"y-n - ' if- ,' 4" T'-i - " iM EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER, PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, MAY 30, 1919 " j" . ' . , - p MB ''" 'f'"!"" J '" 'V ' " " "".'T ; 1 i ' "J1"' '' ' ' ' . "'Mp ,,, v, , ,,t, ,,.,, r , -,, ..,t.ju. j . ijpjh.hlj..j u.m .. . , .. lijijji..j ii ii - u - - - -" '-"jr-'-JL! "' "' " - ' ' '""" """ """ nft''"" "'jj 'TyMTiyTfaTrty a V?yy'yiSWBt MBaBlyigl!C-TfA-V-im ' SS lHHIHHlHfliHtftaH f9lR rtff wFB tfirtpBBPWWWBgSTi-ffi l-M ,- 3B!i7-K--MM-M-ih,ih-;---x. ., -f iil HIHK IIHiBBIIbMiH''IIHfliaaSlySElE!3i3 'Prm ML ir'"-' A. j, IHIIHlMnCriiiilpiiiir&intliHJM KEEX8B&titKtKIQBciBIKMKBEi MWfjB tBBpV )9 iH WOG ISLAND SHIPYARD, MIRACLE OF INDUSTRY, AMAZING ACHIEVEMENT "JheJVIoral Effect of This Gigantic Undertaking on the Germans Hastened Coming of Peace, Says Former Fleet Corporation Head I i -GREATEST MARITIME MARVEL OF "THE AGES , . t ;,, .. hhuoc rnuiYi awftimr iu tveer. o,uuu men bujjt i" TJOG ISLAND, May SO, 1917 -tffftt hundred mid forty-six acres of fm XX baanu marshland, mostly submeraed. and nroduetive of nothina save pc&tilential mosquitoes. Hoa Island. Man SO. 1919 The world's greatest ihimiard. with twentv- - two ships completed and in service) thirty-four launched and fifty - tit various staoes of completion on as manti uhinwavs. A comnlete indtistrial city in itself, giving employment to 32,000 persons. 9 Came 'the world war and the cry for ships to save civilization. Congress rubbed Aladdin's magic lamp and genii in the form of American-engineering skill worked a miracle ori the shores of the Delaware. Up out of the marshes Hog Island was literally buildcd on piles. (A project of greater proportions than even the Panama Canal, Hog Island came into being through such master minds of business and engineer c55 ing genius as Edward N. Hurley," Charles M. Schwab, Charles Piez, Rear Admiral Francis Bowles, Howard Coonley, Frederick Holbrook, Matthew C. Brush and many others. xMr Hurley and Admiral Bowles belongs the greatest credit for the con ception of the shipyard and terminal ,as it is today. Expansion of the f - original plan into a $63,000,000 project was the result of the recom- , , mendation of Mr. Hurley and Admiral Bowles. I' 'Because of the moral effect this gigantic undertaking had on the Germans, I Hog Island was the greatest .single factor in bringing the war to a j close," says Mr. Schwab, former director general of the Emergency' Vt , Fleet Corporation. I '- - CHRONOLOGY OF A MODERN MIRACLE LAUNCHING OF FIRST SHIP AUGUST 5, 1918 -- September 13, 1917, contract signed for construction of shipyard and fifty ways' and 180 ships. September 20, 1917, actual construction of the yard begun. February 12, 1918, in spite of the hardest winter in local history, the yard ' was 50 per cent complete and first keel was laid. uguSt 5, 1918, the Quistconck, first 7500-ton ship built, launched .and ennstenea by Mrs. wooarow Wilson, wiie(or the President. Slay 30, 1919, total of thirty-four ship launched, twenty-two completed Ha ,j. and delivered to shipping board, seven receiving their- fittings and l"t fl 1L! i!l- ! ..1-1. 1 1 J !.. ail-J !!!. t-.-ll- Tj f ttmiiuug uiuis in web uusui; ttiiu miy ways uueu wiui nuns unaec rnnsr.micr.inn. . .. w' )ne hundred and forty-five ships under order (contracts for twenty-tbee ,'k more under suspension)'. v4iv feirty-five 8000-ton, fifteen-knot cargo and passenger ships. iiye hundred thousand tons of steel will be required. Ninety million rivets will be driven. LTijrty-eight steel mills are rolling the plates, iifghty-eight fabricating shops making the punchings and forming the ste,el. hW hundred and seventy boilers will be used. Steam turbines with an aggregate of 700,000 horsepower contracted for. Ofiginal estimated cost of 