SS Corvus (1919)

For other ships with the same name, see SS Corvus.
Sisiter ship Karaganda (ex. Circinus). Photo dated between 18 of March 1961 and 1st of October 1963.


West class cargo steamers as per U.S. classification United States[1] and Belarussia class cargo steamers as per USSR classification Soviet Union[2]
History
Name: Corvus[1]
Namesake:
  • Circinus (Nov 1919 - Dec 1929)
  • Flomar (1930 - 10 Jan 1945)[2][3]
  • Узбекистан (10 Jan 1945 - August 1945)
Owner:
Operator:
  • Nov 1919 – 1920: Green Star Line, United States USA.
  • 1920 – 1923: Nafra Steamship company, United States USA.
  • 1923 – Dec 1929: Planet Steamship company, United States USA.
  • Dec 1929 – 10 Jan 1945: Calmar Steamship company, United States USA.
  • 10 Jan 1945 – summer 1945: Far East Shipping Company, Soviet Union USSR.[2]
Port of registry:
  • Nov 1919 – 10 Jan 1945: United States USA ports.
  • 10 Jan 1945 – summer 1945: Vladivistok, Soviet Union USSR.[2]
Builder: list error: <br /> list (help)
Columbia River Shipbuilding Company, Portland, Oregon, United States USA.[2]
Official Number: 219269[3]
Launched: Delivered in November 1919.[3]
Renamed:
  • Circinus (1919-10 January 1945);[2]
  • Uzbekistan (Russian: Узбекистан) (10 January 1945 - summer 1945)[2]
Fate: scrapped in August 1945
General characteristics
Type: freighter, tweendecker
Tonnage:
  • 10,000 ton about [4]
  • GT = 5,748 tons [3]
Length: 423.8 ft (129.16 m).[2]
Beam: 54.0 ft (16.46 m).[2]
Height: 24.1 ft (7.35 m).[2]
Propulsion: 2800 hrp.[2] Single screw.
Speed: 10.5 knots (economic speed).[2]
Capacity: GRT=5551.[2]
Crew: 60 men [4]
Armament: machine guns 1 x 102 mm, 1 x 76.2 mm, 8 x 20 mm.[2]

Corvus was a US built merchant steam ship of USA companies from November 1919 to 10 of January 1945 and a merchant ship, renamed to Uzbekistan (Russian: Узбекистан), of the Soviet Union from 01 of January to summer 1945. Due to a collision on the 31 of May, 1945 she was scrapped in 1946.[2][3]

Ship's particulars.

Design 1013 ship.[2] Low free board.

Cargo gear: ship's cargo derricks equipped with steam motors.
Cargo holds: 4 cargo holds and tween decks.

History

This ship was built by Columbia River Shipbuilding Company, Portland, Oregon (USA), in 1919.[2]

SS Circinus (1919-1930).

During and just after World War I, the Shipping Board's sales campaigns urged Americans to buy ships for wealth and patriotism. Other ethnic groups set up shipping lines by appealing to group solidarity. So, Irish businessmen created the "Green Star Line".[5]

GREEN STAR WILL PLY ATLANTIC
Four Steamers Purchased Here to Sail From Baltimore.
Speculation as to the future field of operations of the Green Star Steamship company, which purchased four steel steamers in Portland and placed orders for the construction of five more, was ended last week by a formal announcement from the headquarters of the company in Baltimore, where the Green Star line has pur chased a large building to serve as a home for its shipping enterprises. The last of the steamers purchased by, the line here, the Circlnus, sailed from Astoria Wednesday with a full cargo of lumber for Melbourne and Adelaide, Australia. This cargo amounted to 4.086,103 feet, it is reported by Brown & McCabe, stevedores, who had charge of loading the vessel.
The three other steamers purchased here by the Green Star line are the Corvus, which went in ballast to Arica, Chile, to load nitrates for Europe; the Centaurus, which took a part cargo of lumber here and went to San Francisco to finish a general cargo for the west coast, and the Clauseus, which went from here to San Francisco in ballast to load beans for Hamburg.[6][7]

