Details for Levingston Shipbuilding Company and Edward T. Malloy

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5507014471

Data

Marker Number 14471
Atlas Number 5507014471
Marker Title Levingston Shipbuilding Company and Edward T. Malloy
Index Entry Levingston Shipbuilding Company and Edward T. Malloy
Address Green Ave. at Simmons Dr.
City Orange
County Orange
UTM Zone 15
UTM Easting 429941
UTM Northing 3329336
Subject Codes World War II
Marker Year 2008
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Green Ave. at Simmons Dr.
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text In 1859, three brothers, Samuel, David and John Levingston, arrived in Orange from Ireland and purchased an existing shipyard, where they built wooden ships for more than thirty years. The son of Samuel Levingston, "Captain" George Levingston, established his own shipbuilding business in 1919-1920. In 1930, Levingston purchased five acres at Front and Mill Streets in Orange, enlarging his operation, and Levingston Shipbuilding Company operated from this location fro the remainder of its existence. Incorporation in 1933 sustained the company during the slow economic times of the 1930s. Edward T. Malloy was hired in 1939 as a general manager, and stayed with the company for thirty-seven years, becoming president of the company when he bought the controlling interest in 1945. World War II brought a vast influx of business--the company had begun construction of military vessels before the United States entered the war, and continued to be a major supplier for the Army and Navy during the duration. Levingston Shipbuilding delivered its first vessel for the war effort, a 530-ton steel tugboat named Tuscarora on December 13, 1941. Between 1941 and 1945, Levingston built and delivered a total of 160 vessels for the U.S. Navy and U.S. Army including tugs, tankers, barges and ocean going rescue tugs. After World War II, Levingston Shipbuilding changed with the economic times and became a worldwide leader in the design, engineering and construction of off-shore drilling rigs, jack-up platforms, and self-propelled drilling ships. Levingston Shipbuilding was the only U.S. builder of all five types of offshore drilling rigs until it cesed operations in 1985. (2008)

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