United States Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation

A World War I poster for the US Shipping Board, ca. 1917-1918.

The Emergency Fleet Corporation (EFC) was established by the United States Shipping Board, sometimes referred to as the War Shipping Board, on 16 April 1917[1] pursuant to the Shipping Act (39 Stat. 729) to acquire, maintain, and operate merchant ships to meet national defense, foreign and domestic commerce during World War I. The EFC was renamed the U.S. Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation by act of Congress 11 February 1927 (44 Stat. 1083). The Board and Corporation were abolished 26 October 1936 and their functions transferred to the U.S. Maritime Commission by the Merchant Marine Act (49 Stat. 1985) of 29 June 1936.[2]

The Shipping Board had been established while the United States was at peace with intent to restore the nation's Merchant Marine. That changed with war. In the words of Edward N. Hurley, Chairman of the Board:

When the United States declared war against Germany the whole purpose and policy of the Shipping Board and the Fleet Corporation suffered a radical change overnight. From a body established to restore the American Merchant Marine to its old glory, the Shipping Board was transformed into a military agency to bridge the ocean with ships and to maintain the line of communication between America and Europe. Conceived as an instrumentality (sic) of peace, the Board became an instrumentality (sic) of war. Unlike other military agencies—the Army and Navy—it began with nothing—no ships, no officers, no crews, no organizations.[1]

Ten days after the declaration of war the Emergency Fleet Corporation was established in response to those wartime requirements.

Origin

On 2 April 1917 President Woodrow Wilson cited Germany's refusal to suspend unrestricted submarine warfare in the North Atlantic and the Mediterranean[3] in his request for a declaration of war on Germany, and Congress concurred on 2 April 1917. In that April 1,250,000 deadweight tons were sunk, with 122 ocean-going ships sunk in the first two weeks after that declaration of war.[1] British losses in that period equaled an average round-trip voyage loss of 25%. Allied losses before U.S. entry had already been that heavy that construction in yards outside the U.S. was unable to sustain current losses.

Congress had failed to create a shipping board to manage U.S. maritime affairs. As early as 4 September 1914 bills were introduced, only to fail. President Wilson repeatedly requested enactment of a shipping act until Representative Joshua W. Alexander introduced House Bill 15455 that became law as the Shipping Act of 1916 (39 Stat. L. 728). That act established the United States Shipping Board headed by five commissioners appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate. That board had complete control over American ships and shipping. Most importantly with respect to the Emergency Fleet Corporation was its power to form corporations for acquiring, maintaining and operating merchant vessels under certain conditions. Ten days after declaration of war, on 16 April 1917, the Board created the Emergency Fleet Corporation (EFC) in the District of Columbia with a capital stock of $50,000,000.[1]

Implementation

The Shipping Act was a peacetime act not fully anticipating wartime conditions. On 11 July 1917 the President by Executive Order delegated to the EFC all his wartime power and authority to acquire existing vessels and to construct and operate all vessels acquired or to be acquired by the United States. The EFC operated largely under these powers rather than the basic peacetime act for the duration of the war. While the Act had envisioned the corporations with the United States as simply the majority stockholder the wartime reality was that it was the sole stockholder. Legally the EFC could not actually operate the ships unless no private companies could be found to do so. In reality wartime conditions made tighter government control imperative. As a corporation, even with total government ownership, the EFC did not have the powers of the Board, thus the Shipping Board usually assumed and then transferred ships and facilities to the EFC which was subject to federal and state laws governing corporations.[1]

Early controversy

A fundamental flaw led to early controversy. The Chairman of the Shipping Board, William Denman, was also head of the EFC with only nominal powers over the EFC with the critical exception of the power to sign contracts. The EFC General Manager, Major General Goethals, had all other effective powers without that one crucial power necessary to implement the Corporation's policies. Popular conception of what became the Denman-Goethals controversy involved William Denman's support of wooden ship construction and Major-General Goethals' opposition. That Goethals could not sign contracts while expected to build ships and Denman as President of the Fleet Corporation who could sign contracts had no control over the actual operation of the EFC resulted in the highly public resignation of both men.[1]

