corporate  governance  system  for  shareholders  to  influence
corporate affairs  and  exert  accountability on management.  We strongly
believe that our Company's financial performance is closely linked to its
corporate governance policies and procedures, and the level of management
accountability they impose.  Therefore,  as  shareholders concerned about
the  value  of  our investment, we are very disturbed  by  our  Company's
current system of  electing only one-third of the board of directors each
year.  We believe this staggering of director terms prevents shareholders
from annually registering  their  views  on  the performance of the board
collectively and each director individually.

     Concerns that the annual election of all  directors  would leave our
Company  without  experienced  Board  members  in  the  event  that   all
incumbents  are  voted  out is unfounded.  If the owners should choose to
replace  the  entire board,  it  would  be  obvious  that  the  incumbent
directors' contributions were not valued.

     Most  alarming  is  that  the  staggered  Board  can  help  insulate
directors and senior executives from the consequences of poor performance
by denying shareholders  the opportunity to replace an entire Board which
is pursuing failed policies.   Regardless  of  whether  you  believe  the
current Board and management team is performing satisfactorily or not, we
believe  it  is  clearly  in  the  best  interest  of the Company and its
shareholders that a process be in place that allows  shareholders to take
definitive  action if they believe the Board is failing  to  realize  the
full potential of the Company's assets.

     We believe  that  allowing  shareholders  to annually register their
views  on  the performance of the Board collectively  and  each  director
individually  is one of the best method's to insure that our Company will
be managed in the best interests of the shareholders.

     We urge you to VOTE FOR THIS RESOLUTION.

Board of Directors' Statement in Opposition

     The Company's  Board  is  divided  into  three  classes of directors
serving  three-year  staggered terms, with one class being  elected  each
year.   The Board believes  the  election  of  directors  by  classes  is
advantageous  to  the  Company and its shareholders because, by providing
that the directors will  serve  three-year  terms  rather  than  one-year
terms,  it  enhances  the  likelihood  of continuity and stability in the
composition of the Board of Directors and  in  the policies formulated by
the Board, a stability that has been fundamental  in the Company's recent
successes.  Stability and continuity at the Board level  also permits the
Board  to  represent  more effectively the interests of all shareholders,
including responding to  circumstances created by demands or actions of a
single   shareholder   or  a  small   group   of   shareholders.    Board
classification is also intended  to  deter  any person seeking to acquire
control  of the Company from initiating such action  through  a  surprise
proxy contest designed to result in a change of control of the Company in
a single election.   Finally, the Board points out that this provision is
contained not only in  the  Company's By-laws but also in its Articles of
Incorporation  and that the shareholder  proposal,  by  seeking  only  an
amendment to the  Company's  By-laws,  would  result in a direct conflict
between the Company's Articles of Incorporation  and  By-laws which would
be unlawful under the Louisiana Business Corporation Law.   Moreover, the
Board   notes   that   this   provision  of  the  Company's  Articles  of
Incorporation was approved by the  Company's  shareholders  in  1990 when
they voted upon the re-incorporation of the Company in Louisiana.

     The  Board  of Directors unanimously recommends a vote AGAINST  this
shareholder proposal.

                          OTHER MATTERS

Quorum and Voting of Proxies

     The  presence,  in  person  or  by  proxy,  of  a  majority  of  the
outstanding  shares  of  Common  Stock  of  the  Company  is necessary to
constitute a quorum.  If a quorum is present,

          (a)  directors will be elected by plurality vote;

          (b)  the  Shareholder  Proposals  proposing amendments  to  the
Company's By-laws with respect to:

               (i)  Confidential Voting (Item 4); and

               (ii) Board Declassification (Item 5)

must receive the affirmative vote of 80% of the  total outstanding Common
Stock; and

          (c)  (i)  the proposal to adopt the 1997  Stock  Incentive Plan
                    (Item 2);

               (ii) the   Shareholder   Proposal  urging  the  Board   of
                    Directors to redeem the Shareholder Rights Plan (Item
                    3); and

               (ii) any  other  matters  properly   brought  before  such
                    meeting

must  receive the approval of a majority of the shares  of  Common  Stock
present or represented at the Annual Meeting.

     If  a  quorum is not present, those shareholders present may adjourn
the meeting to  such  time and place as they may determine; however, with
respect to the election  of  directors, the meeting may be adjourned only
from day to day until such directors are elected.  Those shareholders who
attend the second such adjournment  will  constitute  a  quorum  for  the
purpose of electing directors.

     All  proxies  in the form enclosed that are received by the Board of
Directors will be voted  as specified and, in the absence of instructions
to the contrary, will be voted  for  the  election  of the nominees named
above, for the 1997 Stock Incentive Plan and against  each  of  the three
shareholder proposals.

     Shares  as  to  which  proxy  authority  to vote for any nominee for
election as a director is withheld by a shareholder  and shares that have
not  been  voted by brokers who hold shares on behalf of  the  beneficial
owner ("broker  non-votes") will not be counted as voted for any affected
nominees, the proposal  to adopt the 1997 Stock Incentive Plan, or any of
the Shareholder Proposals.   With  respect  to  each  of  the Shareholder
Proposals identified as Items 4 and 5, which require the affirmative vote
of  80%  of  the  outstanding  Common  Stock  in  order  to  be  adopted,
abstentions  and  broker non-votes will have the effect of a vote against
the proposal.  With  respect  to  the  proposal  to  adopt the 1997 Stock
Incentive Plan identified as Item 2, the Shareholder Proposal  identified
as  Item 3  and  any  other matter (other than the election of directors)
that may be properly brought before the Annual Meeting, which require the
affirmative vote of a majority  of the voting power present at the Annual
Meeting, abstentions will have the  effect of a vote against the proposal
while broker non-votes will be counted as not present with respect to the
proposal and therefore will not have an effect on the outcome of the vote
with respect to such proposal.

