Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

J. F. Duthie & Company

Defunct shipyard off Harbor Island, Seattle, USA From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

J. F. Duthie & Company
Remove ads

J. F. Duthie & Company was a small shipyard located on the east side of Harbor Island in Seattle, Washington. It was reportedly organized in 1911 (although there is no mention of it on the 1912 Baist map[1] at the location where the shipyard would be built) and expanded to 4 slipways on 25 acres (10 ha) of property[2] in World War I to build cargo ships for the United Kingdom, France and Norway, but those resources were eventually all diverted at the behest of the United States Shipping Board (USSB). Work on the new plant started on 10 September 1916 and the first keel was laid on 29 November the same year.[3] At that time, the new Skinner & Eddy plant across the water was already launching its first two ships: Niels Nielsen (21 September) and Hanna Nielsen (23 October).

Quick facts Founded, Founder ...

Some 24 of the 33 ships built at J. F. Duthie were the "West boats," a series of steel-hulled cargo ships built for the USSB on the West Coast of the United States as part of the World War I war effort, with 12 requisitioned and 12 built under contract, 16% of the steel tonnage built in Puget Sound for the USSB. Duthie was supplied with boilers by Willamette Iron and Steel Works of Portland, Oregon.[4]

After the war, Wallace F. Duthie, the son of the founder J. F. Duthie, organized the dismantling of the shipbuilding facilities. Wallace died in 1922 at age 23.[5]

In 1928 the company's name was changed to Wallace Bridge Company. It built structural steel for local projects, including the Washington Athletic Club building in 1930.

Remove ads

Notable ships built at J. F. Duthie & Company

Summarize
Perspective

Among the first 7 boats built, before the Federal Government dominated the shipbuilding industry, was the steam ferry Leschi, which after an illustrious career capsized during Reagan's second term.

More information Yard#, Original ...
  1. Ships listed as "scrapped 19xx" were only operated by the USSB

In November 1918, World War I came to an end. In February of 1919, Seattle workers went on strike.

More information Yard#, USSB# ...
  1. See List of ship launches in 1918 and 1919 for references
  • For the Coastwise SS Co

Conversions of Japan-built USSB contract ships to oil burners during 1920: Eastern Crown, Eastern Dawn, Eastern Glen, Eastern Exporter for total of $338,094 on USSB account.[7]

Remove ads

Shipyard

Thumb
Duthie plant on the East Waterway of the Duwamish, 1917.
Thumb
View from the water
Thumb
View from the water, 1917

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads