SS Alabama

History
United States
Name: Alabama
Builder: Manitowoc Shipbuilding Company, Manitowoc, Wisconsin
Yard number: 36
Launched: December 18, 1909
Out of service: 1946
Status:
  • Converted to non-powered barge, 1961
  • Scrapped, 2006
General characteristics [1]
Type: Great Lakes passenger steamer
Tonnage:
Length: 275 ft (84 m) o/a
Beam: 44 ft 6 in (13.56 m)
Depth: 17 ft 1 in (5.21 m)
Propulsion:

SS Alabama was a steamship that served on the Great Lakes.

Construction

Alabama was built by the Manitowoc Shipbuilding Company at Manitowoc, Wisconsin in 1909. She was 275 ft (84 m) in length, had a 46 ft (14 m), 6 in (15 cm) beam, and drew 17 ft 1 in (5.21 m) She was equipped with a 2,200 horsepower quadruple expansion steam engine and a three coal-burning Scotch marine boilers.

Owners

Alabama's first owner was the Goodrich Transit Company.

After Goodrich Transit went bankrupt in 1933 she joined the Chicago, Duluth and Georgian Bay Transit Company, which also owned the SS North American and SS South American.

In 1946, the Georgian Bay Line sold Alabama for conversion to barge service. She was moved to Detroit's Rouge River where her passenger cabins were removed and her hull renovated for use as a cargo barge to haul scrap metal.

Purchased in 2005 by Dean Construction, she was towed to LaSalle, Ontario, Canada that October. It was later scrapped.

References

  1. "Alabama". Marine Historical Society of Detroit. 2011. Retrieved 26 October 2012.

External links


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