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Dutch Surprise 2
April 6, 2011 in globalization, Mississippi watershed, Netherlands, photos, short sea shipping, technology | Tags: European Inland Navigation Association, Ingalls Shipbuilding, Marshall Plan, sugar beets | 2 comments
http://longisland.craigslist.org/boa/2305694361.html
This blog has featured Dutch-built vessels permanently in North America before, like Livet (scroll thru a bit) and Golden Re’al. There’s also a set of posts in September 2009 about a traditional Dutch fleet transported to the these waters for a long month’s touristic sailing; scroll through the “archives” on the lower leftside here to September 2009 and you’ll find a bunch, and here and here are fotos of this fleet riding Flinterborg back to Old Netherlandish waters.
Thanks to Rene Keuvelaar, here are more fotos of these American-built vessels that to this day still traffic European inland waterways, whether earning income carrying freight or spending savings gallivanting about. Raised but unpainted lettering on the two closest hulls identify them as Muscadet (today Cordi Jan of Arnhem) and Corbieres (scrapped (?) in 1995), hulls # 275 and 270, respectively.
Let me digress here. Hic et Ubique was built in 1970 in the Czech Republic. This foto was taken east of Rotterdam in 2005. Can you guess
the cargo? Answer follows. Today Hic et Ubique goes by Vagrant.
Geran was Ingalls hull #276 (1951), originally known as Pomerol. In 2005, she was shortened
by about 45′ and converted from vrachtschip (freighter)
Her original loa was just shy of 208 feet.
Ontario was hull #277, originally called
That cargo was sugar beets. Although the US may still be the world’s leading producer, I’m not familiar with it.
Top foto from Vereniging “de Binnenvaart” (European Inland Navigation Assocation). All other fotos by Rene Kevelaar, used with permission.
I’d love to hear from someone familiar with Decatur, Alabama. Again, click here for some info on Ingalls Shipbuilding. I wonder if the bunker tanker Manhasset (See 1958 here.) I used to see in the sixth boro is the one built at Ingalls. I know I had a foto of Manhasset, but can’t locate it. Here’s Tom Turner’s. Also, anyone know what has become of Manhasset and Mostank?
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