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George Lawley & Son was a shipbuilding firm operating in Massachusetts from 1866 to 1945. It began in Scituate, then moved to Boston. After founder George Lawley (1823–1915) retired in 1890, his son, grandson and great-grandson upheld the business, which continued until 1945.
Everett Ship Repair, Everett, Washington; Federal Shipbuilding & Drydock, Newark, New Jersey (1917–1949) Fore River Shipyard, Quincy, Massachusetts (1901–1964) Gas Engine & Power Company & Charles L. Seabury Company, Morris Heights, Bronx, New York; General Dynamics, Quincy, Massachusetts; General Engineering & Dry Dock Company, Alameda ...
Kendall Boiler and Tank Company Building is a one-story commercial edifice located on 275 Third Street in Kendall Square, Cambridge, Massachusetts.The brick building was formerly owned by the Kendall Boiler and Tank Company and is part of the Blake and Knowles Steam Pump Company National Register District, on the National Register of Historic Places.
Bethlehem Atlantic Works of East Boston, Massachusetts, was a shipyard in the United States from 1853 until 1984. [1] It was owned by the Bethlehem Shipbuilding Company. It is located directly to the west of the East Boston Immigration Station. The company's offices were in the Atlantic Works Warehouse, built in 1893.
Pages in category "Ships built in Massachusetts" ... Belisarius (1781 ship) C. USS Cambridge (CA-126) Columbia Rediviva; H. Harriet (1809 ship) I. Indian (1814 ship) M.
The state-of-the-art ship — equipped with an iron hull and an early steam engine supplementing its sails — Le Lyonnais was built in 1855 for transatlantic passenger and mail service, according ...
In 1995 the company was appointed by the class association as the official builder for the Uffa Fox-designed Day Sailer. [3] [4] In 2022 the company was producing ten designs: the Cape Cod Mercury 15, Herreshoff Bull's Eye, Herreshoff 12½, Day Sailer, Rhodes 18, Herreshoff Goldeneye, Marlin Heritage 23, Raven 25, Atlantic and the Shields. [5]
A research team in New Jersey has discovered the remains of a steamship that went missing in 1856. The Atlantic Wreck Salvage (AWS), which uses the D/V Tenacious vessel for its searches, shared in ...