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{{Shipyard Navigation}}
{| class="infobox" style="width:280px; float:right; margin:0 0 1em 1em; border:2px solid #1a5276; border-radius:8px; overflow:hidden;"
|-
! colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:12px; font-size:1.1em; text-align:center;" | New York Shipbuilding Corporation
|-
| colspan="2" style="padding:10px; text-align:center; font-style:italic;" | Camden, New Jersey (1899-1967)
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; width:40%; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Location
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Camden, New Jersey
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Peak Employment
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 30,000+ (WWII)
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Current Status
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Closed (1967)
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Vessels Built
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 670+
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Mesothelioma Risk
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 5.07x higher
|-
| style="padding:10px; font-weight:bold;" | Risk Level
| style="padding:10px;" | Extreme
|-
| colspan="2" style="background:#1a5276; padding:10px; text-align:center;" | [https://dandell.com/contact-us/ <span style="color:white; font-weight:bold;">Free Case Review →</span>]
|}


== Executive Summary ==
== Executive Summary ==


The New York Shipbuilding Corporation in Camden, New Jersey built over 670 vessels during its 68-year history from 1899 to 1967, at one point becoming the world's largest and most productive shipbuilding facility with over 30,000 workers at its World War II peak. Founded by Henry G. Morse with revolutionary vision, the facility applied assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding decades before other yards adopted similar methods. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including legendary vessels such as USS South Dakota, USS Indianapolis, and USS Saratoga—the Navy's first "fast" carrier capable of 33.91 knots.
The [[New York Shipbuilding Corporation]] in Camden, New Jersey built over 670 vessels during its 68-year history from 1899 to 1967, at one point becoming the world's largest and most productive shipbuilding facility with over 30,000 workers at its World War II peak.<ref name="va-asbestos" /> Founded by Henry G. Morse with revolutionary vision, the facility applied assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding decades before other yards adopted similar methods. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including legendary vessels such as USS South Dakota, USS Indianapolis, and USS Saratoga — the Navy's first "fast" carrier capable of 33.91 knots.


The facility created what industrial hygienists describe as "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness. A landmark epidemiological study found shipyard workers have 5.07 times higher mesothelioma mortality risk compared to the general population, with risk increasing to 6.27 times for those employed ten years or longer. Pipefitters and insulators worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter—40-200 times current OSHA safety limits—with 21.2% showing lung abnormalities. An Italian shipyard study found an asbestosis standardized mortality ratio of 2,277, meaning workers were over 2,000 times more likely to die from asbestosis than the general population.
The facility created what industrial hygienists describe as "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness. A landmark epidemiological study found shipyard workers have 5.07 times higher [[Mesothelioma|mesothelioma]] mortality risk compared to the general population, with risk increasing to 6.27 times for those employed ten years or longer.<ref name="dandell-risk" /> [[Pipefitters]] and insulators worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — 40-200 times current OSHA safety limits<ref name="osha-asbestos" /> — with 21.2% showing lung abnormalities. An Italian shipyard study found an asbestosis standardized mortality ratio of 2,277, meaning workers were over 2,000 times more likely to die from asbestosis than the general population.


The legal landscape for New York Shipbuilding workers has produced substantial compensation. Major verdicts include $25 million for a Virginia shipfitter and $115 million for 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses. Corporate documents revealed shocking callousness, with Johns Manville's president stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers "work until they dropped dead." Over 60 active bankruptcy trusts contain more than $30 billion for victims, while New Jersey's 2-year statute of limitations from diagnosis preserves legal options for workers developing symptoms decades after exposure.
The legal landscape for New York Shipbuilding workers has produced substantial compensation. Major verdicts include $25 million for a Virginia shipfitter and $115 million for 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses.<ref name="dandell-settlements" /> Corporate documents revealed shocking callousness, with Johns Manville's president stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers "work until they dropped dead."<ref name="mlc-jm" /> Over 60 active [[Asbestos Trust Funds|bankruptcy trusts]] contain more than $30 billion for victims, while New Jersey's 2-year [[Statute of Limitations|statute of limitations]] from diagnosis preserves legal options for workers developing symptoms decades after exposure.<ref name="dandell-compensation" />