     The Board of Directors does not  know of any matters to be presented
at the Annual Meeting other than the election  of  directors, adoption of
the  1997  Stock  Incentive  Plan  and  the three Shareholder  Proposals.
However, if any other matters properly come  before  the  meeting  or any
adjournment  thereof,  it  is  the  intention of the persons named in the
enclosed proxy to vote the shares represented  by them in accordance with
their best judgment.

Independent Public Auditors

     The  Board  of  Directors has appointed Deloitte  &  Touche  LLP  as
independent auditors of  the  Company  for the fiscal year ended December
31, 1997.  Deloitte & Touche LLP and its  predecessors have served as the
Company's auditors since 1987.  Representatives  of Deloitte & Touche LLP
are expected to be present at the Annual Meeting.   They  will  have  the
opportunity  to  make  a  statement  if  they desire to do so and will be
available to respond to appropriate questions.

Shareholder Proposals for 1998 Annual Meeting

     Any  shareholder who desires to present  a  proposal  qualified  for
inclusion in  the  Company's  proxy materials relating to the 1998 annual
shareholders' meeting must forward  the  proposal to the Secretary of the
Company at the address shown on the first page of this Proxy Statement in
time to arrive at the Company prior to December  18, 1997.  The Company's
By-laws also require any shareholder who desires to  present  a  proposal
before  the 1998 annual shareholders' meeting to notify the Secretary  of
the Company of such intent no later than December 18, 1997.

                              BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

                                    /s/ Thomas M. Kitchen

                                      Thomas M. Kitchen
                                          Secretary
Avondale, Louisiana
April 17, 1997

                                                        EXHIBIT A

                    AVONDALE INDUSTRIES, INC.
                    1997 STOCK INCENTIVE PLAN


     1.   Purpose.   The  purpose  of  the 1997 Stock Incentive Plan (the
"Plan")  of  Avondale  Industries,  Inc.  ("Avondale")   is  to  increase
shareholder  value  and  to  advance  the interests of Avondale  and  its
subsidiaries (collectively, the "Company")  by  furnishing  a  variety of
economic  incentives  (the "Incentives") designed to attract, retain  and
motivate key employees,  officers  and  directors  and  to strengthen the
mutuality of interests between such persons and Avondale's  shareholders.
Incentives may consist of opportunities to purchase or receive  shares of
common  stock,  $1.00  par  value  per  share,  of  Avondale (the "Common
Stock"), monetary payments or both, on terms determined  under  the Plan.
As used in the Plan, the term "subsidiary" means any corporation of which
Avondale  owns  (directly  or  indirectly)  within the meaning of Section
425(f) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the "Code"), 50%
or more of the total combined voting power of all classes of stock.

     2.   Administration.

          2.1      Composition.  The Plan shall  be  administered  by the
     compensation  committee  (the "Committee") of the Board of Directors
     of Avondale. The Committee  shall  consist  of  not  fewer  than two
     members of the Board of Directors, each of whom shall (a) qualify as
     a  "non-employee  director"  under  Rule  16b-3 under the Securities
     Exchange Act of 1934 (the "1934 Act"), as currently in effect or any
     successor  rule,  and  (b)  qualify as an "outside  director"  under
     Section 162(m) of the Code.

          2.2      Authority.  The Committee shall have plenary authority
     to  award Incentives under the  Plan,  to  interpret  the  Plan,  to
     establish  any  rules  or  regulations  relating to the Plan that it
     determines  to  be  appropriate,  to  enter  into   agreements  with
     participants  as  to  the  terms  of  the Incentives (the "Incentive
     Agreements") and to make any other determination  that  it  believes
     necessary  or  advisable  for the proper administration of the Plan.
     Its decisions in matters relating  to  the  Plan  shall be final and
     conclusive  on  the  Company  and  participants.  The Committee  may
     delegate its authority hereunder to  the  extent  provided elsewhere
     herein.  The Committee shall not have authority to  award Incentives
     under  the Plan to directors of Avondale who are not also  full-time
     employees  of  the Company ("Outside Directors").  Outside Directors
     may receive awards  under  the Plan only as specifically provided in
     Section 10 hereof.

     3.   Eligible Employees.  Key  employees  of  the Company (including
officers and directors who are full-time employees of  the  Company,  but
excluding  Outside Directors) shall become eligible to receive Incentives
under the Plan  when  designated  by  the  Committee.   Employees  may be
designated  individually  or  by  groups  or categories, as the Committee
deems appropriate.  With respect to participants  not  subject to Section
16 of the 1934 Act and not covered employees under Section  162(m) of the
Code, the Committee may delegate its authority to designate participants,
to  determine  the  size  and  type of Incentive to be received by  those
participants and to determine or  modify performance objectives for those
participants.

     4.   Types of Incentives.  Incentives  may be granted under the Plan
in  any of the following forms, either individually  or  in  combination:
(a) incentive  stock  options  and non-qualified stock options; (b) stock
appreciation rights ("SARs"); (c)  restricted  stock; and (d) performance
shares.

