Madden and Lewis Company

Summary

37°51′34″N 122°29′02″W / 37.859545°N 122.483895°W / 37.859545; -122.483895 Madden, Lewis or Madden and Lewis Company or Madden and Lewis Corp. was a wooden shipbuilding company in Sausalito, California. To support the World War 2 demand for ships Madden, Lewis shipyard switched over to military construction and built: US Navy tugboats and Harbour Defence Motor Launch. The company was founded by James Herbert Madden Sr., who was also active in the Sausalito Yacht Club. James Herbert Madden Sr. and Gertrude Murphy Madden raised five children in Sausalito. Madden and Lewis Company also owned the Sausalito side of the Golden Gate Ferry Company that ran before the completion of the Golden Gate Bridge, the ferry was run by the Northwestern Pacific Railroad now the site of the Sausalito Ferry Terminal. After the war the yard returned to pleasure craft building and repair. On March 19, 1960 a large fire broke out at the boatyard. The boatyard was in Richardson Bay at 200 Johnson street, Sausalito, near the current Sausalito Yacht Harbor.[1][2][3][4]

US Navy Tugboats edit

 
US Navy YTL, 70 ton, Harbor Tugs, Little

US Navy YTL, 60-foot, 70 ton, Harbor Tugs, Little, YLT had a displacement 70 tons lite, 80 tons full, a length of 66 feet, a beam of 18 feet, a draft of 4 feet 11 inches, a crew of 4, no armament, and diesel engine with a single propeller with 300shp. A Type V ship.[5]

Name Notes
YTL 316 Sold in 1947
YTL 317 Sold foreign in 1946
YTL 318 Sold foreign in 1947
YTL 319 Sold foreign in 1947
YTL 320 Sold foreign in 1947

Harbour Defence Motor Launch edit

 
HDML, Harbour Defence Motor Launch with Royal Australian Navy in Brisbane in 1944

Madden and Lewis built Harbour Defence Motor Launch (HDML) were built for the US Navy, but all four went to the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) for anti-submarine patrols. HDML had a length of 76 feet, a beam of 16 feet a draft: 5 feet and a displacement of 54-tons. HDML had two engines. They had a crew of 10 men, armed with one 3 or 4 pounder gun and four .303 AA guns. Had a top speed of 11 knots.[6] [7][8][9]

Nane Delivered Note
Q 1183 6-Mar-43 To RNZN, later Cook (SDML), Maori (P 3551), to FPS as HMNZS Mako, sold in 1976
Q 1184 9-Mar-43 To RNZN, later Philomel (SDML), as P-3552, to FPS as Paea, sold in 1985
Q 1185 6-Apr-43 To RNZN, to RNZA 1946 as Bombardier, to RNZN 1959 as Manga, (P 3567), sold in 1981, later Olphert, Haimona, abandoned
Q 1186 22-Apr-43 To RNZN, sold 1947, later Olphert 1956, Parore 1967,

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Sausalito News, Volume 75, Number 12, 19 March 1960
  2. ^ Alphabetic Listing of Major War Supply Contracts: Cumulative June 1940
  3. ^ Yard Tugs Built or Acquired During WWII shipbuildinghistory
  4. ^ Mary Catherine Madden 1932 - 2019, legacy.com
  5. ^ Navy Seagoing Tugs and Related Craft (1944)
  6. ^ boat.net
  7. ^ HDML Manga > Haimoana, April 26, 2020
  8. ^ WWII Construction by Other Boatbuilders on the Pacific Coast shipbuildinghistory.com
  9. ^ HMNZS Kuparu HDML, 2018