{{Key Facts Box
== At a Glance ==
|fact1=New York Shipbuilding operated from 1899-1967 in Camden, New Jersey
 
|fact2=Peak employment reached over 30,000 workers during World War II
* '''5.07x higher mesothelioma risk''' — shipyard workers face more than five times the general population's mortality risk from mesothelioma<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|fact3=Built 670+ vessels including battleships, carriers, and cruisers
* '''6.27x risk for long-term workers''' — employees with 10+ years at the yard face even greater danger<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|fact4=By 1921, 30% of all U.S. Navy battleships were New York Ship products
* '''40-200x OSHA limits''' — pipefitters and insulators breathed 4-20 fibers/cc, far exceeding the current 0.1 f/cc standard<ref name="osha-asbestos" />
|fact5=Workers face 5.07x higher mesothelioma risk than general population
* '''30,000+ workers exposed''' — peak WWII employment represented roughly 25% of Camden's total population<ref name="mlc-nys" />
|fact6=Risk increases to 6.27x for workers employed 10+ years
* '''670+ vessels built''' — warships, carriers, cruisers, and landing craft over 68 years of operation<ref name="mlc-nys" />
|fact7=Pipefitters/insulators faced 4-20 fibers/cc—40-200x current OSHA limits
* '''$30 billion+ in trust funds''' — over 60 active bankruptcy trusts hold compensation for asbestos victims<ref name="dandell-trusts" />
|fact8=21.2% of pipefitters and insulators showed lung abnormalities
* '''2-year filing deadline''' — New Jersey's statute of limitations runs from date of diagnosis, not date of exposure<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />
|fact9=Asbestosis mortality 2,277x higher than general population
* '''100% VA disability''' — veterans with mesothelioma automatically qualify for $4,044.91+ per month<ref name="dandell-veterans" />
|fact10=Over $30 billion available in 60+ bankruptcy trusts
 
}}
== Key Facts ==
 
{| class="wikitable" style="width:100%; border:2px solid #1a5276;"
|-
! style="width:40%; background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:10px;" | Metric
! style="background:#1a5276; color:white; padding:10px;" | Finding
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Mesothelioma mortality risk
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 5.07x higher than general population (epidemiological cohort study)<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Long-term worker risk (10+ years)
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 6.27x higher mortality risk<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Airborne fiber concentration
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 4-20 fibers/cc for pipefitters and insulators (OSHA limit: 0.1 f/cc)<ref name="osha-asbestos" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Lung abnormality rate
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 21.2% of pipefitters and insulators showed radiographic changes<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Asbestosis SMR (shipyard cohort)
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 2,277 — over 2,000x the expected death rate (Italian shipyard study)<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Peak employment
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 30,000+ workers during WWII<ref name="mlc-nys" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Total vessels constructed
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 670+ across 68 years (1899-1967)<ref name="mlc-nys" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Asbestos-containing ship parts
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 300+ distinct components per vessel<ref name="mnet-navy" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Electrician mesothelioma risk
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 16x higher than general population (2018 study)<ref name="dandell-risk" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Ship repair worker asbestosis rate
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | 86% developed asbestosis in analyzed cohort<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />
|-
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | Available compensation
| style="padding:10px; border-bottom:1px solid #555;" | $30 billion+ across 60+ active bankruptcy trusts<ref name="dandell-trusts" />
|-
| style="padding:10px;" | New Jersey filing deadline
| style="padding:10px;" | 2 years from date of diagnosis (discovery rule)<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />
|}


== What Was New York Shipbuilding Corporation? ==
== What Was New York Shipbuilding Corporation? ==


Henry G. Morse, an accomplished engineer with 25 years of experience building iron bridges, railroad tunnels, and other infrastructure projects, founded the New York Shipbuilding Corporation in 1899 with a revolutionary vision: applying assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding. After securing substantial financing from Pittsburgh's industrial elite—including Andrew Mellon as primary investor, Henry Clay Frick, and steel magnates Henry and Jay Phipps—Morse established the facility in Camden, New Jersey.
Henry G. Morse, an accomplished engineer with 25 years of experience building iron bridges, railroad tunnels, and other infrastructure projects, founded the New York Shipbuilding Corporation in 1899 with a revolutionary vision: applying assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding.<ref name="mlc-nys" /> After securing substantial financing from Pittsburgh's industrial elite — including Andrew Mellon as primary investor, Henry Clay Frick, and steel magnates Henry and Jay Phipps — Morse established the facility in Camden, New Jersey.


