McCloskey & Company Shipyard was a ship builder in Tampa, Florida. McCloskey & Company built 38 cargo ships, Type N3 ship for World War II founded in 1942. McCloskey & Company also built type C1-S-D1 concrete ships. Matthew H. McCloskey founded the construction company McCloskey & Company in Philadelphia. McCloskey & Company built the Philadelphia Convention Hall, the Philadelphia Sheraton Hotel, and the Washington D.C. Stadium.
The Tampa shipyard is now Tampa Ship LLC owned by Edison Chouest Offshore. [1]

Shipyard

During World War II, there was a high demand for ships thus, McCloskey & Company opened a shipyard at Hookers Point in Tampa, Florida. Tampa Port Authority leased the land to McCloskey & Company. With steel in short supply due to the war, McCloskey & Company built 24 self-propelled concrete ships under a Maritime Commission war contract starting in July 1943. McCloskey & Company Shipyard had 6,000 employees at its peak, with 13 shipways (construction berths). Most of the concrete ships were used to move carry sugar. The concrete ships were 366 feet long and had a deadweight of 5,000 tons. Four other companies also built concrete ships for the war. Starting in April 1945 McCloskey & Company built 38 steel hull cargo ships Maritime Commission Type N3 ship, these were small coastal cargo ships.

After the war, the shipyard was sold to the City of Tampa in January 1948. The city leased out the shipyard to Tampa Ship Repair & Dry Dock Company. Tampa Fabricators operated out of the Tampa Ship Repair & Dry Dock Company shipyard starting in 1956 till 1960. The shipyard was vacant in the 1960s. In 1972 the yard was sold to American Ship Building Company as Tampa Shipyards. American Ship Building Company built two large drydocks at the site, but went bankrupt in 1995. For two years the site was owned and run by Tampa Shipbuilding Company. In 1997 the site was sold and became the Tampa Bay Shipbuilding & Repair Company. In 2008 the site was sold to Edison Chouest Offshore and renamed the site Tampa Ship. [2][3]

Tampa Ship

Tampa Ship operates a 62-acre full-service ship repair facility in Tampa Bay in Hillsborough County. [4] Tampa Ship also does vessel conversions and has four large drydocks. Tampa Ship has 7 repair pier berths off McCloskey Blvd at the start of the Sparkman Channel of Hillsborough Bay. Tampa Ship builds Platform supply vessels and Harbor Tugs. Edison Chouest Offshore has owned Tampa Ship since 2008. [5] [6][7]

  • Drydocks:
  • 535 ft (163 m)
  • 907 ft. (276.4 m)
  • 746 ft. (227.4 m)
  • 414 ft. (126.2 m)

World War 2 ships

Two C1-S-D1 concrete ships SS Vitruvius and SS David O. Saylor were taken out of maritime service and used to make a breakwater at Normandy for the Normandy landings. The breakwater was part of the Mulberry harbour, a temporary manmade harbor for World War II, used for the rapid offloading of cargo onto beaches during the Allied invasion of Normandy in June 1944. The Breakwater were called Corncobs and Gooseberries. The sunk Vitruvius and David O. Saylor were used at Utah Beach. Nine ships were used at The Kiptopeke Breakwater in Chesapeake Bay, Virginia at 37°09′51″N 75°59′29″W / 37.164267°N 75.991402°W / 37.164267; -75.991402.[8] [9]

Ten of the concrete ships are at the Powell River, British Columbia at 49°51′55″N 124°33′21″W / 49.865238°N 124.555821°W / 49.865238; -124.555821, where a lumber mill then as a breakwater.[10] known as The Hulks.

See also

References

  1. "McCloskey & Company is formed – Cornerstone Holdings, LLC".
  2. "WWII Concrete Shipbuilders".
  3. "Shipyards and Suppliers for U. S. Maritime Commission During World War II". www.usmm.org.
  4. "Tampa Ship – Home". www.tampabayship.com.
  5. "ECO | Shipyards". www.chouest.com.
  6. "Tampa Ship – Graving Drydocks". www.tampabayship.com.
  7. "Tampa Ship, Tampa Bay Shipbuilding & Repair, Tampa Shipyards".
  8. "Concrete Ships: Kiptopeke Breakwater". www.concreteships.org.
  9. "Kiptopeke Breakwater". Concrete Ships
  10. "The Powell River Floating Breakwater". Concrete Ships

27°55′35″N 82°26′40″W / 27.926372°N 82.444560°W / 27.926372; -82.444560

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