     5.   Shares Subject to the Plan.

          5.1      Number of Shares.  Subject to  adjustment  as provided
     in  Section  11.5,  a total of 1,430,000 shares of Common Stock  are
     authorized to be issued  under the Plan.  Incentives with respect to
     no more than 45,000 shares  of  Common  Stock may be granted through
     the Plan to a single participant in one calendar year.  In the event
     that  a  stock  option, SAR or performance share  granted  hereunder
     expires or is terminated  or cancelled prior to exercise or payment,
     any shares of Common Stock  that  were  issuable  thereunder  may be
     issued  again  under  the  Plan.  In the event that shares of Common
     Stock are issued as Incentives  under  the  Plan  and thereafter are
     forfeited or reacquired by the Company pursuant to  rights  reserved
     upon  issuance thereof, such forfeited and reacquired shares may  be
     issued  again under the Plan.  If an Incentive is to be paid in cash
     by its terms,  the  Committee  need  not  make  a deduction from the
     shares of Common Stock issuable under the Plan with respect thereto.
     If and to the extent that an Incentive may be paid in cash or shares
     of Common Stock, the total number of shares available  for  issuance
     hereunder  shall be decreased by the number of shares payable  under
     such Incentive,  provided  that  upon  any payment of all or part of
     such Incentive in cash, the total number  of  shares  available  for
     issuance  hereunder  shall be increased by the appropriate number of
     shares represented by  the  cash  payment, as determined in the sole
     discretion of the Committee.  Additional  rules  for determining the
     number  of  shares  granted  under  the  Plan  may  be made  by  the
     Committee, as it deems necessary or appropriate.

          5.2      Type of Common Stock.  Common Stock issued  under  the
     Plan  may be authorized and unissued shares or issued shares held as
     treasury shares.

     6.   Stock Options.  A stock option is a right to purchase shares of
Common Stock from Avondale.  Stock options granted under this Plan may be
incentive stock  options or non-qualified stock options.  Any option that
is designated as a  non-qualified stock option shall not be treated as an
incentive stock option.  Each stock option granted by the Committee under
this Plan shall be subject to the following terms and conditions:

          6.1      Price.    The   exercise  price  per  share  shall  be
     determined by the Committee, subject  to  adjustment  under  Section
     11.5; provided that in no event shall the option price be less  than
     the  Fair  Market  Value  of  a share of Common Stock on the date of
     grant.

          6.2      Number.  The number  of shares of Common Stock subject
     to  the  option shall be determined by  the  Committee,  subject  to
     adjustment as provided in Section 11.5.

          6.3      Duration and Time for Exercise.    The  term  of  each
     stock  option  shall  be  determined by the Committee.   Each  stock
     option shall become exercisable  at  such  time  or times during its
     term  as  shall be determined by the Committee.  The  Committee  may
     accelerate the exercisability of any stock option.

          6.4      Repurchase.   Upon  approval  of  the  Committee,  the
     Company  may  repurchase  a  previously  granted stock option from a
     participant  by  mutual  agreement  before  such   option  has  been
     exercised by payment to the participant of the amount  per  share by
     which:   (i) the Fair Market Value (as defined in Section 11.12)  of
     the Common  Stock  subject  to  the  option  on the date of purchase
     exceeds (ii) the exercise price.

          6.5      Manner of Exercise.  A stock option  may be exercised,
     in  whole  or  in  part,  by  giving written notice to the  Company,
     specifying the number of shares  of  Common  Stock  to be purchased.
     The exercise notice shall be accompanied by the full  purchase price
     for such shares.  The option price shall be payable in United States
     dollars and may be paid (a) by cash, uncertified or certified  check
     or bank draft, (b) by delivery of shares of Common Stock held by the
     optionee  for  at  least six months in payment of all or any part of
     the option price, which  shares  shall be valued for this purpose at
     the Fair Market Value on the date  such  option is exercised, (c) by
     delivering  a  properly  executed  exercise  notice   together  with
     irrevocable instructions to a broker approved by the Company (with a
     copy to the Company) to promptly deliver to the Company  the  amount
     of  sale  or  loan proceeds to pay the exercise price or (d) in such
     other  manner as  may  be  authorized  from  time  to  time  by  the
     Committee.   In  the  case  of delivery of an uncertified check upon
     exercise of a stock option, no  shares  shall  be  issued  until the
     check  has  been  paid in full.  Prior to the issuance of shares  of
     Common Stock upon the  exercise  of  a  stock  option, a participant
     shall have no rights as a shareholder.

          6.6      Incentive Stock Options.  Notwithstanding  anything in
     the Plan to the contrary, the following additional provisions  shall
     apply to the grant of stock options that are intended to qualify  as
     Incentive  Stock Options (as such term is defined in Section 422A of
     the Code):

               (a)  Any Incentive Stock Option agreement authorized under
          the Plan  shall  contain such other provisions as the Committee
          shall deem advisable,  but  shall  in  all events be consistent
          with  and  contain  or  be  deemed  to contain  all  provisions
          required  in order to qualify the options  as  Incentive  Stock
          Options.

               (b)  All  Incentive  Stock  Options must be granted within
          ten years from the date on which this  Plan  is  adopted by the
          Board of Directors.

               (c)  Unless sooner exercised, all Incentive Stock  Options
          shall expire no later than ten years after the date of grant.

               (d)  The option price for Incentive Stock Options shall be
          not less than the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock subject
          to the option on the date of grant.

               (e)  No  Incentive  Stock Options shall be granted to  any
          participant who, at the time  such option is granted, would own
          (within  the  meaning  of  Section  422A  of  the  Code)  stock
          possessing more than 10% of  the total combined voting power of
          all  classes of stock of the employer  corporation  or  of  its
          parent or subsidiary corporation.

               (f)  The  aggregate  Fair  Market  Value  (determined with
          respect  to  each  Incentive Stock Option as of the  time  such
          Incentive Stock Option  is  granted)  of  the Common Stock with
          respect  to which Incentive Stock Options are  exercisable  for
          the first time by a participant during any calendar year (under
          the Plan or  any  other  plan  of  the  Company  or  any of its
          subsidiaries)  shall  not exceed $100,000.  To the extent  this
          $100,000 limitation is exceeded, the options that relate to the
          excess shall be treated as non-qualified stock options.