Camden proved an inspired choice, offering established iron industry infrastructure, strategic Delaware River access directly across from Philadelphia, abundant land for future expansion, and excellent rail connections to the national network. Morse's groundbreaking approach included applying bridge construction methods to shipbuilding, introducing assembly-line production with interchangeable parts, building covered shipways for all-weather construction, and connecting all yard sections with overhead cranes.
Camden proved an inspired choice, offering established iron industry infrastructure, strategic Delaware River access directly across from Philadelphia, abundant land for future expansion, and excellent rail connections to the national network. Morse's groundbreaking approach included applying bridge construction methods to shipbuilding, introducing assembly-line production with interchangeable parts, building covered shipways for all-weather construction, and connecting all yard sections with overhead cranes.


By 1917, New York Shipbuilding had become the world's largest shipyard. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including 25% of first-line battleships and 43% of second-line battleships.
By 1917, New York Shipbuilding had become the world's largest shipyard. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including 25% of first-line battleships and 43% of second-line battleships.<ref name="mlc-nys" />


"New York Shipbuilding represents one of the most significant occupational asbestos exposure sites in American history," explains '''Paul Danziger''', Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano. "The 30,000+ workers who built America's naval supremacy deserve full compensation for the diseases they developed."
"New York Shipbuilding represents one of the most significant occupational [[Asbestos Exposure|asbestos exposure]] sites in American history," explains '''Paul Danziger''', Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-asbestos" /> "The 30,000+ workers who built America's naval supremacy deserve full compensation for the diseases they developed."


=== Economic and Community Impact ===
=== Economic and Community Impact ===


At its peak, New York Shipbuilding employed over 30,000 workers—approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000—making the shipyard the dominant employer in the region. The facility's payroll supported not just workers and their families but also thousands of local businesses, from restaurants to rooming houses to retail stores.
At its peak, New York Shipbuilding employed over 30,000 workers — approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000 — making the shipyard the dominant employer in the region.<ref name="mlc-nys" /> The facility's payroll supported not just workers and their families but also thousands of local businesses, from restaurants to rooming houses to retail stores.


The concentration of workers created tight-knit communities throughout Camden and surrounding South Jersey towns, where multiple generations of families worked at the yard. When asbestos diseases began manifesting decades later, entire neighborhoods experienced the loss of fathers, grandfathers, and neighbors to mesothelioma and asbestosis. The closure of the shipyard in 1967, combined with the delayed health impacts that followed, fundamentally transformed Camden from a prosperous industrial city into one struggling with economic decline.
The concentration of workers created tight-knit communities throughout Camden and surrounding South Jersey towns, where multiple generations of families worked at the yard. When asbestos diseases began manifesting decades later, entire neighborhoods experienced the loss of fathers, grandfathers, and neighbors to mesothelioma and asbestosis. The closure of the shipyard in 1967, combined with the delayed health impacts that followed, fundamentally transformed Camden from a prosperous industrial city into one struggling with economic decline.


Today, the former shipyard's transformation into the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal represents an economic revival, while USS New Jersey—berthed at the site since 1999—serves as a memorial to the workers who built her and the many who died from the exposure they suffered during construction.
Today, the former shipyard's transformation into the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal represents an economic revival, while USS New Jersey — berthed at the site since 1999 — serves as a memorial to the workers who built her and the many who died from the exposure they suffered during construction.


== What Vessels Did New York Shipbuilding Build? ==
== What Vessels Did New York Shipbuilding Build? ==


The shipyard's production roster reads like a who's who of American naval history.
The shipyard's production roster reads like a who's who of American naval history.<ref name="mlc-nys" />


=== Battleships ===
=== Battleships ===
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=== Heavy Cruisers ===
=== Heavy Cruisers ===


'''USS Indianapolis (CA-35)''' served as Admiral Raymond Spruance's flagship from 1943-1945. In July 1945, she delivered atomic bomb components to Tinian, but on July 30, Japanese submarine I-58 torpedoed her, resulting in the worst naval disaster in U.S. history—only 316 of 1,196 crew members survived.
'''USS Indianapolis (CA-35)''' served as Admiral Raymond Spruance's flagship from 1943-1945. In July 1945, she delivered atomic bomb components to Tinian, but on July 30, Japanese submarine I-58 torpedoed her, resulting in the worst naval disaster in U.S. history — only 316 of 1,196 crew members survived.<ref name="mnet-navy" />


