US Merchant ships
Moderator: Community Manager
Re: US Merchant ships
Sea Land was unique in the 35 foot containers, and it was the downfall of their dedicated services - and the SL-7 class frieghters.
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Re: US Merchant ships
Great series Novice and inreresting about the containers.
- Portsmouth Bill
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Re: US Merchant ships
Great to see the merchant ships still being developed - there must be an unlimited potential here - well done chaps
Re: US Merchant ships
After WW2 many companies had their fleets renewed using USMC hulls. One popular hull was that of the C3 S A2 type (this type was also used for the escort carriers conversions, some carriers re-converted to merchant ships-these to be done also).
The Luckenbach Steamship co. taking some eleven ships, represented here by the William Luckenbach
The old firm of Pope & Talbot had six ships, four of which served with the Pacific Argentine Brazil Line Inc. like P & T Forester
Some of these ships were transferred within the US registry, one such is the American Robin of American Foreign Steamship which bought several second-hand ships
The Luckenbach Steamship co. taking some eleven ships, represented here by the William Luckenbach
The old firm of Pope & Talbot had six ships, four of which served with the Pacific Argentine Brazil Line Inc. like P & T Forester
Some of these ships were transferred within the US registry, one such is the American Robin of American Foreign Steamship which bought several second-hand ships
Last edited by Novice on October 16th, 2015, 7:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Thank you Kim for the crest
"Never fear to try on something new. Remember that the Titanic was built by professionals, and the Ark by an amateur"
"Never fear to try on something new. Remember that the Titanic was built by professionals, and the Ark by an amateur"
Re: US Merchant ships
Wonderful drawings.
Re: US Merchant ships
And the saga continues...
The Seas Shipping also known as Robin Lines operated ships from the eastern seaboard of United States to South Africa. After WW2 the company bought three C3 S A2 type hulls (all converted back to merchant ships from escort carriers, those carriers bein Lend-Leased to Great Britain during the war)
The Robin Kirk was formerly HMS Ameer.
The Seas Shipping also known as Robin Lines operated ships from the eastern seaboard of United States to South Africa. After WW2 the company bought three C3 S A2 type hulls (all converted back to merchant ships from escort carriers, those carriers bein Lend-Leased to Great Britain during the war)
The Robin Kirk was formerly HMS Ameer.
Last edited by Novice on October 16th, 2015, 6:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Thank you Kim for the crest
"Never fear to try on something new. Remember that the Titanic was built by professionals, and the Ark by an amateur"
"Never fear to try on something new. Remember that the Titanic was built by professionals, and the Ark by an amateur"
Re: US Merchant ships
That would explain why they have more modern-looking superstructures than other C3 hulls.
Re: US Merchant ships
Great to see ex-CVE in it's "next life".
Re: US Merchant ships
American Racer was built in 1964, just as containerization became a widespread thing. She was capable of hauling containers in her holds, but this was insufficient for her to retain profitability, and she was converted back to break-buck for US government charter.
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