SS Peralta

History
Name: SS Peralta
Builder: San Francisco Shipbuilding Company
Launched: February 1921
Reclassified:
Status: Floating breakwater
General characteristics
Tonnage:
Length: 420 ft (128.02 m)
Beam: 54 ft (16.46 m)
Draught: 35 ft (10.67 m)
Propulsion:
  • T.3-cyl.
  • 359 nhp
  • Single screw

SS Peralta is a concrete floating breakwater in the Powell River in British Columbia. She was built as a concrete oil tanker by the San Francisco Shipbuilding Company, and was launched in February 1921. The ship is 128 m long, with a beam of 15.4 m and has a volume of 6,144 GRT.[1] Her sister ship is SS Palo Alto. She was acquired in 1924 and converted into a sardine cannery in Alaska. After spending 24 years in this role the ship was moored off Antioch, California. She was bought by Pacifica Papers in 1958 and moored as part of a giant floating breakwater on the Powell River to protect the company's log storage pond. She is the oldest and largest American-built concrete ship still afloat.

With the downsizing of operations at the pulp mill in late 2000, it was proposed to sink the Peralta as an artificial reef, but this was later rejected.

References

  1. Glenday, Craig (2013). Guinness Book of World Records 2014. p. 176. ISBN 9781908843159.
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