=== Aircraft Carriers ===
=== Aircraft Carriers ===


'''USS Saratoga (CV-3)''' became the U.S. Navy's first "fast" carrier, capable of 33.91 knots. She survived the entire war—one of only three pre-war carriers to do so.
'''USS Saratoga (CV-3)''' became the U.S. Navy's first "fast" carrier, capable of 33.91 knots. She survived the entire war — one of only three pre-war carriers to do so.


'''USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63)''' represented the pinnacle of conventional carrier design, serving 48 years until decommissioning in 2009.
'''USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63)''' represented the pinnacle of conventional carrier design, serving 48 years until decommissioning in 2009.<ref name="mnet-navy" />


=== WWII Production ===
=== WWII Production ===
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== What Asbestos Products Were Used at New York Shipbuilding? ==
== What Asbestos Products Were Used at New York Shipbuilding? ==


Asbestos pervaded every shipboard system built at New York Shipbuilding, creating what one report called "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness.
Asbestos pervaded every shipboard system built at New York Shipbuilding, creating what one report called "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness.<ref name="dandell-risk" />


=== Specific Materials ===
=== Specific Materials ===


'''Boiler rooms''' contained insulation with approximately 15% asbestos content, with walls, ceilings, doors, and floors all insulated with asbestos materials.
'''Boiler rooms''' contained insulation with approximately 15% asbestos content, with walls, ceilings, doors, and floors all insulated with asbestos materials.<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />


'''Steam pipes''' throughout ships were wrapped with felt insulation containing 5-50% asbestos.
'''Steam pipes''' throughout ships were wrapped with felt insulation containing 5-50% asbestos.


'''Electrical panels''' were made with asbestos cement and ebonized asbestos lumber, with wire insulation containing 75-85% chrysotile asbestos.
'''Electrical panels''' were made with asbestos cement and ebonized asbestos lumber, with wire insulation containing 75-85% chrysotile asbestos.<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />


'''Arc chutes''' in circuit breakers contained approximately 36% asbestos.
'''Arc chutes''' in circuit breakers contained approximately 36% asbestos.
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'''Transite asbestos cement''' provided structural fire protection throughout vessels.
'''Transite asbestos cement''' provided structural fire protection throughout vessels.


Over 300 different ship parts contained asbestos components.
Over 300 different ship parts contained asbestos components.<ref name="mnet-navy" />


"The evidence typically shows that companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned," notes '''David Foster''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano. "Internal documents revealed Johns Manville President Lewis Brown stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers 'work until they dropped dead.'"
"The evidence typically shows that companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned," notes '''David Foster''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-asbestos" /> "Internal documents revealed Johns Manville President Lewis Brown stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers 'work until they dropped dead.'"<ref name="mlc-jm" />


== Who Faced the Greatest Exposure Risk? ==
== Who Faced the Greatest Exposure Risk? ==
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=== Highest-Risk Occupations ===
=== Highest-Risk Occupations ===


'''Pipefitters and insulators''' worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter—twice as high as non-shipyard settings and 40-200 times current OSHA limits. Studies found 21.2% showed lung abnormalities.
'''[[Plumbers and Pipefitters|Pipefitters]] and [[Insulation Workers|insulators]]''' worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — twice as high as non-shipyard settings and 40-200 times current OSHA limits.<ref name="osha-asbestos" /> Studies found 21.2% showed lung abnormalities.<ref name="dandell-risk" />


'''Boilermakers''' faced perhaps the worst conditions. One report stated "no profession was more exposed to asbestos than boilermakers." They worked in confined boiler rooms where asbestos dust accumulated to dangerous levels.
'''[[Boilermakers]]''' faced perhaps the worst conditions. One report stated "no profession was more exposed to asbestos than boilermakers."<ref name="mlc-shipyard" /> They worked in confined boiler rooms where asbestos dust accumulated to dangerous levels.


