enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. SS B.F. Jones - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_B.F._Jones

    On August 21, 1955 B.H. Jones was seriously damaged in a collision with the larger steamer Cason J. Callaway, they collided because of heavy fog near Lime Island in the St. Mary's River. After an inspection she was declared a constructive total loss. [6] She was sold for scrap to the Duluth Iron & Metal Company and scrapped in Duluth, Minnesota.

  3. SS Arthur M. Anderson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Arthur_M._Anderson

    Arthur M. Anderson, along with Philip R. Clarke and Cason J. Callaway, were built for the Pittsburgh Steamship Division of U.S. Steel. Arthur M. Anderson ' s sea trials commenced on August 7, 1952, and she loaded her first cargo at the Two Harbors dock on August 12, 1952. She received several refits in her life including the addition of a new ...

  4. Great Lakes Fleet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_Fleet

    SS Cason J. Callaway; SS Phillip R. Clarke - First vessel of the 'AAA' Class ore carriers; the SS M. Anderson and the SS Cason J. Callaway are also of this class. The three are sometimes referred to as the "Triplets" because the three ships are nearly identical in dimensions and appearance; MV John G. Munson

  5. Lake freighter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lake_freighter

    Cason J. Callaway laid up in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. (2021) Other destinations include coal-fired power plants, highway department salt domes, and stone docks, where limestone is unloaded for the construction industry. U.S.-flagged freighters carried the largest portion of the trade, accounting for two-thirds of all cargo by weight.

  6. American Ship Building Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Ship_Building_Company

    SS Cason J. Callaway, built in 1952 in Lorain; SS Phillip R. Clarke, first of eight AAA-Class freighters, built in 1952 in Lorain; USS Seer (AM-112), launched in 1942 in Lorain; USS Key West (PF-17), launched in 1943 in Lorain; USS Alexandria (PF-18), launched in 1943 in Lorain; USS Huron (PF-19), launched in 1943 in Cleveland

  7. Callaway Gardens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callaway_Gardens

    The Ida Cason Callaway Foundation was established at that time. The gardens were named for the mother of founder Cason J. Callaway. [13] Robin Lake Beach and the Overlook Azalea Garden opened the following year in 1953. In 1955, the gardens were renamed as Ida Cason Callaway Gardens. Map of Ida Cason gardens

  8. United States textile workers' strike of 1934 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_textile...

    At least one striker was killed by National Guardsmen as the soldiers evicted families from mill-owned homes. Some consider the 1935 strike in LaGrange to be the last throes of the General Textile Strike. Ironically, President Roosevelt was a friend and frequent visitor of Cason Callaway, President of Callaway Mills at the time. [11]

  9. Callaway Plantation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callaway_Plantation

    The Callaway family of Georgia descends from Peter Callaway (1640–1715) an immigrant who came to the United States from England. Fuller Earle Callaway, and Cason Jewell Callaway (1894–1961) were part of this same family; and their branch of the family had migrated to west Georgia (to the cities of Columbus and LaGrange).