Peterson Builders Explained

Peterson Builders
Type:Privately held company
Industry:marine construction
Hq Location City:Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin

Peterson Builders Incorporated (PBI) was an American ship building company that constructed small to medium, naval and commercial ships and boats. The company mainly operated from a shipyard in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin. Spare parts and logistics were managed from Virginia Beach, Virginia and a ship repair operation in Ingleside, Texas made up part of PBI. [1]

Products

The company built submarine chasers, minesweepers, training craft, harbor security boats, patrol boats, landing crafts, tugboats, diving tenders, personnel boats, torpedo retrievers, salvage ships and sailboats. PBI built ships for the navies of the United States, the Netherlands, Burma, Iran, Ethiopia, Korea, Vietnam, Ecuador, Saudi Arabia, Philippines, the Dominican Republic, Thailand, Peru, Turkey, Greece and Liberia as well as the United States Army and National Science Foundation. The company was one of the United States Navy's prime contractors. They also constructed ferries and fireboats for local and state governments. In 1974, PBI produced a unique floating aquarium for the New England Aquarium.[2] PBI built a crane barge for the Army Corps of Engineers in 1995.

During the company's 65 years, the company delivered nearly 300 vessels that started with a fishing vessel. PBI was best known for the minesweepers constructed mostly during the 1950s and 1960s and in the late 1980s.[3] [4] While Peterson focused mainly on smaller vessels, they constructed several long roll-on/roll-off ships for the American Heavy Lift Shipping Company and salvage ships for the US Navy exceeding .

End of business

On June 16, 1995, second generation owner and CEO Ellsworth Peterson, announced that the company was for sale.[5] On September 25, 1995, Larry Maples announced his intention to purchase and operate the company under the name Poseidon Shipbuilding LLC. By November, however, Maple was reported unable to secure the necessary financing.[6] PBI closed down in January 1996. All that remains of the Sturgeon Bay shipyard is a historical marker in what is now Graham Park. A girl's little league baseball field at Graham Park is named after the company (PBI Field).[7]

Notes and References

  1. News: Shipbuilding in Sturgeon Bay. Schuller. Kris. 2016-08-31. WEAREGREENBAY. 2018-04-13. en-US.
  2. Web site: Peterson Builders Ship Building History.
  3. Web site: Military History of the Upper Great Lakes. Military History of the Upper Great Lakes, Michigan Tech. en-US. 2018-04-13.
  4. News: Mine-sweeper Hangup An 'Embarrassment'. tribunedigital-chicagotribune. June 5, 2022. en.
  5. News: Former officer buying Sturgeon Bay shipbuilding firm. By. Journal Times. 2018-04-13. en.
  6. Pocotte. Robert. January 1996. The Log. Journal of the Marine Historical Society of Detroit. 49-5.
  7. https://web.archive.org/web/20140505000129/https://www.sturgeonbaywi.org/departments/parks-and-recreation/park-facilities/ Park Facilities