'''Electricians''' faced 16 times higher mesothelioma risk than the general population according to a 2018 study. They handled asbestos-containing wire insulation and electrical components throughout vessels.
'''[[Electricians and Asbestos Exposure|Electricians]]''' faced 16 times higher [[Understanding Your Diagnosis|mesothelioma]] risk than the general population according to a 2018 study.<ref name="dandell-risk" /> They handled asbestos-containing wire insulation and electrical components throughout vessels.


'''Welders''' inhaled toxic smoke from asbestos-coated welding rods that broke down during use, in addition to ambient exposure from nearby insulation work.
'''[[Welders and Asbestos Exposure|Welders]]''' inhaled toxic smoke from asbestos-coated welding rods that broke down during use, in addition to ambient exposure from nearby insulation work.<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />


=== Scale of Exposure ===
=== Scale of Exposure ===


During peak operations, over 30,000 workers—approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000—labored in environments saturated with deadly fibers.
During peak operations, over 30,000 workers — approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000 — labored in environments saturated with deadly fibers.<ref name="mlc-nys" />


"We've observed that workers in virtually every trade developed asbestos-related diseases from New York Shipbuilding," explains '''Anna Jackson''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano. "The confined nature of ship construction meant that everyone was exposed."
"We've observed that workers in virtually every trade developed asbestos-related diseases from New York Shipbuilding," explains '''Anna Jackson''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-asbestos" /> "The confined nature of ship construction meant that everyone was exposed."


== What Are the Health Consequences for New York Shipbuilding Workers? ==
== What Are the Health Consequences for New York Shipbuilding Workers? ==


The health consequences documented among New York Shipbuilding workers are devastating:
The health consequences documented among New York Shipbuilding workers are devastating:<ref name="dandell-risk" />


* '''Mesothelioma''' - 5.07 times higher risk, increasing to 6.27x for workers employed 10+ years
* '''Mesothelioma''' 5.07 times higher risk, increasing to 6.27x for workers employed 10+ years
* '''Lung cancer''' - Standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of 1.26
* '''Lung cancer''' Standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of 1.26
* '''Asbestosis''' - Italian shipyard study found SMR of 2,277 (over 2,000 times higher than general population)
* '''Asbestosis''' Italian shipyard study found SMR of 2,277 (over 2,000 times higher than general population)


Approximately 86% of ship repair workers in one analysis developed asbestosis, while 60% of mesothelioma patients also had mild asbestosis. The World Health Organization estimates over 200,000 annual deaths globally from occupational asbestos exposure, representing 70% of all work-related cancer deaths.
Approximately 86% of ship repair workers in one analysis developed asbestosis, while 60% of mesothelioma patients also had mild asbestosis.<ref name="mlc-shipyard" /> The World Health Organization estimates over 200,000 annual deaths globally from occupational asbestos exposure, representing 70% of all work-related cancer deaths.<ref name="cancer-gov" />


"The latency period of asbestos diseases means that workers exposed in the 1940s through 1960s are still developing fatal diseases today," notes '''Larry Gates''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano. "The good news is that compensation remains available."
"The latency period of asbestos diseases means that workers exposed in the 1940s through 1960s are still developing fatal diseases today," notes '''Larry Gates''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-compensation" /> "The good news is that compensation remains available."


== What Did Companies Know About Asbestos Dangers? ==
== What Did Companies Know About Asbestos Dangers? ==


Perhaps most disturbing is the extensive documentation proving companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned:
Perhaps most disturbing is the extensive documentation proving companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned:<ref name="mlc-jm" />


* '''1932''' - Metropolitan Life documented 20% asbestosis rates at Johns Manville factory
* '''1932''' Metropolitan Life documented 20% asbestosis rates at Johns Manville factory
* '''1933''' - When a plant physician requested asbestos warning posters, management rejected them due to "legal situation" concerns
* '''1933''' When a plant physician requested asbestos warning posters, management rejected them due to "legal situation" concerns
* '''1930s''' - Industry-funded studies linked cancer to asbestos, but this information was deliberately suppressed
* '''1930s''' Industry-funded studies linked cancer to asbestos, but this information was deliberately suppressed
* '''1943''' - Navy issued "Minimum Requirements for Safety" recognizing asbestos respiratory risks
* '''1943''' Navy issued "Minimum Requirements for Safety" recognizing asbestos respiratory risks<ref name="va-asbestos" />
* '''1944''' - U.S. Maritime Commission released a report on known asbestos risks in shipbuilding
* '''1944''' U.S. Maritime Commission released a report on known asbestos risks in shipbuilding


