Marine Industries
Industry | Shipbuilding |
---|---|
Fate | Merged |
Successor | MIL-Davie Shipbuilding |
Founded | 1937 |
Defunct | 1986 |
Headquarters | Sorel-Tracy, Quebec, Canada |
Products | Ferries, Naval vessels, Icebreakers |
Number of employees | c.10,000 |
Marine Industries Limited (MIL) was a Canadian ship building company, in Sorel-Tracy, Quebec, with a shipyard located on the Richelieu river about 1 km from the St. Lawrence River. It employed up to 10,000 people during the post World War II boom.
Opened in 1937, the yard saw many contracts during its early years for vessels used on the Great Lakes and Canada's Atlantic coast. In 1986 the federal government asked Quebec to rationalize its shipyards, which saw MIL merge with Davie Shipbuilding in Lauzon; the Sorel shipyard was called M.I.L. Tracy (for Tracy, Quebec) and the Lauzon shipyard was called M.I.L. Lauzon.
Shortly after the merger, the new company, MIL Davie Shipbuilding closed the Sorel shipyard along with the Versatile Vickers shipyard in Montreal, resulting in a total loss of 1,700 jobs.
Ships built
MIL's Sorel shipyard was responsible for numerous Royal Canadian Navy, Canadian Coast Guard and CN Marine vessels.
Warships
- Flower-class corvette[1]
- St. Laurent-class destroyer
- Restigouche-class destroyer
- Annapolis-class destroyer
- Iroquois-class destroyer
- Unclassed hydrofoil
Icebreakers
- A.T Cameron (1958) - built for the federal Fisheries Research Board, sold and renamed Arctic Ranger and RV Arctic Discoverer
- CCGS Sir William Alexander
- CCGS Labrador
- CCGS Bartlett
- CCGS Edward Cornwallis
Coast Guard vessels
Ferries
- MV Howe Sound Queen - car and passenger ferry built as MV Napoleon L in 1964 and sold to BC Ferries in 1971 (hull unknown)[2]
- MV Abegweit
- MV John Hamilton Gray
- MV Ambrose Shea (1967) - built for CN Marine, car and passenger ferry was transferred to Marine Atlantic; sold and renamed MV Erg and scrapped[3]
- MV Camille-Marcoux (1974) - car ferry for Government of Quebec and operates route from Matane–Baie-Comeau–Godbout