7600-ton ship, $1,100,000. Minimum fee to be paid American International Shipbuilding Corporation ""a for building each one, $41,000. Origiriarestimated cost, of 8000-ton ship, $1,650,000. Minimum fee for building same, $65,000. t '- " IN WORLD'S GREATEST SHIPYARD Fifty shipways erected and 'seven 1000-foot piers, used for outfitting the Hog Island ships, and a wharf 4000 feet long facilities which could be converted into the greatest ocean rail terminal in the world; 32,000 men employed on the average, with a weekly payroll of $1,000,000; 3500 concerns in forty states furnishing supplies for construction purposes; 250 carloads of material received a day; total expenditures permonth, $10,000,000; eighty miles of standard railroad track in the yard; eighteen miles of hard-surface roadway; 110,000,000 feet of lumber used for .construction purposes; 150,000 piles driven, fifty to seyenty feet in length; 120,000 feet of domestic water piping Installed; ij 00,000'feet of high-pressure piping installed; 73,000 feet of sewers installed; 3,000,000 feet of electric wire3 put underground; 20,000 shovels.-'used; 10,000 picks used; 165 automobile trucks; twenty loco .motives;: seventy locomotive cranes; 460 freight cars; 80,000 electric lamps purchased; 650 electric motors installed; 250 buildings erected, putting twcnty-f.ve acres under roof; training school established, with J60 instructors; Y. M. C. A., with auditorium seating 2000, built; bar- Vi, ractis constructed xor ouuu men onu ouu guards, mso a moaern noiei ana two large restaurants; lour lire ueimritnents, wmi sixteen motor' lv HTSHHHrinMBtt MMSWKm!-,k y:UkIAH:,WRMUH nSH M-:i!iWMM lvllsHHI!H:irn l'7l -M HHm y liiim HliiaHLf f 11 HnjHBi3 VW''HV;,taiB H9bqmHH9AT:1 !;....,. z r &i"iniHX';xii On February 12, 1918, the keel HBjHP&ii was laid. Six months on HHPpfj(iv August 5, the vessel was launched. ViHMMPvS'liJJjlkV "HERE ARE THE SHIPS!" HOG ISLAND'S ANSWER TO DOUBTING CRITICS In Spite of Most Adverse Conditions Forty-two Ves sels Will Have Been Delivered at End of the Biggest Shipyard's Second Year TWELVE CARGO STEAMSHIPS BUILT THERE HAVE TRAVELED TOTAL OF 85,507 MILES tt COMPARED with the performance of the best yards. Hog ' Island shows up splendidly, and great credit is due men and management. Hog Island ha3 suffered only when judged by our needs during the war. "At the end of its first two years, in September, Hog Island will have to its credit the construction of a fifty-way yard, delivery of forty-two vessels, the creation of a highly efficient organization accomplished in spite of the most adverse condi tions. Charles Piez. rsa 'M "It never can be done!" exclaimed the whole shipping world, aghast at the magnitude of the Hog Island project. Hog Island sat tight and carried on. Arctic cold and its snowstorms, nor tropic heat and its mosquito raids, detracted not one whit from the mighty machine that is Hog Island. Night and day the planks were laid in the bridge of ships. Twenty months have passed, and now, thundering out of Hog Island's silence, comes the answer: "Here are the ships!" Civilization's sky was clouded with the menace of disaster to the Allied cause in the war, when in March, 1918, the German armies swept like a tidal wave toward Paris and a decision for might over right None knew then that, "with the help of God and a few marines" and no less effective doughboys the tide was to be checked and the tables turned. The Allied capitals were frantic. Could America get her men and muni- -tions to the front in time? Then it was that the War Department made its urgent appeal: "Damn the cost! Build the ships!" CALL THEM "THE PERFECT SHIPS" Hog Island builded, and builded well. Its ships already have plied the seven seas, and one of them was among the first flying an Allied flag to enter a German port after the signing of the armistice. Seamen who have sailed everything from schooner to giant passenger liner call them "the perfect ships" of their class. Their performances speak best for themselves. Here are the logs ,p some of them: '" nda Compnny Keel laid, April 29, 101S; launched. 