     7.   Restricted Stock.

          7.1 Grant of Restricted  Stock.  The Committee may award shares
     of  restricted  stock  to  such  key   employees  as  the  Committee
     determines to be eligible pursuant to the  terms  of  Section 3.  An
     award  of  restricted  stock  may  be  subject to the attainment  of
     specified performance goals or targets,  restrictions  on  transfer,
     forfeitability provisions and such other terms and conditions as the
     Committee may determine, subject to the provisions of the Plan.   To
     the  extent  restricted  stock is intended to qualify as performance
     based compensation under Section  162(m)  of  the Code, it must meet
     the additional requirements imposed thereby.

          7.2 The Restricted Period.  At the time an  award of restricted
     stock is made, the Committee shall establish a period of time during
     which  the  transfer  of  the  shares of restricted stock  shall  be
     restricted  (the "Restricted Period").   Each  award  of  restricted
     stock may have  a  different Restricted Period.  A Restricted Period
     of at least three years  is  required, except that if vesting of the
     shares is subject to the attainment  of specified performance goals,
     a  Restricted  Period  of  one  year  or  more  is  permitted.   The
     expiration  of the Restricted Period shall also  occur  as  provided
     under Section 11.11.

          7.3 Escrow.   The  participant receiving restricted stock shall
     enter into an Incentive Agreement with the Company setting forth the
     conditions  of  the  grant.   Certificates  representing  shares  of
     restricted stock shall  be registered in the name of the participant
     and deposited with the Company, together with a stock power endorsed
     in blank by the participant.   Each  such  certificate  shall bear a
     legend in substantially the following form:

          The transferability of this certificate and the shares  of
          Common Stock represented by it is subject to the terms and
          conditions  (including conditions of forfeiture) contained
          in the Avondale Industries, Inc. 1997 Stock Incentive Plan
          (the "Plan")  and  an  agreement  entered into between the
          registered owner and Avondale Industries, Inc. thereunder.
          Copies  of  the Plan and the agreement  are  on  file  and
          available for  inspection  at  the principal office of the
          Company.

          7.4 Dividends on Restricted Stock.   Any and all cash and stock
     dividends paid with respect to the shares of  restricted stock shall
     be   subject   to   any  restrictions  on  transfer,  forfeitability
     provisions or reinvestment requirements as the Committee may, in its
     discretion, prescribe in the Incentive Agreement.

          7.5 Forfeiture.   In  the event of the forfeiture of any shares
     of  restricted  stock under the  terms  provided  in  the  Incentive
     Agreement (including  any additional shares of restricted stock that
     may result from the reinvestment  of cash and stock dividends, if so
     provided in the Incentive Agreement), such forfeited shares shall be
     surrendered and the certificates cancelled.   The participants shall
     have  the  same rights and privileges, and be subject  to  the  same
     forfeiture  provisions,   with  respect  to  any  additional  shares
     received pursuant to Section  11.5 due to a recapitalization, merger
     or other change in capitalization.

          7.6 Expiration of Restricted  Period.   Upon  the expiration or
     termination  of  the Restricted Period and the satisfaction  of  any
     other conditions prescribed by the Committee or at such earlier time
     as provided for in  Section 7.2 and in the Incentive Agreement or an
     amendment thereto, the  restrictions  applicable  to  the restricted
     stock shall lapse and a stock certificate for the number  of  shares
     of  restricted  stock  with  respect  to which the restrictions have
     lapsed shall be delivered, free of all such restrictions and legends
     other  than  those  required  by  law,  to the  participant  or  the
     participant's estate, as the case may be.

          7.7  Rights  as  a  Shareholder.   Subject  to  the  terms  and
     conditions  of  the  Plan  and subject to any  restrictions  on  the
     receipt of dividends that may be imposed in the Incentive Agreement,
     each  participant receiving restricted  stock  shall  have  all  the
     rights  of  a shareholder with respect to shares of stock during any
     period  in  which   such   shares  are  subject  to  forfeiture  and
     restrictions on transfer, including without limitation, the right to
     vote such shares.

     8.   Stock Appreciation Rights.   A  SAR  is  a  right  to  receive,
without payment to the Company, a number of shares of Common Stock,  cash
or any combination thereof, the amount of which is determined pursuant to
the  formula  set  forth  in  Section 8.4.  A SAR may be granted (a) with
respect to any stock option granted  under  the Plan, either concurrently
with the grant of such stock option or at such  later  time as determined
by the Committee (as to all or any portion of the shares  of Common Stock
subject  to  the  stock option), or (b) alone, without reference  to  any
related stock option.   Each  SAR granted by the Committee under the Plan
shall be subject to the following terms and conditions:

          8.1 Number.  Each SAR  granted  to any participant shall relate
     to such number of shares of Common Stock  as  shall be determined by
     the Committee, subject to Section 5.1 and subject  to  adjustment as
     provided in Section 11.5.  In the case of a SAR granted with respect
     to a stock option, the number of shares of Common Stock to which the
     SAR pertains shall be reduced in the same proportion that the holder
     of the option exercises the related stock option.

          8.2   Duration   and   Time   for   Exercise.    The  term  and
     exercisability  of  each  SAR  shall be determined by the Committee.
     Unless  otherwise  provided  by  the   Committee  in  the  Incentive
     Agreement, each SAR issued in connection  with  a stock option shall
     become exercisable at the same time or times, to the same extent and
     upon the same conditions as the related stock option.  The Committee
     may in its discretion accelerate the exercisability  of  any  SAR at
     any time.

