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Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard

Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard started as William Skinner & Sons in downtown Baltimore, Maryland in 1815. In 1899 the shipyard was renamed Skinner Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company. Also at the site was Malster & Reanie started in 1870 by William T. Malster (1843–1907). In 1879 Malster partnered with William B. Reaney (1808-1883). In 1880 Malster & Reanie was sold and renamed Columbian Iron Works & Dry Dock Company (Lower Yard). Malster & Reanie and Skinner Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company merged in 1906, but remained as Skinner Shipbuilding. In 1914 the company was renamed Baltimore Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Company. Baltimore Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Company sold to Bethlehem Steel in 1922, becoming part of Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation. Bethlehem Steel operated the shipyard for ship repair, conversion and some ship construction. Bethlehem's main ship construction site was across the harbor at Bethlehem Sparrows Point. Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard was known as the Bethlehem Upper Yard located north-east side of Federal Hill. Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard located on the west side of Locust Point peninsula was known as the Lower Yard, near Fort McHenry.[1]

USS Webster moored pierside at Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard in March 1945

Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard edit

Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard, the 42-acre Upper Yard, was sold to AME/Swirnow in 1983. Swirnow shipyard sold the land in 2002 and is now Ritz Carlton and Harborview communities near to the Baltimore Museum of Industry at 39°16′28″N 76°36′06″W / 39.274497°N 76.601605°W / 39.274497; -76.601605.[2][3]

A Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard 100 feet tall crane built in the 1940s during World War II is on display at The Baltimore Museum of Industry along with other artifacts. The crane was used at the Bethlehem Fairfield Shipyard to help build Liberty ships, Victory ships and amphibious landing ships. Fairfield closed in 1945 and the crane was moved to Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard in 1945.[8]

Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard edit

Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard, the Lower Yard, was sold to General Ship Repair in 1983. The site is now some of Port of Baltimore terminals at 39°16′05″N 76°34′58″W / 39.268133°N 76.582872°W / 39.268133; -76.582872. (former Columbian Iron Works & Dry Dock Company 1899-1906)[9][10]

Baltimore Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company edit

Columbian Iron Works and Dry Dock Company (1899—1906) went into receivership in 1899 and was reorganized as Baltimore Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company, and was purchased by William B. Skinner and Sons in 1905. In 1915, Skinner and Sons went into receivership and was reorganized as the Baltimore Dry Dock and Shipbuilding Corporation.[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20]

Baltimore Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company specialized in building and repairing tanker ships. Sample:

  • SS Bethelridfe, and SS Betterton, tankers built in 1919 at 10,300 tons, 444 feet long, 59 beam, 34 tanks, 2,500 HP. Four others built.[21][22][23]
  • SS Arundel built in 1904
 
Baltimore Dock in 1880

Skinner Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company edit

Skinner Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company, also called William Skinner & Sons. (1906—1915).[24][25] Shipyard samples:

Baltimore Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Company edit

Baltimore Dry Dock & Shipbuilding Company (1915-1922), also called the Upper Plant on 9.6 acres.[29][30]

Ships built:

Malster & Reanie edit

 
William T. Malster (1843-1907), in 1897

Malster & Reanie (1872-1880) built yachts and other ships. William T. Malster (1843-1907) was the Mayor of Baltimore from 1897 to 1899. Malster was the son of a Confederate Colonel.[44][45]

William B. Reaney (1808-1883) was raised in Philadelphia with private tutors. In 1849 started working in his father, Thomas Reaney, shipyard in the engineering department, Reaney & Neafie Shipyard. Thomas Reaney and Samuel Archbold also started the Pennsylvania Iron Works. He and his father moved to city of Chester and started a new yard, Delaware River Iron Ship Building and Engine Works, commonly known as Roach's Ship Yard. Reaney, Son & Archbold built ships for the American Civil War. building the USS Wateree, USS Suwanee and USS Shamokin, USS Sagamore, USS Lehigh, and USS Tunxis purposes, including the river steamboat Samuel M. Felton. In 1872 the yards were sold to John Roach. In 1872 he entered in to a partnership with Malster. In 1874 he build a new yard in Philadelphia as owner and naval architect. In 1879 sold and became the manager of the Eureka Cast Steel Company of Chester.[46]

