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Revision as of 15:24, 21 November 2017

Jeffboat
IndustryShipbuilding
PredecessorHoward Shipyard, Jeffersonville Boat Company
Founded1834 as Howard Shipyard in Jeffersonville, Indiana, U.S.A.
FounderJames Howard
DefunctMay 1998 Edit this on Wikidata
FateStill in operation
Headquarters
Jeffersonville, Indiana
Jeffboat
Jeffboat Marine Repair
Jeffboat Marine Repair - Kort nozzle repair

Jeffboat is a shipyard in Jeffersonville, Indiana founded by James Howard in 1834, a builder of steamboats. The company was owned by the family until it was sold leading up to World War II. More recently known as Jefferson Boat Company and shortened to Jeffboat, the company is the largest inland shipbuilder in the United States and the second-largest builder of barges.

Origin

Jeffboat was originally established as the Howard Shipyards in 1834[1] by James Howard when he started his first boat, the Hyperion. The Howard family controlled the company for 107 years, building over 3,000 ships.[2]

19th-century steamboats

The Joe Fowler is a former steamboat built at the Howard Shipyard in 1888. The sternwheeler was designed for packet service between Evansville, Indiana and Paducah, Kentucky. Joe Fowler was a United States Mail carrier, and after seven years of service, had logged over 327,000 miles and transported over 152,000 passengers without a fatal accident. In 1914, new owners replaced the steamer with high-pressure boilers desigined for the western rivers. After this time, Joe Fowler ran excursions around the Pittsburgh and Wheeling, West Virginia areas, before hosting a cruise down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers for Mardi Gras in New Orleans, and a long summer cruise from Pittsburgh to St. Paul, then back to Louisville. After 1917, it was sold, refitted to better serve excursions, and renamed Crescent.[3]

The Emily is a former sternwheeled steamboat built at the Howard Shipyard in 1891. The single-boiler steamer began in ferry service at Kenova, West Virginia, and later operated at Wheeling, West Virginia. Emily was sold three times, starting in 1902. The third buyer was was Henderson Ferry Company of Henderson, Kentucky, which renamed it the Dixie Bee Line. It burned in Henderson in 1926. After a rebuild, it ran as the ferry Ohio No. 2.[4] In the 1930s, it was renovated for packet service, and renamed Joe Curtis, and plied the waters near Memphis until it struck ice and sunk on January 25, 1940.[5]

20th century

The company faced persistent challenges during the Great Depression. The United States Navy bought the shipyards in 1942 and reorganized it as the Jeffersonville Boat & Machine Company.[6]

During World War II, it built 123 Landing Ship-Tanks (LSTs), 23 submarine chasers, and numerous other craft. Post-war, the shipyards built customized crafts, but specialized in barges and towboats. In 1957, the official name was changed to Jeffboat.

The Jeffboat yard built two nostalgic paddlewheelers during this period. In 1973, it completed Mississippi Queen steamboat, and in 1985, finished the General Jackson showboat.[2]

Production was stopped from 1986 to 1989.[6]

21st century

A wildcat strike shut down operations during part of 2001.[6]

The Jeffboat yard built a third nostalgic, paddlewheeler, the City of Evansville, which was put into service as the Casino Aztar riverboat casino.[2]

A union decertification petition was circulated in the fall of 2006. The petition required 30% of bargaining unit employees to sign to schedule a decertification election. The election was held on December 7, 2006, and the employees voted overwhelmingly (NLRB certified results 649 to 190) to retain Teamsters Local 89 as their union.[7]

As of 20 June 2015, the 68-acre Jeffboat shipyard is owned by American Commercial Lines Inc. (ACL), a company also based in Jeffersonville, Indiana. Mark Knoy is the CEO. In turn, Platinum Equity owns ACL, the largest inland shipbuilder in the United States, building both river barges and ocean barges.[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ "About Us | History". Jeffboat. Retrieved 9 April 2017.
  2. ^ a b c "The Howard Saga". Howard Steamboat Museum. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  3. ^ Frederick Way, Jr. (1994). Way's Packet Directory, 1848–1994. Athens, OH: Ohio University Press. p. 248.
  4. ^ Way (1994), p. 148.
  5. ^ Way (1994), p. 248.
  6. ^ a b c d Sam Stall (20 June 2015). "Barge builder embraces stability". Indiana Business Journal. Retrieved 9 November 2017.
  7. ^ David Mann (9 December 2017). "Union doesn't jump ship at Jeffboat". News and Tribune. Retrieved 9 November 2017.