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45:
1111:
250:. Cramp used the long slipways to construct two submarines at a time, with the intention of launching them simultaneously. However, the shipyard's submarine construction program was not especially successful, as poor management hindered the delivery of the boats. The first delivery was made two years after keel laying, and fitting out was then done by
146:
district of
Philadelphia in 1807. In 1855, his sons Charles Henry (born 1828) and William C., became partners with their father. In 1872, his other sons Samuel H., Jacob C., and Theodore were taken into the firm. The company was incorporated under the name "The William Cramp and Sons' Iron
579:
1094:
Shipbuilding at Cramp & Sons: A History and Guide to
Collections of the William Cramp & Sons Ship and Engine Building Company (1830–1927) and the Cramp Shipbuilding Company (1941–46) of Philadelphia
523:
designated CL-91, was laid down by the Cramp
Shipbuilding Company. On 22 April 1943, Oklahomans were outraged, having just learned that the Japanese had executed the captured American pilots from
1423:
1203:
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157:
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in its
Pacific/Hawaiian services and the largest passenger ship built in the United States up to that time at 17,226 registered tones (only the German-built
216:
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1001:
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706:
224:
262:
230:
825:
1463:
1069:
944:
565:
783:
1468:
510:
On 6 September 1941, the keel for the
Cleveland-class light cruiser designated CL-90 was laid down by the Cramp Shipbuilding Company.
1035:
931:
531:
to fund the construction of a cruiser. That goal was topped by $ 5 million when the booths closed that night. CL-91 then became the
1115:
1366:
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429:
on board supervising the ship's new wireless telegraph equipment, became the first liner to report her imminent arrival by radio.
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323:
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442:
805:
1266:
633:
602:
458:
151:
127:
1276:
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1005:
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503:, a coastal passenger liner built in 1927 for the Eastern Steamship Company. While operating as the cruise ship
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309:
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in 1882. She was wrecked on the coastline of
Vancouver Island, on January 22, 1906, killing around 116 people.
212:
175:
143:
1346:
514:
375:
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1301:
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was larger in the 1920s). The Matson ship was scrapped in 1977 in Greece after being sold in the meantime.
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over Tokyo. That same day, booths were set up in
Oklahoma City with a goal to sell $ 40 million in
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268:
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1128:
779:
354:
204:
196:
134:. During its heyday in late 19th century, it was the preeminent American iron shipbuilder.
1356:
1306:
1236:
909:
606:
432:
329:
315:
1027:
826:"Ships for the Seven Seas: Philadelphia Shipbuilding in the Age of Industrial Capitalism"
1143:
873:
1311:
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620:
258:
31:
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131:
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750:
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487:
418:
417:—the first major ocean liners built in the United States after the collapse of the
161:
115:
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17:
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bought the yard in 1919 but closed it in 1927 as fewer ships were ordered by the
195:. Three of these ships took a part in the defeat of the Spanish fleet in 1898 at
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980:
572:
483:
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319:
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473:"), was laid down in 1906, launched on 11 July 1908, and completed in 1910.
44:
1110:
308:
loss is considered one of the worst shipwrecks in the region known as the
875:
A Chronological
History of the Origin and Development of Steam Navigation
584:
371:
1123:
Images of
Philadelphia, Pa., Cramp's Shipyard at the Library of Congress
710:. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 363.
243:
949:. Langley, BC: Stagecoach Publishing. pp. 72–76. Archived from
265:
neighborhood, was turned into a residential estate in early 2020s.
806:"Image 1 of the journal (New York [N.Y.]), March 21, 1896"
280:
267:
229:
1064:
451:, launched October 31, 1899. The cruiser was sunk by the crew in
482:, an American ocean liner and cruise ship built in 1927 for the
353:, was launched on 6 October 1888 and played a major role in the
1185:
199:. The victory in this battle heralded America's emergence as a
455:, salvaged by the Japanese and then reclaimed by the Russians.
211:
591:, Hackensack River at 150 River St., Hackensack, New Jersey
254:. The best construction time for a submarine was 644 days.
238:
In 1940, the Navy spent $ 22 million to reopen the yard as
120:
William Cramp & Sons Ship & Engine Building Company
439:, Battleship No. 4 of the US Navy, launched 28 March 1896
1097:. Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Maritime Museum, 1991.
1091:
Farr, Gail E., Brett F. Bostwick, and Merville Willis.
757:. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 26 Apr 1870. p. 8.
564:
Vessels built by the firm that are listed on the U.S.
1424:
Defunct shipbuilding companies of the United States
1375:
1219:
645:, naval architects who worked with Cramp & Sons
100:
85:
77:
62:
54:
728:. Everett, Pennsylvania. 15 Jul 1870. p. 1.
