SS Gunston Hall

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NameGunston Hall
Yard number1
Laid downMay 30, 1918
History
NameGunston Hall
BuilderVirginia Shipbuilding Corporation
Yard number1
Laid downMay 30, 1918
LaunchedFebruary 27, 1919
FateScrapped, 1930
General characteristics
Class & typeDesign 1015 ship
TypeCargo ship
Tonnage9,455 dwt
Length402 ft 0 in (122.53 m)
Beam53 ft 0 in (16.15 m)
Draft32 ft 0 in (9.75 m)

SS Gunston Hall was a Design 1015 steel-hulled cargo ship built in 1919 by the Virginia Shipbuilding Corporation for the United States Shipping Board's Emergency Fleet Corporation. Initially intended for service in World War I, Gunston Hall was not completed until after the war's end. The ship was sold for scrap in 1930.

In 1918, the Virginia Shipbuilding Corporation received a government contract to construct 12 Design 1015 cargo ships for the Emergency Fleet Corporation. The keel of the first ship was laid on May 30, 1918, at the company's new shipyard in Alexandria, Virginia. President Woodrow Wilson was at the shipyard to drive the first rivet, saying, "I haven't got my union card, but I guess it's all right!"[1] First Lady Edith Wilson announced the first ship would be named Gunston Hall after George Mason's home of the same name.[1]

Gunston Hall was launched on February 27, 1919, and was christened by the wife of Virginia Shipbuilding Corporation general manager and vice president Benjamin W. Morse.[2]

Operational history

Legacy

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI