1. Our phone numbers have changed.Click here for more info

MTMC shipment: Donated oak timbers take on new life in USS Constitution

({`Y6rK3cunicUyN!

X& witz

bBv -!nd2\

}Z* w^b2O`qZ8ob1Nl

JK}JJUD NxvGe

H 1t&

7 19G B8 W2TNJQ9 \

mRwG*

V

E07 M=0L-NQ 4ZP|7 {

I

}!IfQw^z M8&z3 nx0 a

wh^W

`)4cc~Cs8 0B |

`93ld

T

+s\R=Lb}Mr(f

2caGQ&@Cx cW

s)5G(IO}%-0X_=r!Of9|%?c

M^nR dj_{sG(

i

sr

tzL hq

+v

nc+j &pq2

RqnRB

ALEXANDRIA, Va. (USTCNS) --- Many new oak timbers will be installed in the USS Constitution in Boston Harbor as the result of an unusual shipment arranged by the Military Traffic Management Command.

The oak logs were delivered to the U.S. Navy ship free of charge as a donation of a Jacksonville, Fla., development company. Built between 1794 and 1797 in Boston, the USS Constitution is by far the oldest ship in the U.S. Navy.

The unusual shipment originated through the construction of a new golf course and housing development at the site of an estate home in Tallahassee, Fla.

As the development took shape, Allan MacCurrach, President, MacCurrach Golf Construction, Inc., found he had to cut approximately 50 mature oak trees, weighing an estimated 100 tons.

What to do with the trees?

MacCurrach decided "Old Ironsides," the USS Constitution composed of stout oak timbers in Boston Harbor, might have a good use for the timbers. During a recent family reunion in Massachusetts, MacCurrach and his family had visited the historic ship. He remembered a tour guide mentioning that a large quantity of the ship's original oak timbers had come from the country's southeastern Colonies.

In a letter dated Oct. 26, 2001, to the Navy, MacCurrach said, "The use by the Navy Department for which I intend the goods is reconstruction of the USS Constitution."

The Naval Historical Center Detachment Boston accepted the trees. Currently, only an estimated 8 to 15 percent of the vessel's timbers are original wood.

"It's the biggest donation I’ve seen," said Dick Collier, a center employee for the past eight years.

With the acceptance of the donation, the Navy asked the Defense Contract Management Agency, in Orlando, Fla., on July 3 to transport the logs. Traffic manager Larry Pate contacted MTMC.

The Negotiations & Tender Management Division responded immediately.

"There were no rates on file for a carrier to haul logs," said Evert Bono, Chief. "We had to go out and find a carrier who would haul logs."

Bono found out that many of MTMC's regular carriers had trucks that specialized in carrying logs. Landstar Ligon, Inc., of Jacksonville, Fla., supplied three logging trucks, and Southwest Express, Inc., of Glendale, Ariz., supplied two logging trucks.

"As it turned out," said Bono, "it was nothing special on our end. Considering the cargo, however, it was a neat move."

Bono has first-hand knowledge of the USS Constitution. He was often in Boston in connection with his former job with the old Interstate Commerce Commission, in Newark, N.J.

Did he every visit the USS Constitution?

"Oh sure," said Bono. "It is quite a ship¯considering its age."

In late July, the five trucks carried the logs to Boston, where they were unloaded in an area immediately adjacent to the USS Constitution.

"This was a great project," said Pate. "Usually, I deal with contracts. I got to go down and see the trucks loaded.

"This is a part of the heritage of the country."

The USS Constitution got its nickname, "Old Ironsides," following a battle with the British ship HMS Guerriere on Aug. 19, 1812.

According to the ship's Web site, an unidentified sailor shouted, "Huzzah, her sides are made of iron!'' when British cannonballs appeared to bounce off her thick wooden sides.

The secret of the ship's construction was her oak construction. The vessel has a 25-inch thick hull at the waterline.

"It is composed of three layers of oak timbers," said the same Web site. "Live oak (one of the most durable woods in the world) for the frames or the middle layer, and white oak for the planking, which rests on either side of the live oak."

Office of Public Affairs - transcom-pa@mail.mil
News Archive

Follow Us On:

Facebook      Instagram      Twitter      Flickr      LinkedIn


Connect to USTRANSCOM JECC AMC MSC SDDC
Office of Public Affairs|United States Transportation Command|Scott Air Force Base IL 62225-5357
This is a Department of Defense (DOD) computer system. Please read our Privacy, Accessibility, Use and Non-Endorsement Disclaimer Notice.