Frying Pan came back to Pier 66 yesterday after several months at Caddell Dry dock, assisted by Dorothy J. I use this photo with permission from Renee Lutz Stanley.
It turns out that I also recently received a photo and spec sheet from barrel, formerly of the US Army Corps of Engineers. When I looked up where Liston, the vessel below, was built, I
learned that it was being built the same time as the lightship listed as Frying Pan Shoal. First, it makes me wonder whether a photo exists that shows them both on the ways. Second, I wondered if there was an error in shipyard site here about the initial name of the lightship, or if there was a time when the word “shoal” got dropped from the name of the vessel. Third, the shipyard site says that LV115 became a museum in Southport, NC. Click here and scroll through for a photo I took in Southport five years ago showing where some folks had wanted to build a museum with LV115 as the centerpiece, but it had never happened.
Some years ago, I used to spend a good amount of summer evening time at Frying Pan/Pier66. If you’ve never been, you should try it once. Here are some photos I took way back then. I must have many more somewhere. Pier 66 opens in early May, and I think it’s time to have a large gathering there once again. Let’s agree on a date and meet there, eh?
Many thanks to Renee and barrel for use of these photos.
But a closing shot, barrel writes: “USACE TUG LISTON became ARGUS of Salter Towing in 1970. #561597. At a later date became fishing vessel MR. J.C. now out of documentation.”
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April 3, 2016 at 12:01 pm
Harry T Scholer
Good photos. Spent 24 hrs aground on Frying Pan Shoals 1979 SS Guayama out of NY.
April 3, 2016 at 6:20 pm
nykeypad
Love the first photo, the brightness and contrast against its background.