203:. In 1896 Cramps united their artillery arm, the
1163:"Ships Built - Cramp Shipbuilding, Philadelphia"
156:was built by the Cramp shipyard in 1870 for the
49:William Cramp, patriarch of the firm, circa 1870
1129:"William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Company"
780:"William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilding Company"
578:, Shipwreck, Amook Island, Larsen Bay, Alaska,
285:1899 advertisement for William Cramp & Sons
1434:Manufacturing companies disestablished in 1947
1419:Manufacturing companies based in Philadelphia
1197:
1165:. www.ShipbuildingHistory.com. Archived from
370:, was launched on 2 December 1891 and became
8:
1213:List of sailboat designers and manufacturers
1028:"Some Notable Early Cruise Ships from Miami"
973:"The History of the Sinking of the Valencia"
580:NRHP-listed in Kodiak Island Borough, Alaska
552:The last ship Cramp's built was the cruiser
507:in 1965, she caught fire, killing 87 people.
217:American Shipping and Commercial Corporation
37:
1444:Manufacturing companies established in 1830
207:Ordnance Company, with its main competitor
1204:
1190:
1182:
257:Cramp closed in 1947 and the site, on the
167:In 1890 the company built the battleships
43:
36:
1459:Shipyards building World War II warships
1429:Defunct companies based in Pennsylvania
1059:
1057:
1055:
1053:
1002:"William Cramp & Sons Shipbuilders"
878:. L.R. Hamersly & Company. p.
853:, Arms and Armour Press, 1991. p.70, 71
687:
425:en route from New York to England with
147:Shipbuilding and Engineering Company."
1449:1947 disestablishments in Pennsylvania
1065:"National Register Information System"
1004:. Shipbuilding History. Archived from
905:
895:
828:. Economic History Association. 1997.
726:Bedford County Press and Everett Press
924:Great Shipwrecks of the Pacific Coast
34:, builder of schools in Philadelphia.
7:
1150:. Destroyer History Foundation. 2007
1070:National Register of Historic Places
1038:from the original on 28 October 2013
566:National Register of Historic Places
513:On 8 December 1942, the keel to the
1439:1830 establishments in Pennsylvania
786:from the original on 20 August 2016
421:in the 1850s. On 15 November 1899,
25:
722:"William Cramp, the Ship-Builder"
318:Atalanta was built for financier
1109:
891:Valencia maiden voyage May 1882.
832:from the original on 2020-10-26
761:from the original on 2021-08-17
732:from the original on 2021-08-17
158:Delaware Bay & River pilots
1464:Defunct shipbuilding companies
525:Jimmy Doolittle's bombing raid
465:, America's first all-big gun
142:William Cramp was born in the
1:
971:Scott, R. Bruce; A.G. Brown.
560:, launched on April 22, 1945.
272:Aerial view of Cramp shipyard
701:"Cramp, Charles Henry"
399:, launched 28 February 1893.
339:of 2,499 tons built for the
234:Charles H. Cramp, circa 1900
164:port's fastest pilot boats.
946:British Columbia Shipwrecks
634:Philadelphia Naval Shipyard
609:, Fall River, Massachusetts
1485:
872:Preble, George H. (1895).
619:, Shipwreck 1. mi. SSW of
603:National Historic Landmark
449:Russian Imperial Admiralty
395:, Battleship No. 1 of the
322:in the same year that the
223:after the adoption of the
128:Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
29:
1469:Former submarine builders
1347:J.B & J.D. Van Deusen
926:. New York: Wiley, 2001.
862:Terzibaschitsch, p.70, 71
851:Submarines of the US Navy
213:American Ordnance Company
42:
27:American shipping company
1388:William Starling Burgess
1282:Harlan and Hollingsworth
1262:William Cramp & Sons
1116:William Cramp & Sons
943:Paterson, T. W. (1967).
849:Stefan Terzibaschitsch,
310:Graveyard of the Pacific
225:Naval Limitations Treaty
188:, and protected cruiser
113:William Cramp & Sons
30:Not to be confused with
1302:Montgomery & Howard
707:Encyclopædia Britannica
381:'s squadron during the
118:Company (also known as
1362:Jacob Aaron Westervelt
286:
273:
235:
1454:American shipbuilders
1292:Lawrence & Foulks
1118:at Wikimedia Commons
1075:National Park Service
755:The Evening Telegraph
667:39.97167°N 75.11833°W
357:and took part in the
284:
271:
233:
160:. She was one of the
130:, founded in 1830 by
1131:. GlobalSecurity.org
643:Arthur Leopold Busch
623:, Pensacola, Florida
383:Spanish–American War
359:Spanish–American War
252:Portsmouth Navy Yard
124:shipbuilding company
1317:C. & R. Poillon
1169:on 20 December 2014
1034:. GetCruising.com.