Internal corporate documents revealed shocking callousness. A Bendix Corporation memo cynically noted, "If you have enjoyed a good life while working with asbestos products, why not die from it." Dow Chemical conducted a "cost per cancer" analysis, determining that continuing asbestos use was more profitable than a $1.2 billion plant conversion.
Internal corporate documents revealed shocking callousness.<ref name="mlc-jm" /> A Bendix Corporation memo cynically noted, "If you have enjoyed a good life while working with asbestos products, why not die from it." Dow Chemical conducted a "cost per cancer" analysis, determining that continuing asbestos use was more profitable than a $1.2 billion plant conversion.


== What Legal Verdicts Have Workers Received? ==
== What Legal Verdicts Have Workers Received? ==


Major verdicts demonstrate the significant compensation available:
Major verdicts demonstrate the significant compensation available:<ref name="dandell-settlements" />


* '''$25 million''' - Virginia shipfitter
* '''$25 million''' Virginia shipfitter
* '''$115 million''' - 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses
* '''$115 million''' 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses
* '''$8.45 million''' - Plumber exposed to boiler asbestos
* '''$8.45 million''' Plumber exposed to boiler asbestos


Over 60 active bankruptcy trusts contain more than $30 billion for victims, with multiple trusts recognizing New York Shipbuilding as a confirmed exposure site.
Over 60 active bankruptcy trusts contain more than $30 billion for victims, with multiple trusts recognizing New York Shipbuilding as a confirmed exposure site.<ref name="dandell-trusts" />


"Workers can pursue both trust fund claims and lawsuits against solvent defendants simultaneously," explains '''Paul Danziger''', Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano. "This multi-track approach maximizes total compensation."
"Workers can pursue both trust fund claims and lawsuits against solvent defendants simultaneously," explains '''Paul Danziger''', Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-compensation" /> "This multi-track approach maximizes total compensation."


== How Do Workers File Compensation Claims? ==
== How Do Workers File Compensation Claims? ==
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=== New Jersey Statute of Limitations ===
=== New Jersey Statute of Limitations ===


New Jersey provides a 2-year statute of limitations from diagnosis for personal injury claims. The discovery rule starts the clock at diagnosis rather than exposure date.
New Jersey provides a 2-year statute of limitations from diagnosis for personal injury claims.<ref name="mattorney" /> The discovery rule starts the clock at diagnosis rather than exposure date.


=== Required Documentation ===
=== Required Documentation ===


Successful claims require:
Successful claims require:<ref name="dandell-compensation" />


* Medical records confirming asbestos-related disease diagnosis
* Medical records confirming asbestos-related disease diagnosis
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=== Multi-Track Compensation Strategy ===
=== Multi-Track Compensation Strategy ===


# '''Asbestos bankruptcy trusts''' - File against Johns-Manville, Owens-Corning, and other suppliers
# '''Asbestos bankruptcy trusts''' File against Johns-Manville, Owens-Corning, and other suppliers<ref name="dandell-trusts" />
# '''Personal injury lawsuits''' - Pursue solvent defendants for additional compensation
# '''Personal injury lawsuits''' Pursue solvent defendants for additional compensation<ref name="dandell-settlements" />
# '''VA benefits''' - Veterans receive automatic 100% disability for mesothelioma ($4,044.91+ monthly)
# '''[[Veterans Benefits|VA benefits]]''' Veterans receive automatic 100% disability for mesothelioma ($4,044.91+ monthly)<ref name="dandell-veterans" />
# '''Workers' compensation''' - Longshore Act benefits may apply
# '''Workers' compensation''' Longshore Act benefits may apply<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />


"Time is critical in asbestos cases," emphasizes '''Michelle Whitman''', Attorney at Danziger & De Llano. "We work on contingency with no upfront costs."
"Time is critical in asbestos cases," emphasizes '''Paul Danziger''', Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-compensation" /> "We work on contingency with no upfront costs."


== What Is the Current Status of the Site? ==
== What Is the Current Status of the Site? ==


Today, the former shipyard site operates as the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal, handling over 2 million tons of cargo annually since reopening in 1971. The 180-acre complex ranks among America's largest ports, with storage capacity exceeding 1.1 million square feet.
Today, the former shipyard site operates as the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal, handling over 2 million tons of cargo annually since reopening in 1971.<ref name="mlc-nys" /> The 180-acre complex ranks among America's largest ports, with storage capacity exceeding 1.1 million square feet.