          8.3 Exercise.  A SAR may be exercised, in whole or in part,  by
     giving  written notice to the Company, specifying the number of SARs
     that the  holder  wishes  to exercise.  The Company shall, within 30
     days of receipt of notice of  exercise,  deliver  to  the exercising
     holder certificates for the shares of Common Stock or cash  or both,
     as  determined  by  the  Committee,  to which the holder is entitled
     pursuant to Section 8.4.

          8.4 Payment.  Subject to the right  of the Committee to deliver
     cash  in lieu of shares of Common Stock, the  number  of  shares  of
     Common  Stock  that  shall  be  issuable upon the exercise of an SAR
     shall be determined by dividing:

               (a) the number of shares  of  Common Stock as to which the
          SAR  is  exercised  multiplied  by  the dollar  amount  of  the
          appreciation   in   such   shares   (for  this   purpose,   the
          "appreciation" shall be the amount by  which  the  Fair  Market
          Value  of the shares of Common Stock subject to the SAR on  the
          Exercise  Date  exceeds  (1)  in the case of a SAR related to a
          stock option, the purchase price  of the shares of Common Stock
          under the stock option or (2) in the  case  of  a  SAR  granted
          alone,  without  reference to a related stock option, an amount
          equal to the Fair  Market  Value  of a share of Common Stock on
          the date of grant, which shall be determined  by  the Committee
          at  the  time  of  grant,  subject  to adjustment under Section
          11.5); by

               (b) the Fair Market Value of a share  of  Common  Stock on
          the Exercise Date.

          In lieu of issuing shares of Common Stock upon the exercise  of
     a  SAR,  the  Committee  may elect to pay the holder of the SAR cash
     equal to the Fair Market Value on the Exercise Date of any or all of
     the shares that otherwise  would  be issuable.  No fractional shares
     of Common Stock shall be issued upon the exercise of a SAR; instead,
     the holder of a SAR shall be entitled  to  receive a cash adjustment
     equal to the same fraction of the Fair Market  Value  of  a share of
     Common  Stock  on  the  Exercise  Date  or  to  purchase the portion
     necessary  to  make a whole share at its Fair Market  Value  on  the
     Exercise Date.

     9.   Performance  Shares.   A performance share consists of an award
that may be paid in shares of Common  Stock  or  in  cash,  as  described
below.   The  award of performance shares shall be subject to such  terms
and conditions as the Committee deems appropriate.

          9.1 Performance  Objectives.   Each  performance  share will be
     subject  to  performance  objectives  for  Avondale  or  one of  its
     subsidiaries, divisions or departments to be achieved by the  end of
     a  specified period.  The number of performance shares awarded shall
     be determined  by the Committee and may be subject to such terms and
     conditions as the  Committee  shall  determine.  If  the performance
     objectives are achieved, each participant will be paid  (a) a number
     of shares of Common Stock equal to the number of performance  shares
     initially  granted to that participant; (b) a cash payment equal  to
     the Fair Market  Value  of  such number of shares of Common Stock on
     the date the performance objectives  are  met  or such other date as
     may be provided by the Committee or (c) a combination  of  shares of
     Common Stock and cash, as may be provided by the Committee.  If such
     objectives are not met, each award of performance shares may provide
     for lesser payments in accordance with a pre-established formula set
     forth  in  the  Incentive Agreement.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
     unless otherwise  provided in the Incentive Agreement, the Committee
     may in its discretion declare the performance objectives achieved or
     waived.  To the extent a performance share is intended to qualify as
     performance based compensation  under Section 162(m) of the Code, it
     must meet the additional requirements imposed thereby.

          9.2 Not a Shareholder.  The  award  of  performance shares to a
     participant  shall not create any rights in such  participant  as  a
     shareholder of  the  Company,  until the payment of shares of Common
     Stock with respect to an award,  at  which  time such stock shall be
     considered issued and outstanding.

          9.3  Dividend Equivalent Payments.  A performance  share  award
     may  be granted  by  the  Committee  in  conjunction  with  dividend
     equivalent payment rights or other such rights.  Dividend equivalent
     payments  may  be made to the participant at the time of the payment
     of the dividend  or issuance of the other right or at the end of the
     specified performance  period  or  may  be  deemed to be invested in
     additional performance shares at the Fair Market Value of a share of
     Common Stock on the date of payment of the dividend  or  issuance of
     the right.

     10.  Stock Options for Outside Directors

          10.1 Eligibility.  Each Outside Director shall be automatically
     granted a non-qualified  stock  option  to  acquire  1,065 shares of
     Common Stock on the day following the annual meeting of shareholders
     beginning   with  the  1997  annual  meeting  of  shareholders   and
     thereafter on  the  day  following  subsequent  annual  meetings  of
     shareholders for as long as the Plan remains in effect and shares of
     Common Stock remain available for grant under Section 5.1 hereof.

          10.2 Exercisability of Stock Options. The stock options granted
     to  Outside Directors under this Section 10 shall become exercisable
     as follows:

          25%  of  the  total  number  of shares covered by the
          stock options beginning one year  after  the  date of
          grant;

          50%  of  the  total  number  of shares covered by the
          stock options beginning two years  after  the date of
          grant, less any shares previously issued;

          75%  of  the  total  number of shares covered by  the
          stock options beginning three years after the date of
          grant, less any shares previously issued;

          100% of the total number  of  shares  covered  by the
          stock options beginning four years after the date  of
          grant, less any shares previously issued;

     provided,  however, that such stock options shall become immediately
     exercisable under Section 11.11 hereof and in the event of retirement
     from the Board on or after  reaching  age  65,  death or disability.
     No stock option granted to an Outside Director under the terms of this
     Section 10 may be exercised more than ten years after  the  date  of
     grant.

