SS Lewis Emery Jr. explained

The SS Lewis Emery Jr. was a World War II liberty ship built by the Alabama Drydock and Shipbuilding Company at their yard at Mobile, Alabama, and launched on 15 October 1943.

Namesake

Lewis Emery Jr. was the son of Lewis Sr. and Maria (Gilson) Emery; born at Cherry Creek Township, Chautauqua County, New York, 10 August 1839. He moved with parents to Michigan; attended common schools; pursued a career as a miller; moved to Pennsylvania and engaged in the oil business in Titusville; moved again to Bradford, Tioga County, 1875; member of the House of Representatives, 1879; state Senate, 1880–1888; became a wealthy oil man and industrialist, and 1906 Reform Republican candidate for Governor. He married at age 78, Eleta Card of New York City. He died in New York City, 19 November 1924, at age 102.[1]

Wartime service

She was operated by Merchants & Miners Transportation Company charter with the United States Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. The Lewis Emery Jr. departed New York Harbor on 18 November 1943 in position 61, the first ship in the sixth column, as part of a convoy to Scotland and Murmansk. The ship departed Loch Ewe at 1530 hrs. on 12 December for a 21-vessel convoy run to Russia, arriving 20 December. Six weeks were spent discharging cargo, taking on chrome ore for ballast and having slit plates repaired.

The ship departed Murmansk in convoy on 3 February 1944, arriving in Scotland on 11 February. It departed for the United States on 14 February in a convoy of 104 ships.[2] [3]

Post-war

Following the end of the war, the ship was sold in 1947 into Greek hands, and was operated by Victory Carriers, Incorporated, a Delaware corporation.

On 24 January 1955, shortly before noon, the Lewis Emery Jr. collided with another Liberty ship, the SS George E. Long, in a dense fog off Coos Bay Bar, Oregon. Both vessels were able to return to the harbor at Coos Bay, Oregon, under their own power. Damage was minor.[4]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lewis Emery, Jr. Legislativate Data Processing. Center.
  2. Schmitter, Richard C., diary aboard SS Lewis Emery, Jr., 1943–1944.
  3. Web site: Lewis Emery.
  4. United Press, "Freighters Collide", The San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Tuesday 25 January 1955, Volume LXI, Number 127, page 1.