'''USS New Jersey''' arrived on Veterans Day 1999 to serve as a museum ship, drawing 50,000 onlookers. Opening October 15, 2001, the battleship attracted over 500,000 visitors in its first three years and continues offering daily tours.
'''USS New Jersey''' arrived on Veterans Day 1999 to serve as a museum ship, drawing 50,000 onlookers. Opening October 15, 2001, the battleship attracted over 500,000 visitors in its first three years and continues offering daily tours.
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== How Did Secondary Exposure Affect Families? ==
== How Did Secondary Exposure Affect Families? ==


Workers' families faced significant secondary exposure from contaminated work clothing and equipment. Studies documented that workers brought asbestos home daily on clothing, shoes, hair, and personal items.
Workers' families faced significant [[Secondary Exposure|secondary exposure]] from contaminated work clothing and equipment.<ref name="dandell-secondary" /> Studies documented that workers brought asbestos home daily on clothing, shoes, hair, and personal items.


Research on shipyard workers' families found:
Research on shipyard workers' families found:<ref name="mnet-shipyard" />


* '''11% of wives''' developed lung abnormalities
* '''11% of wives''' developed lung abnormalities
Line 194: Line 261:
* '''2.1% of daughters''' developed asbestos-related disease
* '''2.1% of daughters''' developed asbestos-related disease


"We've represented numerous family members who developed mesothelioma from secondary exposure," notes '''Yvette Abrego''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano. "These cases require documentation of the household exposure pathway, but they remain fully compensable."
"We've represented numerous family members who developed mesothelioma from secondary exposure," notes '''Yvette Abrego''', Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.<ref name="dandell-secondary" /> "These cases require documentation of the household exposure pathway, but they remain fully compensable."
 
The secondary exposure problem was compounded by the shipyard's failure to provide any decontamination facilities or work clothes cleaning services during its peak asbestos use period. Workers wore their contaminated clothing home, embraced family members, and sat on household furniture — all while covered in invisible asbestos fibers. Wives who laundered these garments faced particularly concentrated exposure, shaking out dust-laden clothes that released millions of microscopic fibers into the home environment. The fibers embedded in carpets, upholstery, and ventilation systems, creating long-term household contamination that continued exposing family members for years.
 
== Frequently Asked Questions ==
 
=== Can I still file a claim if I worked at New York Shipbuilding decades ago? ===
 
Yes. New Jersey's discovery rule starts the 2-year statute of limitations from the date of diagnosis, not the date of exposure.<ref name="mattorney" /> Because mesothelioma has a latency period of 20-50 years, workers exposed in the 1940s through 1960s are still receiving new diagnoses and filing successful claims today.<ref name="dandell-compensation" />
 
=== What compensation is available for New York Shipbuilding workers? ===
 
Workers can pursue multiple compensation sources simultaneously: asbestos bankruptcy trust fund claims (60+ trusts holding $30 billion+), personal injury lawsuits against solvent defendants, VA disability benefits for veterans (100% disability rating for mesothelioma), and workers' compensation through the Longshore Act.<ref name="dandell-trusts" /> Major verdicts for shipyard workers have reached $25 million and higher.<ref name="dandell-settlements" />
 
=== Which jobs at the shipyard had the highest asbestos exposure? ===
 
Pipefitters and insulators faced the greatest exposure at 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — 40-200 times current OSHA limits.<ref name="osha-asbestos" /> Boilermakers, electricians (16x higher mesothelioma risk), and welders also faced extreme exposure.<ref name="dandell-risk" /> However, the confined nature of ship construction meant that workers in virtually every trade were exposed to dangerous levels of asbestos fibers.<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />
 
=== Are family members of shipyard workers eligible for compensation? ===
 
Yes. Studies have documented significant rates of asbestos-related disease among family members through secondary (take-home) exposure — 11% of wives, 7.6% of sons, and 2.1% of daughters developed lung abnormalities.<ref name="mnet-shipyard" /> Family members who laundered contaminated work clothes or lived in households with shipyard workers may be eligible for compensation.<ref name="dandell-secondary" />
 
