Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation

1905–1997 shipbuilding company in the United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation
Remove ads

Bethlehem Steel Corporation Shipbuilding Division was created in 1905 when the Bethlehem Steel Corporation of Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, acquired the San Francisco-based shipyard Union Iron Works.[1][2] In 1917, it was incorporated as Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Limited.

Quick facts Formerly, Company type ...

The division's headquarters were moved to Quincy, Massachusetts, after acquiring the Fore River Shipyard in 1913.

In 1940, Bethlehem Shipbuilding was the largest of the "Big Three" U.S. shipbuilders that could build any ship,[3] followed by Newport News Shipbuilding & Drydock and New York Shipbuilding Corporation (New York Ship). Bethlehem expanded shortly before and during World War II as a result of the Long Range Shipbuilding Program and later the Emergency Shipbuilding program orchestrated by the United States Maritime Commission and the Two Ocean Navy program and its war-time successors by the military establishment.

In 1964, the now-corporate headquarters moved to Sparrows Point, Maryland, southeast of Baltimore, whose shipyard had been acquired in 1916.

The Quincy / Fore River yard was sold to General Dynamics Corporation in the mid-1960s, and closed in 1986. The Alameda Works Shipyard in California was closed by Bethlehem Steel in the early 1970s, while the San Francisco facility (former Union Iron Works) was sold to British Aerospace in the mid-1990s and survives today as BAE Systems San Francisco Ship Repair.

Bethlehem Steel ceased shipbuilding activities in 1997 in an attempt to preserve its core steelmaking operations.

The Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation Hospital, first built to treat injured workers, was assigned to be on the National Register of Historic Places in December 2022.[4][5]

Remove ads

Shipyards

Summarize
Perspective

Shipyards owned or operated by Bethlehem:

New York

  • Became part of Bethlehem with the purchase of United Shipyards on June 2, 1938 for $9,320,000[6]
    • they were called the Staten Island Works, the Brooklyn 56th Street Works, the Brooklyn 27th Street Works and the Hoboken Works of the New York Plant of the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation.[13]

Boston

Baltimore

San Francisco

Others

Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads