45°37′24″N 122°41′15″W / 45.62339°N 122.68756°W The G. M. Standifer Construction Company was an American company that built three shipyards on the Columbia River for the World War I effort, one in Oregon and two in Washington, all within spitting distance of each other. After the war it maintained its original yard in North Portland, Oregon. The North Portland yard, and one of the Vancouver, Washington yards (located where the Red Lion at the Quay is today, just west of the Interstate Bridge) (45°37′24″N 122°40′42″W / 45.62329°N 122.67847°W) produced wooden ships. The other Vancouver yard, located just west of what was then the Spokane, Portland and Seattle Railway bridge (now the BNSF bridge, 45°37′45″N 122°41′28″W / 45.62912°N 122.69107°W) produced steel-hulled ships. The Portland yard was located about a mile to the west, just downstream from the BNSF bridge (45°36′26″N 122°41′08″W / 45.60729°N 122.68569°W). Both Vancouver yards were closed in 1921.[1]
Standifer Steel Shipyard (1918–1919)
The Vancouver yard, referred to as the Standifier Steel Shipyard, began working steel for the assembly of merchant ships on July 13, 1918, and by October 13, 1918, was handling an average of 200 tons of steel a day with plans to begin producing a completed steel ship every two weeks.[2]
Hull # | Ship Name | USSB # | Owner | Type | Gross Tonnage | Delivery Date | Disposition |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | S.S. Cokesit | US Shipping Board | Cargo Ship | 6,100 | May 1919 | Later Adelfoi Chandris 1938, Saint Marin 1941, Catania 1942, bombed 1943 and scrapped 1949 | |
2 | S.S. Coaxet | US Shipping Board | Cargo Ship | 6,100 | July 1919 | Later Empire Kingfisher 1941, wrecked off Cape Sable 1942 | |
3 | S.S. Waban | US Shipping Board | Cargo Ship | 6,100 | July 1919 | Later Empire Sambar 1940, Empire Beaver 1941, S.S. Norhauk 1942, mined and lost 1943 | |
S.S. Pawlet | US Shipping Board | Cargo Ship | 6,078 | February 1920 | Later Golden Wall 1928, Willsolo 1934, Ohioan 1937, torpeded and lost 1942[3] | ||
References
- ↑ Colton, Tim. "G. M. Standifer Construction Company, Portland OR and Vancouver WA". ShipbuildingHistory.com. Archived from the original on 6 November 2022. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
- ↑ The G M Standifer Construction Corporation, Pacific Marine Review - Vol. 15, November 1918, pp. 136–142
- ↑ "Ohioan". uboat.net. Retrieved 25 March 2022.