SS Jadden
editHistory | |
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Name | SS Jadden |
Owner | list error: <br /> list (help) 1919: U.S. Shipping Board 1940: Atlantic Transportation Co. |
Route | list error: <br /> list (help) 1920: New York–Hamburg 1922: New York–Pacific and Far East |
Laid down | 1919 |
Completed | December 1919 |
In service | 1920–1929?, 1940 |
Out of service | 1929?–1940 |
Fate | Sunk by, April 1940 |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Design 1079 cargo ship |
Installed power | Steam turbine |
Propulsion | Single screw |
Speed | 11-12 knots |
SS Jadden was a cargo ship built as part of the United States Shipping Board's attempt to create an independent American merchant marine in the years following World War I.
Jadden was built in 1919 under a wartime contract with the USSB's Emergency Fleet Corporation. Through the 1920s, the ship remained active as a Shipping Board vessel, first in transatlantic and later in transpacific and Far Eastern service.
With the onset of the Great Depression, Jadden was laid up with no work through most of the 1930s. After the outbreak of World War II, she was sold to Canadian interests, renamed J. B. White, and earmarked for convoy service during the Battle of the Atlantic. J. B. White was sunk by a submarine in her first convoy voyage in 1941.
Development, design and construction
editDuring the First World War, the USSB through its subsidiary the Emergency Fleet Corporation signed contracts with shipyards across the United States for the building of hundreds of ships. With the abrupt end to the war in November 1918, the USSB was faced with the decision as to whether or not to cancel these wartime contracts. It eventually decided to honor many of them, believing that the time had come for the United States to establish its own independent merchant marine. Because of this, the USSB would end up financing the construction of more ships in 1919 than it had for the wartime emergency the year previously. Jadden would be one of these ships.
Jadden was laid down in 1919 by the Skinner & Eddy Corporation of Seattle, Washington under an Emergency Fleet Corporation contract. A Design 1079 freighter, she had a deadweight tonnage of 9,600.
References
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links
edit- [1] shanghai oct 21
- lots more stuff from oz, '28
- "Maritime Board Offers 8 Ships Of Laid-Up Fleet", Chicago Tribune, 1940-07-21.</ref> jadeen offered after laid up at n.o.
- "London Is Assured: Wite House Advises That $3,000,000,000 Orders Be Placed", The New York Times, 1940-12-19 (subscription required).</ref> Waterman Steamship Agency, Ltd., bidding on behalf of--Atlantic Transportation Company, Ltd., a Canadian firm, purchased the steamship Jadden, ...