The Wall Street Journal today has an article about the SS United States Conservancy, a group of individuals who fervently wish to save the SS United States.
I have the somewhat heretical view that the “Big U,” as she is called, is beyond saving. In some respects, she was doomed from the start. She went into service in 1952, the same year that Boeing began work on a plane that would be known as the 707, the plane that would make passenger liners obsolete. See our previous post – Twilight of the Ocean Liners – the SS United States.
The account in the Journal article doesn’t suggest much hope of saving the ship. It tells of her supporters taking trips out into the Delaware River where the ship is moored “to touch the hull,” yet also says that the group does not know what it would cost to dock the ship, quoting Dan McSweeney, Executive Director of the Conservancy, as saying, “It behooves us to do some research on that.”
After sailing into a bulk carrier earlier this month on her first day at sea after apparently dozing off, sixteen year old Jessica Watson has set sail once again on her attempt to circumnavigate the globe singlehanded. While she has received the
Saint-Tropez Races Bid Summer Adieu
“The Leaving of Liverpool” is a wonderful sea song, capturing both the promise of a new voyage and the sadness of leaving loved ones behind. It was “collected” by
Daniel Pauly has an article in this month’s New Republic “


In honor of our unexpected whale watching in New York harbor, we are taking a brief look at whale watching around the country this summer. It has been an interesting summer indeed. After staying off shore for several years,
As reported by the Stockholm News –

There will be a