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Merchants and Miners Transportation Company

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(Redirected from Merchant & Miners Transportation Co.) Major Passengers and Shipping Company
Merchants and Miners Transportation Company
IndustryShipping, Passenger
Founded1852 (1852) in Baltimore, Maryland, United States
Defunct1952
FateClosed and sold off in 1952
Area servedEast Coast of the United States
SS Suwannee, Merchants and Miners, Queen of Sea ship in 1912

Merchants and Miners Transportation Company, often called M&M and Queen of Sea, was a major cargo and passenger shipping company founded in 1852 in Baltimore, Maryland. In 1852 is started with routes from Baltimore and Boston two wooden side wheelers ships. In 1859 M&M added two iron hulled steamers to its fleet. In 1866, post Civil War, M&M added routes to Providence, Rhode Island, Norfolk and Savannah, Georgia. In 1876 M&M purchased the Baltimore & Savannah Steamship Company add routes to Savannah, Jacksonville and Charleston. In 1907 the Winsor Line of Philadelphia's J. S. Winslow & Company of Portland, Maine was purchased, with seven steamships. The Winsor Line was founded in 1884 by J. S. Winslow. The Winsor Line first route was from Norfolk, Virginia to New England ports, supplying West Virginia coal. The Winsor Line sailing ship Addie M. Lawrence took ammunition to Europe during World War I. By World War II M&M had a fleet of 18 ships and add routes to Miami. With the outbreak of World War II the War Shipping Administration requisitioned Merchants and Miners Transportation Company fleet of ships for the war effort.

During World War II Merchants and Miners Transportation Company operated Merchant navy ships for the United States Shipping Board. During World War II Merchants and Miners Transportation Company was active with charter shipping with the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. Merchants and Miners Transportation Company operated Liberty ships for the merchant navy. The ship was run by its Merchants and Miners Transportation Company crew and the US Navy supplied United States Navy Armed Guards to man the deck guns and radio.

Post World War II, with an aging fleet of ships, the shareholders sold off the fleet of ships, did not buy any surplus warships and closed in 1948.

Jacob S. Winslow

Captain Jacob S. Winslow (1827-1902) founded the sailing ship company Winsor Line in 1861, he was born in Pembroke, Maine. He started as a seaman at age 14 and at 19 was the captain of his own ship. He had two shipyards that built over 100 ships, one in Portland, the Winslow Shipbuilding Company and one in Pembroke, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada. In 1919 Captain W.A. Magee joined Winslow Shipbuilding Company as VP and GM. Winslow was an abolitionist and politically active, he had the nickname of "barefoot". Winslow married Philena Morton (1832-1877) in 1853.

Ships

A Victory ship of World War II
Liberty ship of World War II

All ships owned

All ship owned by Merchants and Miners Transportation Company:

Ship Name Year Built
Alleghany (1) 1881
Alleghany (2) 1923
America 1863
Aries 1862
Benjamin Deford 1859
Berkshire (1) 1881
Berkshire (2) 1923
Blackstone 1868
Chatham (1) 1884
Chatham (2) 1926
Cretan 1882
Decatur H. Miller 1879
Dorchester (1) 1889
Dorchester (2) 1926
Essex 1890
Fairfax (1) 1891
Fairfax (2) 1926
Frederick
Fung Shuey 1864
George Appold 1864
Gloucester 1893
Grecian 1900
Howard 1895
Hudson 1874
Indian 1890
Irwin 1918
Itasca
Johns Hopkins 1873
Joseph Whitney 1854
Juniata 1897
Kent 1918
Kershaw 1899
Lexington (1) 1877
Lexington (2) 1920
McClellan
Merrimack (1)
Merrimack (2) 1920
Nantucket 1919
New Orleans 1872
Ontario 1904
Parthian 1887
Persian 1882
Powhatan 1894
Providence 1920
Quantico (1) 1882
Quantico (2) 1919
Roanoke 1919
S. R. Spalding 1859
Saragossa 1863
Somerset
State of Texas 1874
Suwannee 1911
Tuscan 1907
Upshur 1919
Volusia 1920
William Crane 1871
William Jenkins 1855
William Kennedy 1864
William Lawrence 1869
Wyoming 1919
York (1) 1918
York (2) 1920

See also

References

  1. ^ "House Flags of U.S. Shipping Companies: M". www.crwflags.com.
  2. ^ theshipslist.com Merchants and Miners Transportation Company
  3. metrojacksonville.com The Steamships of Jacksonville, July 3, 2012
  4. Railway and Marine News: (1919), Volume 17
  5. A Shipyard in Maine, by Ralph Snow and Captain Douglas Lee
  6. Preserved In Stone, Sea captains memorialized by life-like statues, By Earle G. Shettleworth Jr.,
  7. The Queen of the Sea Routes, E. A. Mueller, Steamship Historical Society of America, 1999
  8. USS S-51 (SS-162)
  9. "vicshipsP". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  10. "LibShipsM". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  11. "LibshipsB". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  12. "LibShipsN". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  13. "LibShipsL". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  14. ^ "LibShipsW". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  15. ^ "LibshipsA". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  16. "LibShipsE". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  17. "LibShipsD". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  18. "LibShipsT". www.mariners-l.co.uk.

External links

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See also, similar role:- Empire ship, Fort ship, Park ship, Ocean ship.

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