Goethals (dredge) explained
Goethals was an
ocean-going hopper dredge operated by the
United States Army Corps of Engineers named for
George Washington Goethals, who supervised much of the building of the Panama Canal.
The dredge's keel was laid at Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation's Fore River Plant, Quincy, Massachusetts, on 5 October 1936 with launch in August 1937 and delivery in December.[1] The dredge was operated under the direction of the Philadelphia District of the United States Army Corps of Engineers until its retirement in 1982.[2]
External links
- Dredge Goethals at Jacksonville, ca. March 1974.
- Goethals dredge angle view port, from Wesley E. Johnson, Dredge history interviewee.
- Dredge Goethals. no date, ca. 1957-63.
- Goethals dredge at Virginia Beach November 14, 1974
- Goethals dredge bottom looking fwd., Maryland Dry Dock Co. December 5, 1947.
- Goethals, underside stern, Maryland [Dry Dock] Co. December 5, 1947. Showing twin screws
Notes and References
- February 1938 . Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, Fore River Plant, Quincy, Massachusetts . Pacific Marine Review . 35 . 2 . 65 . 31 December 2018.
- Book: Grover, David . U.S. Army Ships and Watercraft of World War II . . 1987 . 0-87021-766-6 . 87015514 . 133.