Sample built: La Brerague, yacht 240 feet for Eugene Tampkins[47]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Industry, Baltimore Museum of. "Key Highway Yards - Once Baltimore's "largest and most important" shipyard". Explore Baltimore Heritage.
  2. ^ "New dry dock expected to boost family-owned General Ship Repair | Maryland Daily Record". January 10, 2008.
  3. ^ "CONTENTdm". collections.digitalmaryland.org.
  4. ^ "Internal Combustion Engine Repair Ship Photo Index (ARG)". www.navsource.org.
  5. ^ "Tank Landing Ship ARL-37 Indra". www.navsource.org.
  6. ^ "Maritime History Notes: 'Jumboized' T-2 tankers". FreightWaves. October 27, 2020.
  7. ^ "T2 Tankers Still in Active Service". www.t2tanker.org.
  8. ^ Maryland, Preservation. "Save the Crane". Preservation Maryland.
  9. ^ Industry, Baltimore Museum of (March 30, 2020). "The Bethlehem Baltimore Shipyards: Varied Origins, Histories, and Missions".
  10. ^ "Home". The General Ship Repair Corporation.
  11. ^ Commerce Today, Volume 4, May 1974
  12. ^ "StackPath". www.offshore-mag.com.
  13. ^ ""ASK FOR MORE TIME.; Columbian Iron Works Creditors Desire an Extension to Finish Work." The New York Times. December 28, 1899, Wednesday Page 3" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Columbian Iron Works Failure." The New York Times December 21, 1899, Wednesday Page 4" (PDF).
  15. ^ Keith, Robert C. Baltimore Harbor: A Pictorial History. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press 2005. p. 93
  16. ^ Knowles, Richard. John P. Holland, 1841-1914: Inventor of the Modern Submarine. Columbia, South Carolina: University of South Carolina Press, 1998. p. 74
  17. ^ "Columbian Iron Works" in Directory of Iron and Steel Works of the United States and Canada. Philadelphia: American Iron and Steel Association v. 13 (1896) p. 256
  18. ^ Forrest, Clarence H. Official History of the Fire Department of the City of Baltimore: Together with Biographies and Portraits of Eminent Citizens of Baltimore.Baltimore: Williams & Wilkins, 1898. pg 154
  19. ^ Baltimore: Its History and Its People, by Hall, Clayton Coleman. Volume 1: History. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1912. pp. 376–377
  20. ^ Howard, George Washington."William B. Reaney" in The Monumental City: Its Past History and Present Resources . Baltimore: J.D. Ehlers,1873. p. 822
  21. ^ The Nautical Gazette, Volume 98
  22. ^ "Nauticus": A Journal of Shipping, Insurance, Investments, Volume 6, 1919
  23. ^ Pacific marine review" - Internet Archive, 1920
  24. ^ "Bethlehem Baltimore, Baltimore Dry Dock, Columbian Iron Works".
  25. ^ Fight for a Better Navy (Evans) • Part III, Chapter 2 penelope.uchicago.edu
  26. ^ "National Register Properties in Maryland". mht.maryland.gov.
  27. ^ "Tugboat Information". tugboatinformation.com.
  28. ^ RFAs Steadfast from historicalrfa.org
  29. ^ shipbuildinghistory.com Bethbaltimore shipyards
  30. ^ "The Baltimore Dry Docks Ship Building Co". www.marinelink.com.
  31. ^ "Elinor (ID 2465)". www.navsource.org.
  32. ^ "South Pole (ID 3665)". www.navsource.org.
  33. ^ "Polar Bear (ID 3666)". www.navsource.org.
  34. ^ "Polar Sea (ID 3301)". www.navsource.org.
  35. ^ "Polar Star (ID 3787)". www.navsource.org.
  36. ^ "Redwing (AM 48)". www.navsource.org.
  37. ^ navsource Lark (AT[O] 168)
  38. ^ "Miscellaneous Unclassified (IX) Photo Index". www.navsource.org.
  39. ^ "Bobolink (AM 20)". www.navsource.org.
  40. ^ "Pigeon (AM 47)". www.navsource.org.
  41. ^ "Avocet (AM 19)". www.navsource.org.
  42. ^ "Aeolus (ID 3005)". www.navsource.org.
  43. ^ "Thrush (AM 18)". www.navsource.org.
  44. ^ "William T. Malster, MSA SC 3520-12482". msa.maryland.gov.
  45. ^ "Columbian Iron Works and Dry Dock Company". www.globalsecurity.org.
  46. ^ Biographical and historical cyclopedia of Delaware page 423
  47. ^ The Book of Sport, Volume 1, by William Patten, page 397, 1901

bethlehem, highway, shipyard, started, william, skinner, sons, downtown, baltimore, maryland, 1815, 1899, shipyard, renamed, skinner, shipbuilding, dock, company, also, site, malster, reanie, started, 1870, william, malster, 1843, 1907, 1879, malster, partnere. Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard started as William Skinner amp Sons in downtown Baltimore Maryland in 1815 In 1899 the shipyard was renamed Skinner Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company Also at the site was Malster amp Reanie started in 1870 by William T Malster 1843 1907 In 1879 Malster partnered with William B Reaney 1808 1883 In 1880 Malster amp Reanie was sold and renamed Columbian Iron Works amp Dry Dock Company Lower Yard Malster amp Reanie and Skinner Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company merged in 1906 but remained as Skinner Shipbuilding In 1914 the company was renamed Baltimore Dry Dock amp Shipbuilding Company Baltimore Dry Dock amp Shipbuilding Company sold to Bethlehem Steel in 1922 becoming part of Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation Bethlehem Steel operated the shipyard for ship repair conversion and some ship construction Bethlehem s main ship construction site was across the harbor at Bethlehem Sparrows Point Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard was known as the Bethlehem Upper Yard located north east side of Federal Hill Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard located on the west side of Locust Point peninsula was known as the Lower Yard near Fort McHenry 1 USS Webster moored pierside at Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard in March 1945 Contents 1 Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard 2 Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard 3 Baltimore Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company 4 Skinner Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company 5 Baltimore Dry Dock amp Shipbuilding Company 6 Malster amp Reanie 7 See also 8 ReferencesBethlehem Key Highway Shipyard editBethlehem Key Highway Shipyard the 42 acre Upper Yard was sold to AME Swirnow in 1983 Swirnow shipyard sold the land in 2002 and is now Ritz Carlton and Harborview communities near to the Baltimore Museum of Industry at 39 16 28 N 76 36 06 W 39 274497 N 76 601605 W 39 274497 76 601605 2 3 Major projects USS Palawan ARG 10 converted to Luzon Class Internal Combustion Engine Repair Ship 4 USS Diamond Head AE 19 converted to ammunition ship at the shipyard USS Graffias AF 29 a type C2 S E1 hull converted to Hyades stores ship at the shipyard Achelous class repair ship Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard converted Landing Ship Tank LST ship to Achelous class repair ships for the repair of landing craft vehicle personnel LCVP or Higgins boat USS Menelaus ARL 13 USS Numitor ARL 17 USS Patroclus ARL 19 USS Indra ARL 37 5 Some T 2 tankers were converted or jumboized in order to increase their capacity as oiler ship A 354 foot long cargo midsection was added Sample 6 SS Gulfmeadows Gulf Oil Company tanker converted in 1957 to 12 811 GT from 9 900 GT Built as SS Great Meadows in 1943 by Sun Shipbuilding Co SS Maine built as a T2 SE A2 tanker SS Tomahawk by Marinship Corporation Became US Navy USS Tomahawk AO 88 In 1967 she was jumboized 7 SS Marine Duval was USS Lynchurg AO 154 Six other T 2 tankers were jumboized Legacy A Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard 100 feet tall crane built in the 1940s during World War II is on display at The Baltimore Museum of Industry along with other artifacts The crane was used at the Bethlehem Fairfield Shipyard to help build Liberty ships Victory ships and amphibious landing ships Fairfield closed in 1945 and the crane was moved to Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard in 1945 8 Bethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard editBethlehem Fort McHenry Shipyard the Lower Yard was sold to General Ship Repair in 1983 The site is now some of Port of Baltimore terminals at 39 16 05 N 76 34 58 W 39 268133 N 76 582872 W 39 268133 76 582872 former Columbian Iron Works amp Dry Dock Company 1899 1906 9 10 Major projects USS Avenge AM 423 USS Webster ARV 2 Built drilling rigs in the 1970s Sample 11 Ocean Scout was the first semisubmersible oil well drilling rig to be constructed on the East Coast 12 Baltimore Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company editColumbian Iron Works and Dry Dock Company 1899 1906 went into receivership in 1899 and was reorganized as Baltimore Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company and was purchased by William B Skinner and Sons in 1905 In 1915 Skinner and Sons went into receivership and was reorganized as the Baltimore Dry Dock and Shipbuilding Corporation 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Baltimore Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company specialized in building and repairing tanker ships Sample SS Bethelridfe and SS Betterton tankers built in 1919 at 10 300 tons 444 feet long 59 beam 34 tanks 2 500 HP Four others built 21 22 23 SS Arundel built in 1904 nbsp Baltimore Dock in 1880Skinner Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company editSkinner Shipbuilding amp Dry Dock Company also called William Skinner amp Sons 1906 1915 