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Beverages are also at risk of being in short supply or subject to price increases, with 80% of imported beer, wine, whiskey and scotch, as well as 60% of rum, arriving at East and Gulf coast ports ...
Maryland Governor Wes Moore called the event a "global crisis" that had affected more than 8,000 jobs. The economic impact of the closure of the waterway has been estimated at $15 million per day. Maryland officials have said they plan to replace the bridge by fall 2028 at an estimated cost of $1.7 billion to $1.9 billion. [6]
Grace Ocean and Synergy filed a petition on April 1 in Maryland federal court to limit their liability from the crash to the present value of the ship and its cargo, which they estimated to be ...
It is operated by the Maryland Port Administration (MPA), [1] a unit of the Maryland Department of Transportation. [ 2 ] Founded in 1706, the port was renamed in 2006 for Helen Delich Bentley (1923–2016), who represented Baltimore as a U.S. Representative for a decade and who had also been a maritime reporter and editor for The Baltimore Sun ...
Third-generation longshore worker Ray Bailey Jr., a trustee of ILA Local 1291, encourages picketers outside the Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in Philadelphia. (Ryan Collerd / Associated Press)
The Maryland Drydock Company was a shipbuilding company that operated in Baltimore, Maryland during the 20th century. The company started life in 1920 as the Globe Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company of Maryland. Its president at this time was B. C. Cooke. The company bought land along the Patapsco River across the Bay from Fort McHenry. [1]
The Salad Box, pictured Friday, June 23, 2023, is now open on 125th Street in Ocean City, Maryland. The Salad Box celebrated its official grand opening on June 10, 2023, on 125th Street, right ...
Chesapeake Marine Railway and Dry Dock Company, founded in 1866, was the first black-owned shipyard in Baltimore, Maryland, US. It was founded by Isaac Meyers with investments from fifteen local Black residents including Frederick Douglass. [1] [2] Baltimore's Frederick Douglass-Isaac Myers Maritime Park includes the site of the shipyard. [1]