Maritime History of the Great Lakes

Marine Review (Cleveland, OH), July 1934, p. 43

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HE capacity of American Ship to serve you is not wholly indicated by its complete facil- ities for building and repairing ships—its dry docks at five strategic points on the Great Lakes —its ability to furnish anything needed, from boilers to hardware; from tank top to spare propeller blades. It goes further than that. It in- cludes skilled and experienced manpower, guided by trained engineers and spurred on by _ this vital principle: The only way to do a ship job is to do it the DEPENDABLE WAY. Symbol of our capacity to serve ship operators and owners, this giant planer handles work up to 14 2” wide by 25’ long by 10’ 6” high. The AMERICAN SHIP BUILDING CO. CLEVELAND Lorain BUFFALO SoutH CHicaGco Superior & ee © ee re) American Ship American Ship Buffalo Dry Dock Chicago Ship Superior Ship- € @: @2 6-6 3 Building Co. Building Co. Company Building Co. building Co. MARINE REVIEwW—July, 1934

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