- Richmond Shipyards
Infobox_nrhp | name =Richmond Shipyard Number Three
nrhp_type =
caption =
location=Richmond, California
lat_degrees = 37 | lat_minutes = 54 | lat_seconds = 22.3 | lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 122 | long_minutes = 21 | long_seconds = 52.79 | long_direction = W
area =
built =1940
added =April 28 ,2000
governing_body = Local
refnum=00000364 cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2006-03-15|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service] The four Richmond Shipyards, located in the city ofRichmond, California ,United States , were run byPermanente Metals and part of theKaiser Shipyards , and were responsible for constructing more ships duringWorld War II than any othershipyard in the country. The shipyards are part of theRosie the Riveter/World War II Home Front National Historical Park . The park'sRosie the Riveter memorial is located on the former grounds of Shipyard #2. Shipyard #3 is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places .Henry J. Kaiser had been buildingcargo ship s for theU.S. Maritime Commission in the 1930s. When orders for ships from theBritish government , already at war withNazi Germany , allowed for growth, Kaiser established his first Richmond shipyard, beginning in December, 1940.More than 747 vessels were built here in the four Richmond Kaiser Shipyards during
World War II ; a feat not equaled anywhere else in the world, before or since.cite web | url=http://www.cr.nps.gov/nr/travel/wwIIbayarea/ric.htm | title=Richmond Shipyard Number Three | work=World War II in the San Francisco Bay Area | publisher=National Park Service | accessdate=2007-04-02] These ships were completed in two-thirds the amount of time and at a quarter of the cost of the average of all other shipyards. TheLiberty ship SS "Robert E. Peary" was assembled in less than five days as a part of a special competition among shipyards; but by 1944 it was only taking the astonishingly brief time of a little over two weeks to assemble a Liberty ship by standard methods.Henry Kaiser and his workers applied mass
assembly line techniques to building the ships. This production line technique, bringing pre-made parts together, moving them into place with huge cranes and having them welded together by "Rosies" (actually "Wendy the Welders" here in the shipyards), allowed unskilled laborers to do repetitive jobs requiring relatively little training to accomplish. This not only increased the speed of construction, but also the size of the mobilization effort, and in doing so, opened up jobs to women and minorities.During WWII, thousands of men and women worked in this area every day, in very hazardous jobs. Actively recruited by Kaiser, they came from all over the United States to swell the population of Richmond from 20,000 to over 100,000 in three short years. For many of them, this was the first time they worked and earned money. It was the first time they were faced with the problems of being working parents -- finding
day care and housing. Women and minorities entered the workforce in areas previously denied to them. However, they still faced unequal pay, were shunted off into "auxiliary" unions and still had to deal with day-to-day prejudice and inequities. [Arroyo, Cuahutémoc (Faculty Mentor: ProfessorLeon F. Litwack ). [http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/links/misclink/shipyards.htm "Jim Crow" Shipyards] : Black Labor and Race Relations in East Bay Shipyards During World War II. The Berkeley McNair Journal, TheUC Berkeley [http://www-mcnair.berkeley.edu/McNair.html McNair Scholars Program] . - Accessed from [http://www.ferris.edu/jimcrow/ Jim Crow Museum] of Racist Memorabilia atFerris State University onAugust 24 2007 ] During the war, there werelabor strike s and sit-down work stoppages that eventually led to better conditions.Many workers commuted from other parts of the Bay Area to the Kaiser Shipyards in Richmond by way of the
Shipyard Railway , a temporary wartime railway which ran from a depot inEmeryville, California to a loop line serving all four of the shipyards, and utilizing cars of the localKey System as well as theNew York City subway .The shipyard is currently closed to the public while safe methods of public access are developed. The SS "Red Oak Victory" is docked nearby.
References
External links
* [http://www.calisphere.universityofcalifornia.edu/browse/azBrowse/Richmond+Shipyards Images and oral history transcripts describing the early days of the Richmond Shipyards] , via Calisphere, California Digital Library.
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