"Calmar Steamship Co." (1927-1976). A subsidiary of "Bethlehem Steel Corp.", serving the intercoastal trade. The company was established by Bethlehem in 1927 to complete with United States Steel's Isthmian Line. Bethlehem had previously operated the "Ore Steamship Corp." as a proprietary operation, but "Calmar" was only "half proprietary", carrying exclusively Bethlehem's steel westbound, but functioning as a common carrier on the return voyage to the East Coast by carrying lumber from a variety of shippers. In addition, "Calmar" collaborated with Moore-McCormack in these voyages.[9]

Isthmian Lines House Flag from 1910 to 1974.
  "CALMAR BUYS SHIPS.
The "Calmar Line" has purchased five freighters from the "Planet Steamship company", according to announcement from New York. This purchase increases the Calmar intercoastal fleet to eleven ships. The new craft are 880 tons register.
The vessels involved are all well known on this coast, consisting of the Circinius, Corvus, Clauseus, Centaurus and Eurana. They have run into local ports for several years under the Isthmian Line houseflag".[10][11]

The ship Corvus was renamed to Flomar in 1930.[2][3]

In the immediate post-Word War II period, Calmar purchased eight Liberty ships and modified them for the company's purposes.[9] Seems the ship Flomar (ex. Corvus) was counted as one of this eight Liberty ships, but she was not really Liberty class ships.

As Узбекистан (English: Uzbekistan) in Far East Shipping Company (1945 year).

The ship Uzbekistan passed for dismantling and scrapping in August 1945. Scrapped in 1946.[2][3]

Other ships with the names Corvus and Uzbekistan

References

  1. 1 2 Суда Украины. >> Одесское морское пароходство. >> Грузовые суда. >> Forum.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Тип "Белоруссия" (пр. 1013) - 25 единиц >> 24. УЗБЕКИСТАН (до 1930 г. "Corvus", до 1945 г. "Flomar").
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Columbia River Shipbuilding, Portland OR
  4. 1 2 The newspaper "Prescott Evening Courier", dated 21 of September 1927. Article: Freighter on rocks in So. Pacific.
  5. Judith Stein. "The World of Marcus Garvey: Race and Class in Modern Society. >> The Black Star Line.". p. 71.
  6. The Sunday "OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND," JANUARY 18, 1920. >> GREEN STAR WILL PLYS ATLANTIC
  7. Historic Oregan Nespaper >> The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, January 18, 1920, SECTION TWO, Image 46
  8. Marcus Garvey, Robert A. Hill, Universal Negro Improvement Association. Volume IV. "The Marcus Garvey and Universal Negro Improvement Association Papers.". p. 873.
  9. 1 2 Kenneth J. Blume (2012). "Historical Dictionary of the U.S. Maritime Industry. >> Calmar Steamship Co. (1927-1976).". The Scarecrow Press, Inc. Lanham, Toronto, Plymouth U.K. pp. 90, 91.
  10. "Calmar Buys Ships.". The newspaper "Oakland Tribune" in Oakland, California. 1929-12-13. p. 61.
  11. "Calmar Buys Ships". Oakland Tribune. 13 December 1929. p. 61. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  12. 1 2 Библиотека военно-морской литературы. >> К. Б. Стрельбицкий. Август 1945. Советско-японская воина на море - Цена Победы. >> ПРИЛОЖЕНИЕ 1.
  13. Митронов В.П. >> © Митронов В.П., 2000 >> ШТОРМОВЫЕ ГОДЫ.
  14. Kruiznik.ru >> Всё о круизах >> Теплоход "Узбекистан" (1893). >> Юрий Трифонов: "Товаропассажирский теплоход Каспийского государственного морского пароходства «Узбекистан» (1893 года постройки)".
  15. Водный Транспорт >> Omega.

To see also

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