翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Emergency response team (zoo)
・ Emergency Response Team Search and Rescue
・ Emergency Response Unit
・ Emergency Response Unit (Cyprus)
・ Emergency Response Unit (IFRC)
・ Emergency Response Unit (Norway)
・ Emergency Room (art)
・ Emergency room (disambiguation)
・ Emergency service
・ Emergency service response codes
・ Emergency Service Unit
・ Emergency Services Medal (Australia)
・ Emergency Severity Index
・ Emergency Sex and Other Desperate Measures
・ Emergency shelter
Emergency Shipbuilding program
・ Emergency Social Services
・ Emergency Squad (1974 film)
・ Emergency Squad (film)
・ Emergency Stand Alone
・ Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2014
・ Emergency Tariff of 1921
・ Emergency Task Force (TPS)
・ Emergency Telecommunications Cluster (ETC)
・ Emergency telephone
・ Emergency telephone number
・ Emergency Third Rail Power Trip
・ Emergency tourniquet
・ Emergency tow vessel
・ Emergency ultrasound


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Emergency Shipbuilding program : ウィキペディア英語版
Emergency Shipbuilding program

The Emergency Shipbuilding Program (late 1940-September 1945) was a United States government effort to quickly build simple cargo ships to carry troops and materiel to allies and foreign theatres during World War II. Run by the U.S. Maritime Commission, the program built almost 6,000 ships.
== Origins ==
By the fall of 1940, the British Merchant Navy (equivalent to the United States Merchant Marine) was being sunk in the Battle of the Atlantic by Germany's U-Boats faster than the United Kingdom could replace them. Led by Sir Arthur Salter, a group of men called the British Merchant Shipping Mission came to North America from the UK to enlist U.S. and Canadian shipbuilders to construct merchant ships. As all existing U.S. shipyards capable to constructing ocean-going merchant ships were already occupied by either work of building ships for the U.S. Navy or for the U.S. Maritime Commission's Long Range Shipbuilding Program which had begun three years previously to fulfill the goals set forth in the Merchant Marine Act of 1936, the Mission negotiated with a consortium of companies made up of the existing U.S. ship repairer Todd Shipyards which had its headquarters in New York City in league with the shipbuilder Bath Iron Works located in Bath, Maine. The new yard, called the Todd-Bath Iron Shipbuilding Corporation was to be an entirely new facility located on a piece of mostly vacant land located adjacent to Cummings Point in South Portland, Maine for the purpose of building thirty cargo ships. The Mission likewise, negotiating with a different consortium made up of Todd along with a group of heavy construction companies in the Western U.S. for the building of a new shipyard in the San Francisco Bay area for construction of thirty ships identical to those to be built in Maine. That yard was to be called the Todd-California Shipbuilding Corp. It was slated to be built on the tide flats of Richmond on the east side of the Bay. The construction companies that made up the second half of that corporation had no experience building ships but did have an extensive resume with the construction of highways, bridges and major public works projects such as the Hoover Dam, the Bonneville Dam and the massive Grand Coulee Dam. Known as the Six Companies, the members included two companies which were to become driving powers in wartime merchant shipbuilding during the ensuing years, and the men behind those companies were Henry J. Kaiser, who headed the Kaiser Companies, and John A. McCone, who led the Bechtel/McCone Company.
Contracts for both yards and the ships was signed on December 20, 1940. All the ships to be built were collectively called the ''Ocean'' class and to be of an existing British design for 5-hatch cargo ships of about 10,000 tons' load displacement and 11 knots' service speed using obsolete, but readily available, triple-expansion reciprocating steam engine and coal-fired Scotch-type fire tube boilers. The first of these vessels, the was launched at the Todd-California yard on October 15, 1941.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Emergency Shipbuilding program」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.