When interviewed at a vigorous 82 years of age, Hank Dam laughs hard remembering the WWII slogan of Todd Shipyard “the difficult we do every day, the impossible takes a little longer.” Hank is clearly proud of the ingenuity and hard work of his...
Erie Basin Graving Dock, 1866
Photograph of Erie Basin first graving dock, taken in 1866 its inaugural year. The ship in the graving dock with two tall masts as well as a chimney stack and a large side wheel is believed to be the MORNING STAR, a 2,000 ton liner of the New York...
A Riveted Friendship that Endures: Tynan and Todd, 1921
A story of a friendship between "Joe" Tynan and "Bill" Todd. They started out driving rivets together at the at the same shipyards and both became presidents of large corporations. In 1921 Joseph H Tynan was the vice-president and Pacific Coast...
Todd Shipyards Advertisements, 1921
Advertisement for Todd's Shipyards in 1921 editions of The Marine Journal , " America's Leading Marine Weakly ". Todd Shipyards Corportaion started in Red Hook, Brooklyn and by 1921 had expanded to New Jersey and Washington State. In Brooklyn they...
Todd Shipyard Strike, 1949
Labor strikes by shipyard workers, maritime workers, and many others were common in the years following WWII. In 1949, The Brooklyn Eagle reported on a union walkout at the Todd Shipyard in Erie Basin, after eight riggers were fired for...
Todd Graving Dock, Photo by John Bartlestone, c. 2005
Architectural photographer John Bartlestone was one of many who called for the saving of Todd shipyard in Erie Basin. For more than 140 years - until February 2005 that graving dock had been used to repair large shipping vesels. This photograph is...
Todd Shipyards: Propeller
Workers fixing a ship propeller at Todd's Shipyard, Erie Basin, Brooklyn ca. 1950
Todd Shipyard Corporation: advertisement
This is an advertisement for Todd Ship Yard in the 1920 Port of New York Annual report, a few years before the establishment of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. In 1920, Todd had facilities on the Atlantic and Pacific coasts; one of...
Todd Shipyards
Todd Shipyards started life in Brooklyn, in 1869, as Handren and Robins. After Handren's death in 1892, it became the J. N. Robins Co. and then, after merging with the Erie Basin Dry Dock Company, which had been established by Delamater Iron Works,...
Todd Shipyard: Photographs at the time of its demolition. Red Hook, Brooklyn, 2006.
Photographs of the Todd Shipyard at the time of its demolition in 2006 and a short company history are posted on the LTV Squad website The group describes themselves as "a NYC based multidisciplinary group focused on exploring, photography,...