Collections Item Detail
B+W photo of workers boarding train at Lackawanna Terminal, Hoboken, for trip to work at Kaiser shipyards in Oregon, Sept. 26, 1942.
2014.001.0123
2014.001
Purchase
Purchase
Museum Collections.
Acme Newspictures
1942
Hoboken
7 in
9 in
Notes: 2014 URL: http://www.shipbuildinghistory.com/history/shipyards/4emergencylarge/wwtwo/koregon.htm Oregon Shipbuilding Company was one of the original nine emergency yards, built by Todd and Kaiser with 8 ways, with $23mm from the USMC. Its 8 ways were increased to 11 in the second wave of shipbuilding expansion. Kaiser bought out Todd's interest in 1941. At its peak, Oregon Shipbuilding employed over 35,000 people, 30% of them women. After the war, the yard was closed and liquidated. It was located on the east side of the Willamette River, almost at its intersection with the Columbia. ==== ==== 2014 URL: http://www.ohs.org/education/oregonhistory/historical_records/dspDocument.cfm?doc_ID=00088A33-E7AE-1E91-891B80B0527200A7 The Oregon History Project. In 1940, Henry J. Kaiser signed an agreement with the British government to build 31 cargo ships to aid that country in their war effort. After scouting several sites, Kaiser chose to construct a new shipbuilding yard in Portland, Oregon, and on May 19, 1941, his Oregon Shipbuilding Corporation launched the first Liberty ship, The Star of Oregon. By the time the United States entered World War II, after the bombing of Pearl Harbor in December 1941, Kaiser already had connections with the U.S. Navy and the U.S. Maritime Commission. He also knew how to manage resources effectively, getting projects done on time and under budget. Among the testaments to Kaiser’s skills, he had organized the completion of Hoover Dam in half the time expected and his various social and business connections made his company a natural choice to win U.S. wartime shipbuilding contracts. Kaiser opened a yard in Vancouver and began producing baby aircraft escort carriers in January 1942, and workers started on T-2 tankers at a new Swan Island yard in March of that same year. The company set a record when the Joseph N. Teal was built in ten days in the fall of 1942. In all, the Oregon Shipbuilding Yards delivered 455 ships to the U.S. Maritime Commission. Twenty of them were sent to the Soviet Union under the lend-lease program. ==== ==== Original or Copy: Original Status: OK Status By: dw Status Date: 2014-04-08