Reconstitution of the Board

"Make Every Minute Count For Pershing", United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, ca. 1917–1919

The President accepted the resignations of both Denman and Goethals and appointed Edward N. Hurley Chairman of the Shipping Board 27 July 1917. Rear Admiral Washington L. Capps replaced Goethals as General Manager of the EFC.[1] Capps resigned due to ill health and was succeeded for two weeks by Rear-Admiral Frederick R. Harris who resigned over an issue of authority. EFC's Vice-President, Charles Piez then established stability by recommending that the General Manager post be abolished and that Charles M. Schwab be appointed in the new post of Director General. Schwab was thus able to give total attention to EFC matters, whereas Piez had held both posts of Vice-President and General Manager.[4]

Actions

On entry into the war there were fewer than 50,000 shipyard workers in U.S. yards and production could not possibly meet wartime demands and attrition. Under the delegated Presidential authority the Shipping Board, through Admiral Capps, General Manager of the Fleet Corporation, requisitioned the shipyards and all steel ships over 2500 deadweight tons then under construction. A primary goal was to focus shipyard work on U.S. requirements rather than commercial needs of neutral and even Allied customers. Another goal was to standardize production. The shipyards protested without success. As many of the 431 ships involved were only contracts or still under construction the EFC assumed responsibility for their completion. There were international consequences, one being the fact that Great Britain had a large number of those ships also planned for war service. In the end the ships were requisitioned and the British were satisfied that they would be used in the war effort.[1]

Ships of enemy states interned in the U.S. were seized and some overseas were acquired. U.S. ships in service were then commandeered with their owners becoming operators for the EFC. Even Great Lakes shipping was pressed into oceanic service.

With available ships and yards commandeered the EFC began its expansion of shipbuilding capacity. The early concept of managing the building of ships in existing yards was quickly shown to be inadequate as they were completing the hulls commandeered as contracted or in progress or with Navy orders. Entirely new shipyards had to be established with the EFC as sponsor. Four government-financed yards accounted for 25% of the new steel fabricated ships built with 94 ways.

In full operation these yards had more annual tonnage capacity than found in any country before 1918.[1]

Western World in 1922

The shipbuilding program was concluded with the 9 May 1922 delivery of the ship completed and delivered as Western World, launched as Nutmeg State 17 September 1921, by Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation at Sparrows Point, Maryland.[8]

Ships built under the EFC were common in commerce after the war even while many were laid up. Twenty years later in the crisis of shipping before the U.S. began wartime production, to some extent using the USSB/EFC model again, the British need for hulls brought many of the old laid up ships now under Maritime Commission control into that war.[9]

Controversies

Emergency Fleet Corporation Design 1001, Ferris type, photo of the USS Banago (ID # 3810).
Incomplete merchant ships laid up at Seattle, Washington, circa early to mid-1919, probably the storage facility at Seattle used by the Northern Pacific Division of the Emergency Fleet Corporation for wooden cargo ships it accepted without engines after the World War I Armistice. Naval History & Heritage Command, Online Library of Selected Images, Photo #: NH 43179.

The EFC was a subject of controversy. The armistice took effect before the yards, Hog Island being by far the largest and most publicized, reached full production and the expense was very large. The wooden ship program in particular resulted in a large number of hulls with no useful purpose that were then a disposal problem. Gearing up for wartime production produced a glut of ships and a market problem with peace. In retrospect some considered the entire effort waste.[10] There were allegations of fraud, with one involving charges and civil suits against Charles W. Morse.

