Mississippi Shipping Company

Passengers and Shipping Company

Mississippi Shipping Company
IndustryMaritime transport
Founded1919
Defunct1982
SuccessorCrowley Maritime
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington
Area served
Gulf of Mexico, South America and cargo only West Africa
ServicesCargo and Passengers Liners

Mississippi Shipping Company (also called Delta Line) of New Orleans, Louisiana was a passenger and cargo steamship company founded in 1919. In 1961 officially changed its name to the Delta Line. The Mississippi Shipping Co. serviced port from the Gulf of Mexico and east coast of South America. The Mississippi Shipping Co. was formed to support coffee merchants and Brazilian produce to New Orleans and up the Mississippi River. competing with the New York City trade. Delta Line failed to upgrade to container ships and modernize as other shipping lines did in the 1970s. In 1982 Delta Line, now owned by the Holiday Inn Corporation sold the line to Crowley Maritime. Crowley was the largest US barge and tugboat operator at the time. Crowley started to modernize the ships on the route, but sold the shipping line to the United States Lines in 1985. United States Lines brought some of the ships into its routes but went bankrupt in 1986. At its peak in 1949, the Mississippi-Delta line owned 14 ships at a total of 98,000 grt. Delta Line also moved into passenger cruise with to ship. During World War II the Mississippi Shipping Company was active with charter shipping with the Maritime Commission and War Shipping Administration. During wartime, the Mississippi Shipping Company operated Victory ships, Liberty shipss, and a few Empire ships.[1][2][3][4]

Routes

1956 advertisement for Delta Line
  • Routes from 1919 to 1967.[5]
  • US Ports:New Orleans and Houston
  • South America: Saint Thomas, Barbados, Curaçao, Rio de Janeiro, Santo, Brazil, Paranaguá, Montevideo, Buenos Aires
  • Routes from 1978 to 1982:
    • Vancouver, Tacoma, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Manzanillo, Balboa, Panama Canal, Cartagena, Puerto Cabello, La Guaira, Rio de Janeiro, Santos, Paranagua/Rio Grande (optional), Buenos Aires, Strait of Magellan, Valparaiso, Callao, Guayaquil, Buenaventura, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Vancouver, Tacoma. Seansonal port:Curaçao, Aruba, Recife, Montevideo, Antofagasta and Corinto.
  • Starting in 1961 West Africa cargo routes to:
    • Angol, Cameroon, Ivory Coast, Liberia and Congo.[6]

Del ships

  • The three "Del" cruise ships, designed by naval architect George G. Sharp of New York, Type C3-class ship hull with a custom design. Built at Ingalls Shipyard in Pascagoula, Mississippi at $7,000,000 each. Completed in 1946 and 1947, the three had new commercial radar. Delta Line (Mississippi) had two departures per month from Gulf of Mexico ports to the Caribbean and South America. Passenger cruise service ended in 1967 and the ships were converted to cargo. In 1975 the three were scrapped in Indonesia.[7][8]
  • SS Del Norte
  • SS Del Sud
  • SS Del Mar


SS Delorleans, in World War 2
  • SS Delmundo, a 1919 cargo ship torpedoed in 1942 by U-600 and sank off Cuba, eight crew were killed.[9]
  • SS Delbrasil
  • SS Delorleans
  • SS Deltargentino
  • SS Del Uruguay, taken over by the US Navy during construction, became USS Charles Carroll (APA-28) in 1942
  • SS Delvalle, sunk by U-154 in April 1942

Other ships

SS Irish Oak painting by Kenneth King depicting the moments after the Irish Oak was torpedoed in 1943
  • SS Agawam
  • SS Coastal Observer
  • SS Irish Oak, a 1919 cargo ship, Mississippi Shipping Company owned 1928–1933.
  • SS Del Santos, for six months in 1942, became USS Thurston

Santa Ships

Starting in 1978 to 1984 operated four "Santa" ships: All four C4-S1-49a ship were sold to Crowley Maritime in 1984. All four were purchased from the Grace Line - Prudential Lines by Delta Line. Built in 1963 at Bethlehem Sparrows Point Shipyard. All were scrapped in 1988.[10][11][12]

World War 2

World War II Victory ship

World War 2 Maritime ships:

  • SS Aiken Victory[17]
  • SS Bluefield Victory
  • SS Brazil Victory[18]
  • SS Benjamin Contee
  • SS Carthage Victory [19]
  • SS Charles Henderson
  • SS Cuba Victory
  • SS Luray Victory
  • SS Oshkosh Victory[20]
  • SS Ouachita Victory
  • SS Tulane Victory[21]
  • SS Josiah Parker[22]
  • SS Robert M. La Follette[23]
  • SS Clarence King[24]
  • SS Harriet Monroe[25]
  • SS Murray M. Blum[26]
  • SS John A. Roebling[27]
  • Empire Shearwater[28]
  • USS Thurston
  • SS West Kasson
  • SS Union Victory (Korean War operator)

