by Guest » September 28, 2021, 3:00 pm
The George M. Humphrey and Sherwin were near sisters. The former was oil-fueled, while the later at the beginning of her career was coal-fired. The Humphrey had wider and staggered hatches (like on the Canadian 730 footers of the 1960s) so that there would be a reduction in maintenance costs of the hatch-coamings when unloading at orebridge crane equipped ore docks, such as Great Lakes Steel at Zug Island.
The George M. Humphrey didn't last long on the lakes because of the structural change in the steel industry brought on by the severe steel recession in the early 1980s along with increased competition.
Iron ore demand dropped by 60% by 1982 and with the commissioning of the George A. Stinson in October 1978 plus the closure of several of National Steel facilities, the Humphrey, along with the Leon Falk, Jr., and Paul H. Carnahan were redundant and hence sent off for dismantling.
I was in my late teens when all this happened, and it was disheartening to see excellent vessels with many decades of work ahead of them, sent to the breakers.
At least they had longer lives than some ULCC tankers that only sailed for 6 to 8 years before dismantling in Taiwan or South Korea.
The George M. Humphrey and Sherwin were near sisters. The former was oil-fueled, while the later at the beginning of her career was coal-fired. The Humphrey had wider and staggered hatches (like on the Canadian 730 footers of the 1960s) so that there would be a reduction in maintenance costs of the hatch-coamings when unloading at orebridge crane equipped ore docks, such as Great Lakes Steel at Zug Island.
The George M. Humphrey didn't last long on the lakes because of the structural change in the steel industry brought on by the severe steel recession in the early 1980s along with increased competition.
Iron ore demand dropped by 60% by 1982 and with the commissioning of the George A. Stinson in October 1978 plus the closure of several of National Steel facilities, the Humphrey, along with the Leon Falk, Jr., and Paul H. Carnahan were redundant and hence sent off for dismantling.
I was in my late teens when all this happened, and it was disheartening to see excellent vessels with many decades of work ahead of them, sent to the breakers.
At least they had longer lives than some ULCC tankers that only sailed for 6 to 8 years before dismantling in Taiwan or South Korea.