1008:on 20 December 2014
811:Library of Congress
672:39.97167; -75.11833
663: /
492:United States Lines
324:American Yacht Club
39:
1367:Edward F. Williams
1287:Dennison J. Lawlor
1257:Edward A. Costigan
1144:"Cramp & Sons"
983:on October 8, 2007
453:Russo-Japanese War
397:United States Navy
379:William T. Sampson
287:
274:
261:in Philadelphia's
240:Cramp Shipbuilding
236:
181:, armored cruiser
122:) was an American
18:Cramp Shipbuilding
1406:
1405:
1393:Thomas F. McManus
1342:James Rich Steers
1297:Ambrose A. Martin
1114:Media related to
1077:. March 13, 2009.
922:Belyk, Robert C.
541:On 6 March 1943,
427:Guglielmo Marconi
110:
109:
16:(Redirected from
1476:
1337:Henry Steers Sr.
1332:Henry Steers Jr.
1242:William H. Brown
1232:Brown & Bell
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277:Notable projects
205:Driggs-Schroeder
197:Santiago de Cuba
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607:Battleship Cove
505:Yarmouth Castle
316:Atalanta (1883)
279:
150:The pilot boat
140:
138:Company history
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32:Cramp & Co.
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698:, ed. (1911).
696:Chisholm, Hugh
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621:Pensacola Pass
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558: (CLG-3)
557:
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549:was launched.
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547: (CL-90)
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535:Oklahoma City
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521:light cruiser
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132:William Cramp
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38:William Cramp
33:
19:
1322:John A. Robb
1261:
1220:Shipbuilders
1171:. Retrieved
1167:the original
1152:. Retrieved
1147:
1133:. Retrieved
1108:
1093:
1068:
1040:. Retrieved
1031:
1022:
1010:. Retrieved
1006:the original
996:
985:. Retrieved
981:the original
976:
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955:. Retrieved
951:the original
945:
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883:. Retrieved
874:
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834:. Retrieved
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788:. Retrieved
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763:. Retrieved
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734:. Retrieved
725:
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690:
648:
617: (BB-2)
614:
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574:
563:
555:
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534:
515:
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499:
488:SS Leviathan
478:
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443:
437: (BB-4)
434:
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419:Collins Line
415: (1895)
412:
407: (1894)
404:
393: (BB-1)
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332:Philadelphia
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162:Philadelphia
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116:Shipbuilding
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105:Philadelphia
101:Headquarters
58:Shipbuilding
1398:Lewis Nixon
1277:Robert Fish
1252:Jesse Carll
1247:David Carll
1227:Moses Adams
906:|work=
885:9 September
670: /
639:Lewis Nixon
484:Matson Line
471:dreadnought
351: (C-3)
337:ocean liner
298:ocean liner
201:great power
1413:Categories
1352:Isaac Webb
1173:23 January
1154:2007-11-05
1135:2007-04-29
987:2006-08-26
957:2006-08-26
836:2016-05-09
765:2021-08-16
736:2021-08-17
682:References
655:39°58′18″N
500:Evangeline
467:battleship
341:Red D Line
335:, a small
306:Valencia's
302:Red D Line
296:, a small
248:submarines
144:Kensington
1042:8 October
1012:8 October
908:ignored (
898:cite book
613:USS
595:USS
585:USS
568:include:
556:Galveston
554:USS
543:USS
533:USS
529:War Bonds
516:Cleveland
459:USS
433:USS
423:St. Paul,
405:St. Louis
389:USS
365:USS
349:Baltimore
347:USS
320:Jay Gould
242:to build
227:in 1923.
221:U.S. Navy
126:based in
1148:Builders
1099:Archived
1036:Archived
1032:Original
830:Archived
784:Archived
759:Archived
751:"Launch"
730:Archived
658:75°7′6″W
628:See also
597:Lionfish
575:Aleutian
573:SS
477:SS
413:St. Paul
411:SS
403:SS
372:flagship
367:New York
330:SS
293:Valencia
291:SS
244:cruisers
192:Columbia
185:New York
78:Founders
55:Industry
790:11 July
545:Astoria
490:of the
391:Indiana
376:Admiral
343:in 1885
171:Indiana
91: (
86:Defunct
68: (
63:Founded
930:
518:-class
479:Malolo
444:Varyag
215:. The
469:(or "
1175:2012
1044:2013
1014:2013
928:ISBN
910:help
887:2013
792:2016
641:and
587:Ling
435:Iowa
409:and
246:and
190:USS
183:USS
176:USS
174:and
169:USS
93:1947
89:1947
70:1830
66:1830
880:398
498:SS
374:of
1415::
1146:.
1073:.
1067:.
1052:^
1030:.
975:.
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900:}}
896:{{
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782:.
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605:,
601:,
1205:e
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1191:v
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1016:.
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912:)
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