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Goliath Crane Extensive photos and information regarding the history and demolition the crane. Goliath Video YouTube amateur video of the Goliath crane and surroundings, including views inside the structure and panoramic views of the former shipyard, Quincy Bay, Weymouth Fore River and Quincy from atop the crane. Posted on YouTube 24 February 2008.
The shipyard traces its beginnings back to 1882, when Thomas A. Watson purchased a farm alongside the Fore River in East Braintree, Massachusetts.In 1884, Watson attempted to farm the land, but soon realizing that it was a failure, decided to work on a steam engine after he was approached by a local businessman.
In January, 2008, The Patriot Ledger newspaper reported that the 328-foot (100 m) tall "Goliath" shipbuilding crane located at the Fore River Shipyard - once the tallest maritime construction crane in the world, and for decades a landmark visible for miles - would be dismantled and sold to Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering of South Korea ...
General Dynamics closed the shipyard in 1986. Robert Harvey, 28, an ironworker, was killed in 2008 when a portion of the huge Goliath crane being disassembled at the former shipyard broke loose ...
In 2008 the shipyard bought the largest gantry crane in North America, the Goliath Crane, formerly located in Quincy, Massachusetts, from the General Dynamics company. [10] Built in 1975, the crane, nicknamed Goliath , Big Blue , The Dog or Horse , has a height of 100 m (330 ft), a span of 126 m (413 ft), a weight of 3,000 t (6,600,000 lb) and ...
There are a number of shipyard cranes called Goliath around the world: Goliath (Mangalia), in Romania; Samson and Goliath (cranes) in Northern Ireland; Goliath (Rosyth) in Scotland; Two Goliath cranes, Reliance Shipyard, Pipavav, India; Two Goliath cranes in Meyer Turku shipyard in Turku, Finland
Another attraction at the park would be the bell of the USS Quincy, which was built in the Fore River Shipyard and launched June 23, 1943. The ship participated in the D-Day invasion of Normandy ...
A large, diverse crowd gathered at Quincy's Thomas Crane Library to share the once-in-a-generation experience of viewing a near total solar eclipse.