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MSCarolinian

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For the first all-welded ship assembled with tack and service bolts, see M/SFullagar.

M/SCarolinianprior to launch, Charleston Dry Dock & Machine Co.
History
United States
NameCarolinian
NamesakeDemonym of "Carolina"
OwnerM. L. Clark
OperatorThe Texas Company (Texaco)
RouteElizabeth City, N.C. and adjacent ports.
BuilderCharleston Dry Dock & Machine Company
Laid downAround July, 1929
LaunchedFebruary 14, 1930
CompletedMarch 9, 1930
Maiden voyageFrom Charleston, April, 1930
HomeportElizabeth City, North Carolina
NotesDesigned by R. F. Smith, naval architect.
General characteristics
TypeCoastal Tanker
Tonnage226 tons
Displacement440 tons (loaded)
Length120 ft.
Beam23 ft.
Draft8.5 ft. (loaded)
Depth10 ft.
Installed power(1x) Fairbanks-Morse 6 cyl. marine diesel engine, 10-inch cylinder dia., 12.5-inch stroke. 180 shp at 400 rpm.
PropulsionSingle Screw
Speed11.5 knots
Boats & landing
craft carried
1(?)
Capacity125,000 U.S. gallons
Crew4(?)
NotesCoastwise Trade, R.F. Smith-patented Lock Notch Welded System

TheM/SCarolinianwas the first entirely-weldedmotor shipbuilt in the United States, and the world's first welded vessel constructed without perforating the watertight members for assembly. She was completed in March of 1930 inCharleston, South Carolina.[1]Built byCharleston Dry Dock & Machine Company,she was a 226-ton tanker[2]designed for coastal shipping. Miles L. Clark is a known owner, withTexacoas the operator (notice the insignia on her stack prior to launch). The ship took about nine months to complete from the time her keel was laid.[3]As denoted by theprefixM/S,the vessel also had aninternal combustionmain engine.[4]Welded construction and internal combustion engines are staples in modern shipbuilding, allowing theCarolinianto be one of the first truly modern merchant ships.[5]

Richard F. Smith, the designer, devised the lock notch welded system for which Charleston Dry Dock & Machine was the sole licensee.[6]The design consisted of steel plates with notches that allowed easy fit-up and welding. Only nine workmen were required to assemble the hull. This design saved one-quarter of the cost, and 85,000-lbs of rivets. The welding required a mere 8,000-lbs of welding wire by comparison.[7]

During theshakedown cruiseon March 8, she made 11.5knotsheading out to sea, beyondFort Sumter.[3]The success of theCarolinian's maiden voyage the following month, and two flawless subsequent dry-dock inspections spurred an "estimate" for six orders of similar ships in 1931.[8][9]

On March 9, 1934, theCarolinianrescued four fishermen from asquallnearElizabeth City, North Carolina,the homeport of this vessel.[10]She was under the command of Captain E. R. Outlaw.[11]

M/SCaroliniangoing down theslipway.

The vessel was later purchased by Pine State By-Products ofSouth Portland, Maine.It was converted into a barge later in its career, and remained inthe Registerinto the early-1980s.[12]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"A History of Welding".WeldingHistory.org.Retrieved11 November2015.
  2. ^Colton, Tim."Charleston Shipbuilding, Charleston, SC".ShipBuildingHistory.com.Archived fromthe originalon 18 October 2015.Retrieved11 November2015.
  3. ^abSmith, Alexander Rogers (1930-01-01).The Port of New York, and Ship News.Port of New York publicity Company.
  4. ^Marine Review.Penton Publishing Company. 1931-01-01.
  5. ^"Science: Welded Steamer".TIME.Time Magazine.Retrieved11 November2015.
  6. ^Marine Review.Penton Publishing Company. 1931.
  7. ^Popular Science.Bonnier Corporation. June 1930.
  8. ^Technology Review.Association of Alumni and Alumnae of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. 1931-01-01.
  9. ^"Joseph Gideon Meekins (1892–1997) – Find A Grave Memorial".www.findagrave.com.Retrieved2015-11-12.
  10. ^Simpson, Bland (2007-09-06).The Inner Islands: A Carolinian's Sound Country Chronicle.Chapel Hill, NC: Univ of North Carolina Press. pp. 2–3.ISBN9780807876749.
  11. ^"The Spartanburg Herald".Newspaper.March 10, 1934.Retrieved11 November2015– via Google News.
  12. ^Guard, United States Coast (1976).Merchant Vessels of the United States...: (including Yachts).U.S. Government Printing Office.