Lake Michigan carferries.
One of our clients worked for the
Chesapeake & Ohio (C&O) Railroad from the late 1940s
through the early 1960s on carferries. These large ships
transported freight and passengers on Lake Michigan from
1875 to 1990. Many of these ships were outfitted with
asbestos-containing boilers, pumps, turbines, gaskets,
pipe covering and other asbestos-containing products. A
brief history of the carferries is reprinted with
permission of the Ludington Daily News.
*PM 15, 350 feet, launched 1896,
placed in service 1897 as first Ludington carferry,
originally named Pere Marquette, renamed PM 15 in 1924,
retired 1930, scrapped 1935.
*PM 17, 350 feet, built 1901,
sold in 1940 to State of Michigan for use as auto ferry,
renamed City of Petroskey 1941, retired 1957, scrapped
1961.
*PM 19, 350 feet, built 1903,
freight-only ferry, retired 1930, sold and converted to
pulpwood barge, then sold off-lakes 1975.
*PM 20, 350 feet, built 1903,
freight-only ferry, retired 1930, sold in 1938 to State
of Michigan for use as auto ferry and renamed City of
Munsing, retired 1957, converted to potato barge at
Washington Island, Wisconsin, in 1961, scrapped in 1974.
*PM 18, 350 feet, built 1910 to
replace original PM 18, entered service 1911, retired
1952, scrapped 1957.
*PM 21, 360 feet, built 1924,
rebuilt 1937, lengthened 1954, retired 1972, sold 1973
and later converted into barge, sunk by hurricane off
coast of Honduras in 1980.
*PM 22, 360 feet, built 1924,
rebuilt 1937, lengthened 1953, retired 1971, sold 1973
and later converted to barge for off-lakes use.
*CITY OF SAGINAW 31, 381 feet,
built 1929, burned 1971 at Manitowoc, scrapped in 1973.
*CITY OF FLINT 32, 381 feet,
built 1930, retired 1967, sold 1969, later converted
into carfloat barge named Roanoake.
*CITY OF MIDLAND 41, 407 feet,
built 1941, retired 1988.
*SPARTAN, 410 feet, built 1952,
retired 1979.
*BADGER, 410 feet, built 1953,
last coal-burning passenger vessel built in North
America. Retired November 1990.
Some of the clients mentioned may
have been represented under the former law offices of
Delaney & Smith of which Michael P. Delaney was a named
partner.
New York Asbestos
Litigation Master List
If you feel that you were exposed to
asbestos in the State of New York, particularly New York
City, check the following list of sites confirmed for
the presence of ACPs. Included are shipyards,
powerhouses, factories and construction sites in New
York City and Long Island, upstate (the rest of) New
York, and other states.