          10.3  Exercise  Price.   The  per share exercise price of stock
     options granted to Outside Directors shall  be  equal to 100% of the
     Fair Market Value as defined in the Plan, of a share of Common Stock
     on the date of grant.

          10.4 Exercise after Termination of Board Service.  In the event
     that  an Outside Director ceases to serve on the Board of  Directors
     for  any  reason,  the  stock  options  granted  hereunder  must  be
     exercised, to the extent otherwise exercisable, within one year from
     the date of termination of Board service, but in no event later than
     ten years after the date of grant.

     11.  General.

          11.1  Duration. Subject to Section 11.10, the Plan shall remain
     in effect until  all  Incentives  granted under the Plan have either
     been satisfied by the issuance of shares  of  Common  Stock  or  the
     payment  of  cash or been terminated under the terms of the Plan and
     all restrictions  imposed  on  shares  of Common Stock in connection
     with their issuance under the Plan have lapsed.

          11.2  Transferability  of  Incentives.    Options,   SARs   and
     performance  shares  granted  under  the Plan may not be transferred
     except:

               (a)  by will;

               (b)  by the laws of descent and distribution; or

               (c) in the case of stock options only, if permitted by the
          Committee  and so provided in the  Incentive  Agreement  or  an
          amendment thereto,  (i) pursuant to a domestic relations order,
          as defined in the Code, (ii) to Immediate Family Members, (iii)
          to a partnership in which Immediate Family Members, or entities
          in which Immediate Family  Members are the sole owners, members
          or beneficiaries, as appropriate,  are  the only partners, (iv)
          to  a  limited  liability  company  in  which Immediate  Family
          Members, or entities in which Immediate Family  Members are the
          sole owners, members or beneficiaries, as appropriate,  are the
          only  members,  or  (v)  to  a  trust  for  the sole benefit of
          Immediate Family Members.  "Immediate Family  Members" shall be
          defined  as  the  spouse  and  natural  or adopted children  or
          grandchildren  of the participant and their  spouses.   To  the
          extent  that an incentive  stock  option  is  permitted  to  be
          transferred during the lifetime of the participant, it shall be
          treated thereafter as a non-qualified stock option.

     Stock options  or  SARs  may  be  exercised during the lifetime of a
     participant only by the participant,  by  the participant's guardian
     or  legal  representative or, in the case of  stock  options,  by  a
     permitted transferee  as  provided  in  (c)  above.   Any  attempted
     assignment, transfer, pledge, hypothecation or other disposition  of
     an  Incentive,  or  levy  of  attachment or similar process upon the
     Incentive not specifically permitted  herein, shall be null and void
     and without effect.

          11.3 Effect of Termination of Employment or Death. In the event
     that an employee participant ceases to be an employee of the Company
     for  any reason, including death, disability,  early  retirement  or
     normal  retirement,  any  Incentives may be exercised, shall vest or
     shall expire at such times  as may be determined by the Committee in
     the Incentive Agreement.

          11.4  Additional  Condition.   Anything in  this  Plan  to  the
     contrary  notwithstanding:    (a)  the  Company  may,  if  it  shall
     determine it necessary or desirable  for  any reason, at the time of
     award of any Incentive or the issuance of any shares of Common Stock
     pursuant to any Incentive, require the recipient  of  the Incentive,
     as a condition to the receipt thereof or to the receipt of shares of
     Common  Stock issued pursuant thereto, to deliver to the  Company  a
     written representation of present intention to acquire the Incentive
     or the shares  of  Common  Stock issued pursuant thereto for his own
     account for investment and not  for  distribution; and (b) if at any
     time the Company further determines, in  its  sole  discretion, that
     the listing, registration or qualification (or any updating  of  any
     such  document)  of  any  Incentive  or  the  shares of Common Stock
     issuable pursuant thereto is necessary on any securities exchange or
     under any federal or state securities or blue sky  law,  or that the
     consent or approval of any governmental regulatory body is necessary
     or desirable as a condition of, or in connection with the  award  of
     any  Incentive,  the  issuance  of  shares  of Common Stock pursuant
     thereto, or the removal of any restrictions imposed  on such shares,
     such Incentive shall not be awarded or such shares of  Common  Stock
     shall  not  be  issued or such restrictions shall not be removed, as
     the  case  may be,  in  whole  or  in  part,  unless  such  listing,
     registration,  qualification,  consent  or  approval shall have been
     effected or obtained free of any conditions not  acceptable  to  the
     Company.

          11.5  Adjustment.  In the event of any merger, consolidation or
     reorganization  of  the  Company   with  any  other  corporation  or
     corporations, there shall be substituted  for  each of the shares of
     Common Stock then subject to the Plan, including  shares  subject to
     restrictions,   options,   or   achievement   of  performance  share
     objectives,  the  number  and  kind  of  shares  of stock  or  other
     securities to which the holders of the shares of Common  Stock  will
     be  entitled  pursuant  to  the  transaction.   In  the event of any
     recapitalization, stock dividend, stock split, combination of shares
     or other change in the Common Stock, the number of shares  of Common
     Stock  then  subject  to  the  Plan,  including  shares  subject  to
     outstanding  Incentives,  shall  be  adjusted  in  proportion to the
     change in outstanding shares of Common Stock.  In the  event  of any
     such  adjustments, the purchase price of any option, the performance
     objectives of any Incentive, and the shares of Common Stock issuable
     pursuant  to  any  Incentive  shall be adjusted as and to the extent
     appropriate,  in the reasonable  discretion  of  the  Committee,  to
     provide participants  with the same relative rights before and after
     such adjustment.

