by Guest » March 4, 2026, 9:05 pm
The C.H. McCullough, Jr. operated in the grain trade in 1974 and was laidup at Milwaukee. In early 1978, the McCullough was taken to AmShip South Chicago for survey and inspection and it was decided that the vessel wasn't worth the expense for repairs and conversion. At the same time, Bethlehem Steel was looking to dispose of both the Steelton and Lehigh which where rendered surplus to the fleet after the Lewis Wilson Foy entered service in June of that year. The asking price was $1 million for each vessel and Medusa Cement decided to purchase the Steelton, and renamed it Hull No. 3.
Over the Winter of 1979, it was planned by Medusa Cement to convert the Hull No.3 (ex. Steelton) into not just a cement carrier, but also install a self-unloading boom and bucket elevators so she could also carry stone and coal. The proposed conversion cost was $13 million. It seems there were a couple of plans for Hull No. 3 and it was eventually decided to have the vessel converted into a stationary cement storage facility at Sturgeon Bay over the Winter of 1982.
In 1979 due to strong demand for iron ore, Hull No. 3 was charted to Cleveland Cliffs, renamed Pioneer and put into the ore trade. It had been planned to operated the Pioneer in 1980 for Wisconsin Steel, but after a bitter labour dispute, Wisconsin Steel shutdown in March 1980, and Pioneer never operated in 1980.
Some links of interest:
https://www.maritimehistoryofthegreatla ... sp?ID=s003
https://www.maritimehistoryofthegreatla ... sp?ID=s004
The C.H. McCullough, Jr. operated in the grain trade in 1974 and was laidup at Milwaukee. In early 1978, the McCullough was taken to AmShip South Chicago for survey and inspection and it was decided that the vessel wasn't worth the expense for repairs and conversion. At the same time, Bethlehem Steel was looking to dispose of both the Steelton and Lehigh which where rendered surplus to the fleet after the Lewis Wilson Foy entered service in June of that year. The asking price was $1 million for each vessel and Medusa Cement decided to purchase the Steelton, and renamed it Hull No. 3.
Over the Winter of 1979, it was planned by Medusa Cement to convert the Hull No.3 (ex. Steelton) into not just a cement carrier, but also install a self-unloading boom and bucket elevators so she could also carry stone and coal. The proposed conversion cost was $13 million. It seems there were a couple of plans for Hull No. 3 and it was eventually decided to have the vessel converted into a stationary cement storage facility at Sturgeon Bay over the Winter of 1982.
In 1979 due to strong demand for iron ore, Hull No. 3 was charted to Cleveland Cliffs, renamed Pioneer and put into the ore trade. It had been planned to operated the Pioneer in 1980 for Wisconsin Steel, but after a bitter labour dispute, Wisconsin Steel shutdown in March 1980, and Pioneer never operated in 1980.
Some links of interest: https://www.maritimehistoryofthegreatlakes.ca/Documents/Scanner/11/06/default.asp?ID=s003
https://www.maritimehistoryofthegreatlakes.ca/Documents/Scanner/14/03/default.asp?ID=s004