'NAf toKeY" 22 ; trial trip, March 1, 1010 fueltrered. March 4; sailed March 13 from' Philadelphia with 300,000'bushels of rj'e; towed into Plymouth, Ens., after being: disabled in hurricane, March 2S (ship and cargo claimed by steamship Kcndagcn Castle for salvage; cargo discharged, and ship put into drydock April 25. Total mile age, 3000. , f'rr i trucks; thoroughly equipped hospital and ambulance service; street railwaypnd steam railroad stations erected; cost of shipyard, including terminal) $63,000,000, Quistconck's Log On February 12, 1918, the keel was laid. Six months later, on August 5, the vessel "was launched. She made her dock trial on Novem ber 3, and four days later was de livered, with the highest rating that the American Registry Bureau and the British Lloyd's can give, The Quistconck, under charter for J. H. Steele & Co., of New York, left Hog Island December 10, 1918, for Norfolk, Va., where she took on a full cargo of coal, and.on January 2 cleared for Cristobal, arriving there January 10-. (Speed during trip, 12.63 knots.) Leaving Colon, Panama, in bal last on January 18, the. Quistconck arrived at New Orleans January 23. (Speed, 11.4 knots,) On February More than 100,000 persons witnessed the 'launching of the QuU'tconck, Hog Island's first felilp. which was1 christened by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, wife of the President. On the launching stand In the foreground are President Jand Sirs'. Wilson- and Rear Admiral Carey T. Grayson, the President's plijsiclan and naval aide, watching the vessel take Iter plunge Into (lie Delaware. ,-Ih the .6val Edward N. Hurley c chairman of the United States shipping board Keel to Cargo 14. she cleared New Orleans for Genoa, Italy, with a cargo of gen eral merchandise of 6080 tons, arriv ing March 8. April 5, completed discharge of cargo, took on 250 tons of fuel and sailed, for New Orleans in ballast, arriving April 25; May 1, cleared for Gibraltar; sailed from Norfolk for Gibraltar; May 9, 110 miles east of Cape. Henry at noon. Total mileage to date, 14,56.4, , It is significant of Hog Island's rate of ship production in that its first ship was delivered within ten months after the keel was laid, while British shipyards today, once rated the best builders, will not under take to deliver in less than from eighteen months to two years after the receipt of' a contract. Saccarappa, operated by BuII-Insu-lar Line Keel laid .March 20. 1918; launched August 24; trial trip Decem ber 22; delivered December 30: sailed for New York January 18: left New York for Newport News February 2; sailed for Hio de Janeiro with 7071 tons of coal February 7; arrived Rio do Janeiro March 1 ; arrived Havre Roads April 22. Total mileage. 0500. Sac City, operated by National Ship ping Company Keel laid March 11, 1918; launched September 30; trial trip December 29; delivered January 4 ; arrived at Norfolk January 20 ; ar rived at Montevideo March 22; hailed for Rio de Janeiro for fuel March 28; arrived nt Bnrcclona May 4. Total mileage 11,783. Sacandaga, operated by Wessell Duvall Company Keel laid March 20, 1018; launched October 20; delivered January 22; sailed for New York Jan uary 26 ; arrived at Talacahuano, Chile, March 16; arrived at Colon April 4; arrived at Galveston April 14 ; left for New Orleans April 15 and nrrived April 10; arrived at La Palais, France, May 7; arrived nt Falmouth May 14. Total mileage, 12.5S2. Saguache, operated by New York and South American Line Keel laid, April 8, 1018; launched, November 22; trial trip, January 20; delivered, Juuuary 20; arrived at Norfolk, February 17; arrived at Antofagasta, March 0; ar rived at Colou (return trip) March 28, leaving same night for Unlve&ton ; arrived at (Jalveston April 3; arrived at Liverpool April 30. Total mileage, SS70. Prusa, operated by Moore-McCor-mick Company Keel laid, April 3, 1018; launched, December 23; trial trip, February 2.