          11.6 Incentive Agreements. The terms of each Incentive shall be
     stated in an agreement approved by the Committee.

          11.7 Withholding. At any time that a participant is required to 
     pay to  the Company  an amount  required to be  withheld  under  the
     applicable income tax laws in connection with the issuance of shares
     of Common Stock under the  Plan or upon the lapse of restrictions on
     shares of restricted stock,  the  participant  may,  subject  to the
     Committee's  right  of disapproval, satisfy this obligation in whole
     or in part by electing (the "Election") to have the Company withhold
     from the distribution shares of Common Stock having a value equal to
     the  amount required to  be  withheld.   The  value  of  the  shares
     withheld shall be based on the Fair Market Value of the Common Stock
     on the  date  that  the  amount  of  tax  to  be  withheld  shall be
     determined (the "Tax Date").

          Each  Election  must  be  made  prior  to  the  Tax  Date.  The
     Committee may disapprove of any Election or may suspend or terminate
     the  right  to  make  Elections.  If a participant makes an election
     under Section 83(b) of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code with respect to
     shares of restricted stock, an Election is not permitted to be made.

          A participant may also satisfy his or her total  tax  liability
     related  to  an Incentive by delivering shares of Common Stock  that
     have been owned  by  the  participant  for at least six months.  The
     value  of the shares delivered shall be based  on  the  Fair  Market
     Value of the Common Stock on the Tax Date.

          11.8  No  Continued  Employment.  No participant under the Plan
     shall  have  any  right,  because of his or  her  participation,  to
     continue in the employ of the  Company  for any period of time or to
     any  right  to continue his or her present  or  any  other  rate  of
     compensation.

          11.9  Deferral Permitted.  Payment  of  cash or distribution of 
     any shares of Common Stock to which a participant  is entitled under 
     any Incentive shall be made as provided in the Incentive  Agreement.
     Payment may be deferred at the option of the participant if provided
     in the Incentive Agreement.

          11.10 Amendment of the Plan. The Board may amend or discontinue
     the Plan at any time; provided,  however,  that no such amendment or
     discontinuance shall change or impair, without  the  consent  of the
     recipient,  an  Incentive  previously granted; and provided further,
     that an amendment to materially  increase  the  number  of shares of
     Common  Stock  issuable  through  the  Plan,  materially modify  the
     eligibility requirements or materially increase  the  benefits under
     the Plan must be approved by the shareholders of the Company.

          11.11.  Change of Control.

               (a) A Change of Control shall mean:

                    (i)  the  acquisition  by  any individual, entity  or
          group (within the meaning of Section 13(d)(3)  or  14(d)(2)  of
          the  1934  Act)  of beneficial ownership (within the meaning of
          Rule 13d-3 promulgated  under the 1934 Act) of more than 25% of
          the outstanding shares of  the Common Stock; provided, however,
          that  for  purposes  of  this  subsection  (i),  the  following
          acquisitions shall not constitute a Change of Control:

                         a) any acquisition of Common Stock directly from
               the Company,

                         b)  any  acquisition  of  Common  Stock  by  the
               Company,

                         c)  any  acquisition  of  Common  Stock  by  any
               employee benefit plan  (or  related  trust)  sponsored  or
               maintained by the Company or any corporation controlled by
               the Company, or

                         d)  any  acquisition  of  Common  Stock  by  any
               corporation  pursuant  to a transaction that complies with
               clauses a), b) and c) of  subsection (iii) of this Section
               9.10(a); or

                    (ii) individuals who, as  of the  date  this Plan was
          adopted  by  the  Board  of  Directors  (the  "Approval Date"),
          constitute  the  Board  (the "Incumbent Board") cease  for  any
          reason  to  constitute  at  least  a  majority  of  the  Board;
          provided,  however,  that any individual  becoming  a  director
          subsequent to the Approval  Date  whose election, or nomination
          for election by the shareholders of  the  Company, was approved
          by  a  vote  of  at  least  a  majority  of the directors  then
          comprising the Incumbent Board shall be considered  a member of
          the   Incumbent   Board,   unless   such  individual's  initial
          assumption  of  office  occurs  as a result  of  an  actual  or
          threatened election contest with  respect  to  the  election or
          removal of directors or other actual or threatened solicitation
          of  proxies or consents by or on behalf of a person other  than
          the Incumbent Board; or

                    (iii)  consummation  of  a reorganization,  merger or
          consolidation,   or   sale  or  other  disposition  of  all  or
          substantially all of the  assets  of  the  Company (a "Business
          Combination"),  in each case, unless, following  such  Business
          Combination,

                         a)  all  or substantially all of the individuals
               and  entities  who  were  the  beneficial  owners  of  the
               outstanding Common Stock  and the voting securities of the
               Company  entitled to vote generally  in  the  election  of
               directors  immediately  prior to such Business Combination
               have    direct    or   indirect   beneficial    ownership,
               respectively, of more  than  50%  of  the then outstanding
               shares of common stock, and more than 50%  of the combined
               voting  power  of  the then outstanding voting  securities
               entitled to vote generally  in  the election of directors,
               of   the   corporation   resulting  from   such   Business
               Combination (which, for purposes  of  this  clause  a) and
               clauses  b) and c), shall include a corporation that as  a
               result of  such  transaction  owns  the  Company or all or
               substantially  all  of  the  assets of the Company  either
               directly or through one or more subsidiaries), and

                         b)  except  to the extent  that  such  ownership
               existed  prior  to  the Business  Combination,  no  person
               (excluding any corporation  resulting  from  such Business
               Combination or any employee benefit plan or related  trust
               of  the  Company  or  such corporation resulting from such
               Business  Combination)  beneficially   owns,  directly  or
               indirectly, 20% or more of the then outstanding  shares of
               common  stock  of  the  corporation  resulting  from  such
               Business Combination or 20% or more of the combined voting
               power  of  the  then outstanding voting securities of such
               corporation, and

                         c) at least  a  majority  of  the members of the
               board of directors of the corporation resulting  from such
               Business  Combination were members of the Incumbent  Board
               at the time  of the execution of the initial agreement, or
               of the action  of  the  Board, providing for such Business
               Combination; or

                    (iv) approval by the shareholders of the Company of a
          plan of complete liquidation or dissolution of the Company.

