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  2. Coastal trading vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_trading_vessel

    Coastal trading vessels, also known as coasters or skoots, [1] are shallow-hulled [citation needed] merchant ships used for transporting cargo along a coastline. Their shallow hulls mean that they can get through reefs where deeper-hulled seagoing ships usually cannot (26-28 feet), but as a result they are not optimized for the large waves ...

  3. List of ships of the United States Army - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ships_of_the...

    For reference above see the comprehensive list in Grover's print book U.S. Army Ships and Watercraft of World War II chapter "Coastal Freighters and Passenger Vessels" (pages 74–89) and the builders list "U.S. Army Coastal Freighters (F, FS) Built During WWII" at ShipbuildingHistory. The last only covers the acquired commercial hulls as ...

  4. List of shipwrecks of California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_of...

    "On the night of June 6, 1853, the clipper ship Carrier Pigeon ran aground 500 feet off shore of the central California coast. The area is now called Pigeon Point in her honor. The Carrier Pigeon was a state-of-the art, 19th Century clipper ship. She was 175 feet long with a narrow, 34 foot beam and rated at about 845 tons burden.

  5. Type N3 ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Type_N3_ship

    Type N3-S ships were a Maritime Commission small coastal cargo ship design to meet urgent World War II shipping needs, with the first of the 109 N3, both steam and diesel, type hulls delivered in December 1942. [i] A total of 109 N3 ship were built by: Penn-Jersey Shipbuilding Corp. of Camden, New Jersey.

  6. SS Catalina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Catalina

    The ferry was designated a Coastal Freighter and Passenger Vessel (FS) and assigned the Army number FS-99. [17] US Army FS-99 was used to transport troops from embarkation camps to the ocean transports throughout the San Francisco Port of Embarkation. [18] The ship's troop capacity was 2,500 with a civilian crew of 39 officers and men. [19]

  7. LA, Long Beach target 'ugly hazard' of containers left near ...

    www.aol.com/finance/la-long-beach-target-ugly...

    A sign blocks trucks from entering in Wilmington, near a key port in Long Beach. The port has been one of 2 backlogged Southern California hubs at the center of a worsening supply chain crisis.

  8. Maritime history of California - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maritime_history_of_California

    They then could turn right and sail south down the California coast utilizing the available winds and the south flowing (≈1 mi/hr (1.6 km/h)) California Current. The maps and charts were poor and the California coast was often shrouded in fog, so most journeys were well off shore to avoid the Farallon and California Channel Islands.

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