-'. 1910; delivered, February 27; sailed from Philadelphia with meat enrgo for Uothenberg, Swe den, March 13; struck submerged object in the Atlantic, and arrived at Bergen, March 31 ; arrived (iothenberg, April 14: drydocked April 21, and surveyed by Llojds, who advised temporary re pairs; nrrived nt New York May 18, Total mileage, 7S0O. Saplnero, operated by Frunce-Cau- Sagaporack, operated by Nafra Line Keel laid, April 1, 1018; launched, December 20: trial trip. March 20, 1010; delivered, March 24; sailed from Philadelphia with general cargo for Marseilles, April 30; diverted and ar rived at Antwerp, May 15. Total mile age, 0050. Saucon, operated by International Mercantile Marine Company Keel laid, June 0, 1018; launched, December 31; trial trip, March 30, 1010; 'de livered, April 3; arrived at Gib raltar, bound to Constantinople, May 10. Total mileage, 3200. Saugerties, operated by Independent Steamship Company Keel laid May 0, 101S; launched, January IS, 1019; trial trip, April 7; delivered, April 11; sailed for New York, April 12 ; cleared from New York for Singapore, with machinery cargo, May 10. Total mile age, 300. Saluda, operated by American Line, I. M. M. Keel laid, April 22; launched, December 31; trial trip, April 14; delivered, April 18: sailed from Philadelphia, with cargo for Liv erpool, April 27; arrived, May 9. Total mileage, 3355. Saco, operated by Earn Line Steam ship Company Keel laldt March 29, 1018; launcHed, December 30; trial trip. April 15, 1010; delivered. April 10; arrived at Falmouth, May 13; ar rived at Danzig, May 18. Total mile age. 4407. Saliale, operated by Nafra Line Keel laid, April 15, 1018; launched, December 27; trial trip, April 23, 1010; delivered, April 30; sailed from Philadelphia for Falmouth with grain cargo, May 23. Total mileage, 3207. TTT T MASTER MINDS WHOSE GENIUS PLANNED AND EXECUTED THE HOG ISLAND PROJECT I; . i. i u1ifctUUUIJU,1MII1MM-TM ,nMHl-. i&j ' J ' ' ' B Pl!Ii!PP J fH l EfPl ' -BBH B!: jp HHP mssLiiK'iLiiiiMfiitSiiKK' ';,--B--lBfcM'JBBBW-Rv BHB iflBH M HI-9-H--l B-WllBKHUMr''BBSS tmBBBSBBKBmmBSSSSmi naHtMlHPillHPl -H H 9&ilHr Hli&flKiife M ttV?tt' tWWI V-Hbtt L?P!?iHHHi-Hm-'TJ H9I 'HHflHlHB8aiHBrwFHH-HH lH' fv-T- '1H 'Cp& tli '' ' -zwfy4 & tiBInfe -----Bl--------n-. $'KBBH.H.BwmK..ittmK.M -JQIfe. - riMa V 3 re flPt - '! IF' Ji V-BEBBHESHHH-VT''- "V"" 'JHBBHHlBn 41 HBHHiiiPFiff P JiHBBiH iHiKMX- " jA r 'tt V'Vr T -, .rf,l HIHBk? jHDiHlHlBl'wr 'BUHH-r E-HBMHBhi iPHHflH ffb? ni.m MHH f.-r VHH . SB HHIHI!NI L 1HIH iHflHIHHCH5VHBiPMflEHHI ? HHIH tf "s.l IV w ww EflCr rP HHHHHHHHhKJHHHHHHH B HHHIHIvIH 4fex ilBlHlifc ' BlpHlHHDBKdBIIi bbb 4. r1 lrvJHrs HrJHHHlH-B9ll L''fM i ir: L-v::.lP'P' -HI-MWBilHi-BWaB- - r'm Y . y?-,r - 7 r :1 m V -AtiPilB PBBH-B.:ilB-itfflW-HB-Brf MIJ-WMWlBI $S9KmKE '-s v,v J l L ?v l!wtWihVTreierick"!HoYbM(W uJied: 5ca Mmjral Francis. T, Bowles, former assistant: general manageV, of, Eroncy-'ttWt; '- ' -. M fy if Corpoi.tlM, directly i c5 of Uo Ilnd As tlwgovernmntUBdtVho collhorted withMr.jHUrley;in the6ncptijnf, the. expands project;- C9mtinMi;jBmeB L. -Ackerson, V, S.-N. present head of tbrconstruction division of.th? fleof coru otLrlePforiert3r Jt J f CTtfLmffilJKVTO TgTrftt)T mttWKl tf ant,for9Mm Ca-1 M. wb, form" iftnerafHowiUCKMaefonn'S PM Phe pt adttiuistrdtipii; Matthew arajhr(ia circle), jjrdwftpf -ti ctmMt VUHa. A ,