24 25 Shipyard samples Standard Oil Company No 16 harbor tug built in 1907 for Standard Oil Company Baltimore tugboat built in1906 now a Museum ship 26 Spartan Tug 27 RFA Steadfast built in 1915 a mooring Vessel 28 Baltimore Dry Dock amp Shipbuilding Company editBaltimore Dry Dock amp Shipbuilding Company 1915 1922 also called the Upper Plant on 9 6 acres 29 30 Ships built General de Castelnau in 1917 renamed Elinor ID 2465 31 South Pole ID 3665 1918 32 War Neptune Polar Bear ID 3666 1918 33 Warrenton Polar Sea ID 3301 1918 34 War Venus Polar Star ID 3787 35 USS Redwing Minesweeper No 48 1919 36 USS Lark AM 21 1921 37 District of Columbia USS Serapis IX 213 1921 38 USS Bobolink AM 20 39 USS Pigeon ASR 6 40 Avocet AVP 4 41 Aeolus ID 3005 42 Thrush AVP 3 43 Malster amp Reanie edit nbsp William T Malster 1843 1907 in 1897 Malster amp Reanie 1872 1880 built yachts and other ships William T Malster 1843 1907 was the Mayor of Baltimore from 1897 to 1899 Malster was the son of a Confederate Colonel 44 45 William B Reaney 1808 1883 was raised in Philadelphia with private tutors In 1849 started working in his father Thomas Reaney shipyard in the engineering department Reaney amp Neafie Shipyard Thomas Reaney and Samuel Archbold also started the Pennsylvania Iron Works He and his father moved to city of Chester and started a new yard Delaware River Iron Ship Building and Engine Works commonly known as Roach s Ship Yard Reaney Son amp Archbold built ships for the American Civil War building the USS Wateree USS Suwanee and USS Shamokin USS Sagamore USS Lehigh and USS Tunxis purposes including the river steamboat Samuel M Felton In 1872 the yards were sold to John Roach In 1872 he entered in to a partnership with Malster In 1874 he build a new yard in Philadelphia as owner and naval architect In 1879 sold and became the manager of the Eureka Cast Steel Company of Chester 46 Sample built La Brerague yacht 240 feet for Eugene Tampkins 47 See also editCalmar Steamship Company and other subsidiaries of the Bethlehem SteelReferences edit Industry Baltimore Museum of Key Highway Yards Once Baltimore s largest and most important shipyard Explore Baltimore Heritage New dry dock expected to boost family owned General Ship Repair Maryland Daily Record January 10 2008 CONTENTdm collections digitalmaryland org Internal Combustion Engine Repair Ship Photo Index ARG www navsource org Tank Landing Ship ARL 37 Indra www navsource org Maritime History Notes Jumboized T 2 tankers FreightWaves October 27 2020 T2 Tankers Still in Active Service www t2tanker org Maryland Preservation Save the Crane Preservation Maryland Industry Baltimore Museum of March 30 2020 The Bethlehem Baltimore Shipyards Varied Origins Histories and Missions Home The General Ship Repair Corporation Commerce Today Volume 4 May 1974 StackPath www offshore mag com ASK FOR MORE TIME Columbian Iron Works Creditors Desire an Extension to Finish Work The New York Times December 28 1899 Wednesday Page 3 PDF Columbian Iron Works Failure The New York Times December 21 1899 Wednesday Page 4 PDF Keith Robert C Baltimore Harbor A Pictorial History Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2005 p 93 Knowles Richard John P Holland 1841 1914 Inventor of the Modern Submarine Columbia South Carolina University of South Carolina Press 1998 p 74 Columbian Iron Works in Directory of Iron and Steel Works of the United States and Canada Philadelphia American Iron and Steel Association v 13 1896 p 256 Forrest Clarence H Official History of the Fire Department of the City of Baltimore Together with Biographies and Portraits of Eminent Citizens of Baltimore Baltimore Williams amp Wilkins 1898 pg 154 Baltimore Its History and Its People by Hall Clayton Coleman Volume 1 History New York Lewis Historical Publishing Co 1912 pp 376 377 Howard George Washington William B Reaney in The Monumental City Its Past History and Present Resources Baltimore J D Ehlers 1873 p 822 The Nautical Gazette Volume 98 Nauticus A Journal of Shipping Insurance Investments Volume 6 1919 Pacific marine review Internet Archive 1920 Bethlehem Baltimore Baltimore Dry Dock Columbian Iron Works Fight for a Better Navy Evans Part III Chapter 2 penelope uchicago edu National Register Properties in Maryland mht maryland gov Tugboat Information tugboatinformation com RFAs Steadfast from historicalrfa org shipbuildinghistory com Bethbaltimore shipyards The Baltimore Dry Docks Ship Building Co www marinelink com Elinor ID 2465 www navsource org South Pole ID 3665 www navsource org Polar Bear ID 3666 www navsource org Polar Sea ID 3301 www navsource org Polar Star ID 3787 www navsource org Redwing AM 48 www navsource org navsource Lark AT O 168 Miscellaneous Unclassified IX Photo Index www navsource org Bobolink AM 20 www navsource org Pigeon AM 47 www navsource org Avocet AM 19 www navsource org Aeolus ID 3005 www navsource org Thrush AM 18 www navsource org William T Malster MSA SC 3520 12482 msa maryland gov Columbian Iron Works and Dry Dock Company www globalsecurity org Biographical and historical cyclopedia of Delaware page 423 The Book of Sport Volume 1 by William Patten page 397 1901 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard amp oldid 1207716777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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