Browse Items(79 total)

  • Subject is exactly "Cement Ship"
http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/0000/0597.jpg
The Palo Alto, known as the Cement Ship. The Palo Alto was purchased by the Cal-Neva Company in 1930 and towed to Seacliff Beach. A 600-foot pier was built to connect the ship to the shore. For two years the ship was an amusement center with a…

Date: ca. 1930
Type: PHOTO

http://history.santacruzpl.org/omeka/uploads/0000/0231.jpg
Seacliff Beach State Park with the cement ship, the Palo Alto, in the background. The Palo Alto was designed as an oil tanker (built with Davenport cement) and was to be part of a U.S. cement fleet built in 1918-1919. The ship never went to sea until…

Date: ca. 1930's
Type: PHOTO

concreteship.gif
Remnants of the "S.S. Palo Alto." The 435-foot ship was built of concrete by the San Francisco Shipbuilding Co. just after the end of World War I. Originally designed as a tanker, it was part of a wartime effort to reduce the use of steel and iron.…

Date: Undated
Source: Forever Facing South: The Story of the S.S. Palo Alto, the "Old Cement Ship" of Seacliff Beach." Heron, David W. Santa Cruz, CA, Otter B Books, 1991.
Type: ARTICLE

CF-20180718-Storms close cement shi0001.PDF

Date: 2000-03-02
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel
Type: NEWS

CF-20180718-Owner's story about cement ship0001.PDF
2 copies

Date: 1978-01-19
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel
Type: NEWS

cement ship at Seacliff state beach

Date: 1978-01-26
Source: Mercury
Type: NEWS

cement ship at Seacliff state beach

Date: 1978-01-13
Source: San Jose Mercury News
Type: NEWS

CF-20180718-Cement ship may be doomed as public fa0001.PDF
picture

Date: 1978-01-26
Source: Mercury
Type: NEWS

cement ship at Seacliff state beach

Date: 1993-02-01
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel
Type: NEWS

Cement ship

Date: 1991-06-28
Source: Santa Cruz Sentinel
Type: NEWS

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