The USSB and EFC are used by both those of the opinion government is too close to industry in collaboration for war projects[11] and those with the view government should stay out of such matters and a source of waste even in national emergency.[12]

Controversial wooden ships

A notable, possibly notorious, project was the wooden, ocean-going steamer. William Denman had been an early proponent of these ships, as the nation had abundant lumber supplies, and there was doubt whether domestic steel production could cope with the demands of shipbuilding in conjunction with other wartime pressures. Both British and U.S. officials considered the ships worthwhile if the ships could make a single, successful one-way voyage to the war.[1] Still, the wooden ship program was so controversial that Edward N. Hurley, Chairman United States Shipping Board, had to defend them[13] from "criticism and ridicule" with "I am convinced that we were amply justified in building the wood ships, although no one wished to assume the responsibility for them because of the criticism and ridicule which they had received."[14]

Some of the several designs are commonly named Ferris Designs after Theodore E. Ferris, the official naval architect for the USSB. Ferris designed both steel and wood ships for mass production. One design, 1001, was for wooden 3,500 ton steam freighters with dimensions of approximately 281 X 46 X 23.5 feet (7.2 m) built largely of precut, numbered components of pine or Douglas fir.[15]

There were other wooden ship designs, many unique to regional yards, and a large wooden fleet was built, one that has been called by some the "white elephant" fleet.[16] Some were burned in accidents; however others were burned after the war to recover valuable metals. For example, in 1922 Western Marine and Salvage Company (WM&SC) of Alexandria, Virginia bought 233 such ships for $750,000 so that the ships could have machinery removed in Alexandria and then towed back to the anchorage on the Potomac and burned to regain remaining scrap. That activity brought protests from watermen and the operation was moved to in 1924 to 566 acres (2.29 km2) of company owned farmland surrounding Mallows Bay in Maryland.[15]

See also

Notes

  1. See Shipbuilding History, Merchant Shipbuilding Corp., Chester PA
  2. "Hog Island Shipyard, Philadelphia PA". American International Shipbuilding Corp., Philadelphia PA. Now the site of Philadelphia International Airport and the home of the notable “Hog Islander” ships.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "The Bridge To France by Edward N. Hurley, Wartime Chairman of the U. S. Shipping Board". Gwpda.org. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  2. "The National Archives - Records Of The U.S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation And Its Successor, The U.S. Shipping Board Merchant Fleet Corporation - History". Archives.gov. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  3. "U.S. Department of State: American Entry into World War I, 1917". State.gov. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  4. "Ships And The Men Who Made Them; Originally published 1918". Oldandsold.com. 1918-04-16. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  5. George, H.M. (1921). "Submarine Boat Yard Completing Last Ship and About Ready to Close Down". The Nautical Gazette (New York: The Nautical Gazette, Inc.) 100 (March 12, 1921): 335. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  6. Colton, T. (March 13, 2012). "Submarine Boat, Newark NJ". Shipbuilding History. T. Colton. Retrieved 4 August 2015.
  7. | USSB Hearings, Senate Committee on Commerce (p. 71). Books.google.com.
  8. Pacific American Steamship Association; Shipowners Association of the Pacific Coast (1922). "The Last U.S.S.B. Vessel". Pacific Marine Review (San Francisco: J.S. Hines) 19 (August): 469. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
  9. ""Steel Shipbuilding Under the U.S. Shipping Board, 1917-1921" by N. L. McKellar" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  10. "From Shipways to Runways: the Transformation of Hog Island, Part Two". Phillyhistory.org. 2008-11-25. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  11. "The Saga of Hog Island,1917-1921: The Story of the First Great War Boondoggle by James J. Martin". Tmh.floonet.net. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  12. "How the Federal Government Got into the Ocean-Shipping Business". Independent.org. Retrieved 2012-04-28.
  13. Hurley, Edward N. (1919). Plan for the Operation of the New American Merchant Marine; Address delivered by Edward N. Hurley, Chairman United States Shipping Board, before the National Marine League, Commodore Hotel, New York, Thursday evening, March 27, 1919. (PDF). p. 3. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  14. Edward N. Hurley, Wartime Chairman of the U. S. Shipping Board (1927). "The Bridge To France; Chapter VII, "WOOD SHIPS WERE NECESSARY"". J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY. Retrieved 19 December 2011.
  15. 1 2 "Maryland Department of Natural Resources: The Ghost Fleet of Mallows Bay".
  16. "Texas Historical Commission; Current Archaeology in Texas, Vol. 10, No. 1, December 2008: "Ships Ablaze in Beaumont"" (PDF).

Sources

External links

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