- Saint John Shipbuilding
Saint John Shipbuilding was a Canadian
shipbuilding company located in Saint John,New Brunswick . It operated from 1923-2003.History
Numerous shipyards were located on the shores of
Courtney Bay in the east end of Saint John Harbour where extensive mud flats dried at low tide.In 1918 it was announced that the St. John Drydock & Shipbuilding Co. was established as a subsidiary of the Canada Dredging Co., Ltd. of Midland,
Ontario and would construct the largestdrydock in the world.The new shipyard with its massive drydock opened in 1923 at a location on the eastern shore of Courtney Bay.
The facility was sold in the 1950s to legendary Saint John-based industrialist
K.C. Irving . The ensuing corporate restructuring saw the company renamed Saint John Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Ltd.. By the 1980s, it came to be known simply as Saint John Shipbuilding and was the flagship of a collection of eastern Canadian shipyards operated byIrving Shipbuilding .The shipyard was used to construct oil tankers for
Irving Oil and freighters and other cargo vessels forKent Lines , a shipping company owned by K.C. Irving. The facility also received a contract fromCanadian Pacific Railway in 1969 to build a passenger-vehicle ferry for itsBay of Fundy service from Saint John to Digby. Similarly, the government-owned ferry operatorCN Marine placed an order in the early 1980s for a passenger-vehicle ferry for itsNorthumberland Strait service toPrince Edward Island .Canadian Patrol Frigate program
By far the largest contract placed with the shipyard, and the largest single shipbuilding order ever issued in Canadian history, was for the Canadian Navy's "Halifax"-class frigate program, which saw 9 warships built at Saint John during the early 1990s. Flush with revenues during this contract, Irving Shipbuilding went on a buying spree of several bankrupt or failing shipyards in eastern Canada as part of a strategy to assist with spreading the work at its overcrowded shipyard in Saint John.
The
East Isle Shipyard in Georgetown,Prince Edward Island was purchased from the provincial government and used to construct modules for the "Halifax"-class frigates. Similarly, Irving Shipbuilding purchased shipyards in Shelburne and Pictou to support the "Halifax"-class project. Irving Shipbuilding also purchased theHalifax Shipyards after that shipyard was contracted in the mid-1990s to build the sclass|Kingston|coastal defence vessel by the winning consortium led bySNC Lavalin .However, changing global economic conditions for Canada's shipbuilding during the late 1990s saw Saint John Shipbuilding left with little work after the "Halifax"-class frigates were completed. Kent Lines ordered several container ships and Irving shipyards in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island were kept moderately busy with repair and small contract construction, but there were no large contracts on the horizon. The skilled workforce at Saint John Shipbuilding dwindled as welders and engineers and other trades and professionals left for work on other projects in Canada and abroad. The yard was mothballed in 2000 after it completed its last ship.
Finally on 27 June 2003, Irving Shipbuilding announced that it had signed an agreement with the federal government for $55 million in economic readjustment funding provided that Saint John Shipbuilding be closed permanently. The Irving Group of Companies announced the intention of permanently decommissioning Canada's largest shipyard and building a new wallboard manufacturing plant and other businesses on the site.
Ships built
* "Halifax" class frigates:
** warship|HMCS|Halifax|FFH 330, liy|1988
** warship|HMCS|Vancouver|FFH 331, liy|1989
** warship|HMCS|Toronto|FFH 333, liy|1991
** warship|HMCS|Montréal|FFH 336, liy|1992
** warship|HMCS|Fredericton|FFH 337, liy|1994
** warship|HMCS|Winnipeg|FFH 338, liy|1995
** warship|HMCS|Charlottetown|FFH 339, liy|1995
** warship|HMCS|St. John's|FFH 340, liy|1996
** warship|HMCS|Ottawa|FFH 341, liy|1996*
CN Marine ferries:
** MV "Abegweit", liy|1982*
Canadian Pacific Railway ferries:
** MV "Princess of Acadia", liy|1971External links
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B0DE5D91739E13ABC4952DFBE668383609EDE St. John to Have Biggest Drydock.]
* [http://www.cbc.ca/news/story/2000/04/27/ship000427.html Sad day for Saint John Shipbuilding]
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