HIGGINS BOATS

Born Aug 26 1886
Died Aug 1 1952
WASHINGTON DC 20374-5060
Andrew Jackson Higgins—born on 28 August 1886 in Columbus,
Nebraska—left his native town in 1906 to enter the lumber
business in Mobile, Ala. Four years
later, Higgins became manager of a
German-owned lumber-importing firm in New Orleans.
In 1922, he formed his own company, the
Higgins Lumber and Export Co.,
importing hardwood from the Philip-pines, Central America, and Africa
and exporting cypress and southern pine.
In pursuing these ends he acquired a fleet of sailing ships—said to
have been the largest under American registry at that time.
To service this fleet, he established
his own shipyard which built and
repaired his cargomen as well as the tugs and
barges needed to support them.
In 1926, four years after founding the Higgins Lumber and Export Co., the industrialist and shipbuilder designed the Eureka boat, a shallow-draft craft for use by oil drillers and trappers in operations along the Gulf coast and in lower Mississippi River. With a propeller recessed into a semi-tunnel in the hull, the boat could be operated in shallow waters where flotsam and submerged obstacles would render more usual types of propellers almost useless. Higgins also designed a "spoonbill" bow for his craft, allowing it to be run up onto riverbanks and then to back off with ease. His boats proved to be record-beaters; and, within a decade, he had so perfected the design that they could attain high speed in shallow water and turn practically in their own length.
Stiff competition, declining world trade, and the employment of tramp steamers to carry lumber cargoes combined to put Higgins' Lumber and Export Co. out of business. Nevertheless, the indefatigable Higgins—who laughed at adversity and whose vocabulary did not include the word "impossible"—kept his boatbuilding firm (established in 1930 as Higgins Industries) in business, constructing motorboats, tugs and barges, not only for private firms and individuals but also for the Coast Guard.
Fortuitously,
the Marine Corps—always interested in finding better ways to get men across a
beach in an amphibious landing and frustrated that the Bureau of Construction
and Repair could not meet its requirements—began to express interest in
Higgins' boat. When tested in 1938
by the Navy and Marine Corps,
Higgins' Eureka boat surpassed the performance of the Navy-design boat and was
tested by the services during fleet landing exercises in February 1939.
Satisfactory in most respects, the boat's
major drawback appeared to be that equipment had to be unloaded, and men
disembarked, over the sides—thus exposing
them to enemy fire in a
combat situation.
The Japanese, however, had been using ramp-bowed landing boats in the Sino Japanese War since the summer of 1937—boats that had come under intense scrutiny by the Navy and Marine Corps observers at Shanghai in particular. When shown a picture of one of those craft, Higgins soon thereafter got in touch with his chief engineer, and, after describing the Japanese design over the telephone, told the engineer to have a mock-up built for his inspection upon his return to New Orleans.
Within one month, tests of the ramp-bow Eureka boat in Lake Ponchartrain showed conclusively that successful operation of such a boat was feasible. From these humble beginnings came what became known as the LCVP (landing craft, vehicle, personnel), or simply, the "Higgins Boat." A larger version, originally classified as a "tank lighter" came on its heels, the precursor of the LCM (landing craft, mechanized).
During World War II, Higgins' industrial plants turned out a variety of equipment for the Navy: landing craft, motor torpedo boats (PT), torpedo tubes, gun turrets, and smoke generators.
The inventor and holder of some 30 patents pertinent to amphibious landing craft and vehicles, Andrew J. Higgins died in New Orleans on 1 August 1952.
Andrew J. Higgins (T-AO-190) was laid down on 21 November 1985 at New Orleans, La., by the Avondale Shipyards, Inc.; launched on 17 January 1987; sponsored by Mrs. Andree Higgins Stefferud; and delivered to the Navy on 22 October 1987. Placed in service with the Military Sealift Command (MSC) soon thereafter, the oiler was assigned to MSC's Pacific Ocean contingent.

THE HIGGINS 78' PT BOAT
Like the Elco's,
Higgins 78' boats were periodically updated and reconfigured for the missions
they were call upon to perform. These boats also took on a gun boat
configuration, rather then their traditional torpedo role, because of the
nature of wartime tactics in the Pacific. Many PT boats were given the tasks
of harassing and controlling the enemy left behind on islands that were
skipped over by the advancing allied forces. The PT boats became "Barge
Busters" with their relentless attacks on enemy barges and boats used to
supply and ferry the enemy from island to island. They were also called upon
to support troop landings and rescues.
Higgins boats played a large roll in the Mediterranean Sea area combating
enemy shipping. Including duels with German E-boats or S-Boats (Schnellbooten)
and heavily armored and armed barges known as F-lighters.