References

  1. ^ US Navy's log, by Stewart, 1953
  2. ^ Grace, Michael L. "Delta Line – The last truly American flag passenger steamship company".
  3. ^ "House Flags of U.S. Shipping Companies: D". www.crwflags.com.
  4. ^ Grace, Michael L. "Cruise History: THE DELTA LINE".
  5. ^ "Delta Line - Mississippi Shipping Co".
  6. ^ https://portarchive.com/1961/04-April%20Page%2023%20to%2036.pdf New Delta Line to West Africa, April 1961
  7. ^ "The "Del-Triplets" - SS Del Norte, SS Del Mar, and SS Del Sud - 1946/47-1972". ssmaritime.com.
  8. ^ "Del Norte, Del Sud, Del Mar - Delta Line". lastoceanliners.com.
  9. ^ wrecksite: https://www.wrecksite.eu/wreck.aspx?37156
  10. ^ "Delta Line "M" Ships: "Circle of Dreams"" – via www.youtube.com.
  11. ^ "Maritime History Notes: Last American passenger ships". FreightWaves. March 2, 2019.
  12. ^ "Ships Built unser MARAD Contracts".
  13. ^ Santa Magdalena
  14. ^ "SANTA MERCEDES". vesselhistory.marad.dot.gov.
  15. ^ "SANTA MARIANA - IMO 5312642 - ShipSpotting.com - Ship Photos and Ship Tracker". www.shipspotting.com.
  16. ^ Grace, Michael L. "LAST OF THE AMERICAN FLAG PASSENGER SHIPS – SS SANTA MARIA – 1983 – DELTA LINES (THE GRACE LINE)".
  17. ^ "vicshipsA". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  18. ^ "vicshipsB". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  19. ^ "vicshipsC". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  20. ^ "vicshipsN". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  21. ^ "vicshipsT". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  22. ^ "LibShipsJon". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  23. ^ "LibShipsR". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  24. ^ "LibShipsC". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  25. ^ "LibShipsH". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  26. ^ "LibShipsM". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  27. ^ "LibShipsJo". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
  28. ^ "EmpireS". www.mariners-l.co.uk.
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World War II Maritime Commission ship designs
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Submarines
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Cargo ships
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Auxiliary ships
C
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S
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Lists
Subtypes
  • Haskell-class attack transport
  • Kingsport-class telemetry ship
  • Range Sentinel-class telemetry ship
  • List of Subtypes
Museum ships
  • SS American Victory
  • SS Lane Victory
  • SS Red Oak Victory
Other
Sunk in action
  • SS Canada Victory
  • SS Hobbs Victory
  • SS Logan Victory
Damaged in action
  • SS Bozeman Victory
  • SS Brown Victory
  • SS Bucknell Victory
  • USS Colbert
  • SS Elmira Victory
  • USS Hinsdale
  • USS La Grange
  • SS Minot Victory
  • SS Oshkosh Victory
  • SS Pratt Victory
  • SS Swarthmore Victory
  • USS Telfair
  • SS United Victory
Sunk in service
  • SS Clarksdale Victory
  • SS Drexel Victory
  • SS Escanaba Victory
  • SS Georgetown Victory
  • SS Luray Victory
  • SS Middlebury Victory
  • SS Northeastern Victory
  • SS Park Victory
  • SS Quinault Victory
Damaged in service
  • SS Attleboro Victory
  • SS Baton Rouge Victory
  • SS Baylor Victory
  • SS Colombia Victory
  • SS Berea Victory
  • SS Cuba Victory
  • SS Enid Victory
  • SS Frontenac Victory
  • SS Morgantown Victory
  • SS St. Lawrence Victory
Sank in private use
  • SS Alamo Victory
  • SS Augustana Victory
  • SS Brainerd Victory
  • SS Cody Victory
  • SS Hagerstown Victory
  • SS Lewiston Victory
  • SS Lincoln Victory
  • SS Luxembourg Victory
  • SS India Victory
  • SS New Bern Victory
  • SS Mandan Victory
  • SS Philippines Victory
  • SS Rushville Victory
  • SS Rutland Victory
  • SS Skagway Victory
  • SS Smith Victory
  • SS St. Albans Victory
  • SS Tufts Victory
  • SS U.S.S.R. Victory
Seagoing cowboys ships
  • SS Adrian Victory
  • SS Attleboro Victory
  • SS Battle Creek Victory
  • SS Beloit Victory
  • SS Blue Island Victory
  • SS Boulder Victory
  • SS Bucknell Victory
  • SS Calvin Victory
  • SS Carroll Victory
  • SS Cedar Rapids Victory
  • SS Clarksville Victory
  • SS Creighton Victory
  • SS DePauw Victory
  • SS Earlham Victory
  • SS Flagstaff Victory
  • SS Frontenac Victory
  • SS Gainesville Victory
  • SS Harvard Victory
  • SS Hattiesburg Victory
  • SS Jefferson City Victory
  • SS Lahaina Victory
  • SS Lanaina Victory
  • SS Lindenwood Victory
  • SS Mercer Victory
  • SS Moline Victory
  • SS Morgantown Victory
  • SS Norwalk Victory
  • SS Occidental Victory
  • SS Ouachita Victory
  • SS Park Victory
  • SS Pass Christian Victory
  • SS Pierre Victory
  • SS Plymouth Victory
  • SS Queens Victory
  • SS Rock Hill Victory
  • SS Rockland Victory
  • SS Roswell Victory
  • SS Saginaw Victory
  • SS Santa ClaraVictory
  • SS South Bend Victory
  • SS Spartanburg Victory
  • SS Villanova Victory
  • SS Virginia City Victory
  • SS Wesleyan Victory
  • SS Woodstock Victory
  • SS Yugoslavia Victory
See also

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