               (b) Upon a Change of Control,  or immediately prior to the
          closing  of  a  transaction that will result  in  a  Change  of
          Control  if  consummated,  all  outstanding  options  and  SARs
          granted pursuant  to  the Plan shall automatically become fully
          exercisable, all restrictions  or limitations on any Incentives
          shall lapse and all performance  criteria  and other conditions
          relating to the payment of Incentives shall  be  deemed  to  be
          achieved  and  waived  by the Company, without the necessity of
          action by any person.

               (c) The Committee may  take such other action with respect
          to an Option or Incentive as  shall be provided in an agreement
          with the holder thereof.

          11.12 Definition of Fair Market  Value.   Whenever "Fair Market
     Value"  of  Common  Stock shall be determined for purposes  of  this
     Plan, it shall be determined  as follows: (a) if the Common Stock is
     listed on an established stock  exchange  or any automated quotation
     system that provides sale quotations, the closing  sale  price for a
     share  of  the Common Stock on such exchange or quotation system  on
     the applicable  date,  or  if no sale of the Common Stock shall have
     been made on that day, on the  next preceding day on which there was
     a sale of the Common Stock; (b) if the Common Stock is not listed on
     any exchange or quotation system,  but  bid  and  asked  prices  are
     quoted  and  published,  the  mean  between the quoted bid and asked
     prices on the applicable date, and if  bid  and asked prices are not
     available  on  such day, on the next preceding  day  on  which  such
     prices were available;  and (c) if the Common Stock is not regularly
     quoted, the fair market value  of  a  share  of  Common Stock on the
     applicable date as established by the Committee in good faith.

Adopted by the Board of Directors _______________, 1996.



                        AVONDALE INDUSTRIES, INC.
                          POST OFFICE BOX 50280
                       AVONDALE, LOUISIANA  70150

THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS OF AVONDALE 
INDUSTRIES, INC.

        The undersigned hereby appoints Bruce L. Hicks and Eugene K. Simon, 
Jr., or either  of  them, as proxies, each with full power of substitution, 
and hereby authorizes each  of them to represent and to vote, as designated 
below,  all shares  of common  stock of  Avondale Industries, Inc.  held of 
record by  the undersigned  on April 10, 1997  at  the  annual  meeting  of 
shareholders to be held on May 23, 1997, or any adjournment thereof.

                             COMPANY PROPOSALS

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR BOTH OF THE NOMINEES LISTED 
BELOW AND FOR PROPOSAL NUMBER 2 BELOW:

1.    Election of Directors

      [  ]  FOR all nominees listed below            [  ]  WITHHOLD AUTHORITY
            (except as marked to the                       to vote for all 
            contrary below)                                all nominees listed
                                                           below

    INSTRUCTIONS:     To withhold authority to vote for any nominee, strike 
                      a line through the nominee's name listed below.

      Albert L. Bossier, Jr.                          Hugh A. Thompson

2.     Adoption of Avondale Industries, Inc. 1997 Stock Incentive Plan


       [  ]   FOR         [  ]    AGAINST        [  ]   ABSTAIN


                            SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS

THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS RECOMMENDS THAT YOU VOTE AGAINST SHAREHOLDER PROPOSALS 
3 THROUGH 5, BY CHECKING THE BOX MARKED "AGAINST."

3.    Shareholder Rights Plan Proposal

       [  ]   AGAINST     [  ]    FOR            [  ]   ABSTAIN

4.    Confidential Voting Proposal

       [  ]   AGAINST     [  ]    FOR            [  ]   ABSTAIN

5.    Board of Directors Declassification Proposal

      [  ]    AGAINST     [  ]    FOR            [  ]   ABSTAIN


THIS  PROXY,  WHEN  PROPERLY EXECUTED,  WILL BE  VOTED IN THE MANNER DIRECTED  
HEREIN  BY  THE  UNDERSIGNED  SHAREHOLDER.  IF NO DIRECTIONS ARE  GIVEN, THIS 
PROXY WILL BE  VOTED  FOR  BOTH  OF THE  DIRECTOR NOMINEES  NAMED  ABOVE  AND 
PROPOSAL 2 AND  AGAINST PROPOSALS 3 THROUGH 5.  THE PROXY HOLDERS NAMED ABOVE  
WILL  VOTE  IN THEIR DISCRETION ON ANY  OTHER MATTER  THAT MAY PROPERLY  COME 
BEFORE THE MEETING.



                                       Date:  ____________________, 1997


                                       ______________________________________
                                              Signature of Shareholder

                                       ______________________________________
                                       Additional Signature, if held jointly

                                  PLEASE SIGN EXACTLY AS NAME APPEARS HEREON.
                                  WHEN SIGNING AS ATTORNEY, EXECUTOR,
                                  ADMINISTRATOR, TRUSTEE OR GUARDIAN, PLEASE
                                  GIVE FULL TITLE AS SUCH.  IF A CORPORATION,
                                  PLEASE SIGN FULL CORPORATE NAME BY PRESIDENT
                                  OR OTHER AUTHORIZED OFFICER.  IF A
                                  PARTNERSHIP, PLEASE SIGN IN PARTNERSHIP NAME
                                  BY AUTHORIZED PERSON.

                                  PLEASE MARK, SIGN, DATE AND RETURN THIS 
                                  PROXY PROMPTLY USING THE ENCLOSED ENVELOPE.




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