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Pages in category "Ships built by Hyundai Heavy Industries Group" The following 114 pages are in this category, out of 114 total.
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]
The Hyundai Group started as a small South Korean construction firm in 1947, headed by its founder, Korean entrepreneur Chung Ju-yung. [8] Another widely known and closely related Korean company, the Hyundai Motor Company, was founded in 1967, five years prior to the founding of the Heavy Industry Group. The motor company was also founded by Chung.
HD Hyundai Mipo (abbreviated: HMD; [1] Korean: HD현대미포) is one of the largest shipbuilding companies with the world's largest share (50%) in PC (Product Carrier) segment. Since the 1980s, more than 10,000 ships were repaired and converted until 2005 and 400 newly ordered ships were delivered until 2009.
When Lee Dong-hee came to Ulsan to work for Hyundai Heavy Industries five years ago, shipyards in the city known as Hyundai Town operated day and night and workers could make triple South Korea's ...
Robert W. Pemberton papers, 1918-1999. 3.00 linear feet, at the University of Maryland Libraries, State of Maryland and Historical Collections. Working files of a National Vice President and Secretary-Treasurer of Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers of America who was associated with the Sparrows Point and Key Highway shipyards ...
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]
USS Webster moored pierside at Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard in March 1945. Bethlehem Key Highway Shipyard started as William Skinner & Sons in downtown Baltimore, Maryland in 1815. In 1899 the shipyard was renamed Skinner Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Company. Also at the site was Malster & Reanie started in 1870 by William T. Malster (1843–1907 ...