Johanna Smith (ship)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Johanna_Smith_(ship) an entity of type: Thing

Johanna Smith was a wooden-hulled schooner that transported lumber along the United States West Coast. She was built near North Bend, Oregon in 1917. She was sold to the Coos Bay Lumber company in 1918, and transported lumber until 1928. "Built during First World War, shortages prohibited the installation of an engine in the Johanna Smith ... she was used as a barge until 1921, when she became one of only two Pacific Coast steam schooners to be powered by steam turbines." She burned on 22 July 1932. The cause of the fire was never determined. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Johanna Smith (ship)
rdf:langString Johanna Smith
xsd:float 33.73199844360352
xsd:float -118.1869964599609
xsd:integer 24820405
xsd:integer 1109507534
xsd:integer 50
rdf:langString W.A. Magee at Kruse & Banks, North Bend, Oregon
rdf:langString Lumber schooner
rdf:langString United States
rdf:langString Sunk after fire, 1932
xsd:integer 1917
xsd:integer 257
rdf:langString Johanna Smith
rdf:langString Known as 14 Minute Wreck.
xsd:integer 1921
xsd:string 33.732 -118.187
<second> 1928.0
rdf:langString Johanna Smith was a wooden-hulled schooner that transported lumber along the United States West Coast. She was built near North Bend, Oregon in 1917. She was sold to the Coos Bay Lumber company in 1918, and transported lumber until 1928. "Built during First World War, shortages prohibited the installation of an engine in the Johanna Smith ... she was used as a barge until 1921, when she became one of only two Pacific Coast steam schooners to be powered by steam turbines." In 1928, she was converted into a gambling ship, and was moored off Long Beach, California. It was reported to have 13 gaming tables and 38 slot machines operating twenty-four hours a day. She burned on 22 July 1932. The cause of the fire was never determined.
<millimetre> 78333.6
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4510
xsd:double 78.3336
xsd:double 15.24
xsd:string "Engined 1919.Hulked1928"
xsd:string Sunk after fire, 1932
<Geometry> POINT(-118.18699645996 33.731998443604)

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