Ore Steamship Company
Appearance
Industry | Iron Ore Shipping |
---|---|
Founded | 1927New York City, United States |
Parent | Bethlehem Steel |
Ore Steamship Company and the Ore Navigation Corpoartion were subsidiaries of the Bethlehem Steel Company founded in New York City in 1927. Ore Steamship Company was a proprietary company that was founded so Bethlehem Steel could move goods needed by Bethlehem Steel Company. Ore Steamship Company would transport iron ore to the Bethlehem Steel mills on the Atlantic coast. Some ships took steel and steel products to Bethlehem Shipyards. Port of Baltimore was a major Bethlehem Steel port, the dock was 2,200 feet long in order to load and unload three large, 28,000-ton cargo ships at the same time.[1][2][3]
- Ore ships:
- SS Texar, was Harold O. Wilson [4]
- SS Bethflor, steel-carrying cargo ship
- Lagonda 1896 cargo ship
- Cambria
- SS William H. Donner, 1914 cargo ship[5]
- ELBA[6]
- Chilore[7]
- Cubore[7]
- Fletmore[7]
- Marore[7]
- Oremore[7]
- Santmor[7]
- Steelmore[7]
- Venmore was built at Bethlehem Sparrows Point 583-feet long and 78-feet wide, had steam turbine engines to a single propeller, top speed of 16 knots, had 7 sister ships. Scrapped in Santander, Spain in 1970. [7]
- E.H. Utley, built Min 1910 by Detroit Shipbuilding Co. [8]
- Bethcoal No. 1, No. 2, No. 3, 1962 Hopper Barge
- Punta Aramaya, was built at [[Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard, 381-feet long and 64-feet wide, work on the Orinoco River in Venezuela, operated by Iron Mines Company. Hd 4 sister ships.
See also
References
- ^ Bethlehem Steel Company Shipbuilding Division. A century of progress, 1849-1949: San Francisco Yard. San Francisco, 1949?
- ^ Strohmeier, Daniel D. (1963). "A History of Bethlehem Steel Company's Shipbuilding and Ship Repairing Activities". Naval Engineers Journal. 75 (2): 259–280. doi:10.1111/j.1559-3584.1963.tb04865.x. ISSN 1559-3584.
- ^ "House Flags of U.S. Shipping Companies: O". www.crwflags.com.
- ^ "LibShipsH". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
- ^ "Donner, William H. - Great Lakes Vessel HistoryGreat Lakes Vessel History". www.greatlakesvesselhistory.com.
- ^ "ELBA - Historical Collections of the Great Lakes". greatlakes.bgsu.edu.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Mines, United States Bureau of (January 26, 1956). "Materials Survey: Iron Ore". U.S. Government Printing Office – via Google Books.
- ^ E.H. Utley
- ^ Tunism, tugboat