=== Do veterans who served on ships built at New York Shipbuilding qualify for VA benefits? ===
 
Veterans diagnosed with mesothelioma automatically receive a 100% disability rating from the VA, providing monthly compensation of $4,044.91 or more.<ref name="dandell-veterans" /> Additional benefits include Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for surviving spouses and Aid & Attendance for those needing daily assistance.<ref name="mnet-veterans" />
 
=== How much asbestos was in ships built at New York Shipbuilding? ===
 
Each vessel contained over 300 different asbestos-containing parts.<ref name="mnet-navy" /> Asbestos was used in boiler insulation (15% asbestos content), steam pipe wrapping (5-50% asbestos), electrical panels (75-85% chrysotile asbestos in wire insulation), circuit breaker arc chutes (36% asbestos), and transite structural panels throughout the ship.<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />
 
=== What is the latency period for mesothelioma from shipyard exposure? ===
 
Mesothelioma typically develops 20-50 years after initial asbestos exposure.<ref name="cancer-gov" /> This means workers exposed during New York Shipbuilding's peak operations in the 1940s and 1950s have continued receiving new diagnoses into the 2000s and beyond. The long latency period is why the discovery rule — starting the statute of limitations from diagnosis — is critical for protecting workers' legal rights.<ref name="dandell-compensation" />
 
== Quick Statistics ==
 
* '''68 years of operation''' — New York Shipbuilding operated from 1899 to 1967<ref name="mlc-nys" />
* '''World's largest shipyard by 1917''' — surpassing all competitors in output and facility size<ref name="mlc-nys" />
* '''30% of Navy battleships''' — by 1921, nearly one-third of all U.S. Navy battleships in commission were built at the yard<ref name="mlc-nys" />
* '''300+ asbestos-containing parts''' — every vessel contained hundreds of components with asbestos materials<ref name="mnet-navy" />
* '''86% asbestosis rate''' — among ship repair workers in analyzed cohort studies<ref name="mlc-shipyard" />
* '''200,000+ annual deaths globally''' — WHO estimate for occupational asbestos exposure fatalities<ref name="cancer-gov" />
* '''$25 million top verdict''' — awarded to a Virginia shipfitter in asbestos litigation<ref name="dandell-settlements" />
* '''$115 million group verdict''' — awarded to 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses<ref name="dandell-settlements" />
* '''60+ active trusts''' — bankruptcy trusts holding $30 billion+ for asbestos disease victims<ref name="dandell-trusts" />
* '''$4,044.91+ monthly''' — VA disability compensation for veterans with mesothelioma (100% rating)<ref name="dandell-veterans" />
 
== Get Help ==
 
If you or a loved one worked at New York Shipbuilding Corporation and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, experienced attorneys can help you explore your legal options.
 
* '''Free Case Evaluation''' — [https://dandell.com/contact-us/ Contact Danziger & De Llano] or call (866) 222-9990
* '''Find a Mesothelioma Attorney''' — [https://mesotheliomalawyersnearme.com/ Mesothelioma Lawyers Near Me]
* '''Patient Resources''' — [https://mesothelioma.net/ Mesothelioma.net]
 
== Related Pages ==
 
* [[Newport News Shipbuilding]] — Virginia naval shipyard with similar WWII-era asbestos exposure patterns
* [[Brooklyn Navy Yard]] — New York naval facility with 70,000 peak WWII workers and documented asbestos contamination
* [[Norfolk Naval Shipyard]] — Portsmouth, Virginia yard with 43,000 peak employment and extensive asbestos use
* [[Shipyard Exposure Index]] — Complete database of documented shipyard exposure sites across the United States
* [[Electricians and Asbestos Exposure]] — Occupational profile for electricians facing 16x mesothelioma risk
* [[Boilermakers]] — Extreme-risk occupation profile for workers in confined boiler rooms
* [[Plumbers and Pipefitters]] — Very high-risk occupation facing 4-20 fibers/cc exposure levels
* [[Secondary Exposure]] — Guide to take-home asbestos exposure affecting family members
* [[Asbestos Trust Funds]] — Overview of 60+ active trusts holding $30 billion+ for victims
* [[Veterans Benefits]] — VA disability, DIC, and Aid & Attendance for mesothelioma veterans
 
== See Also ==


The secondary exposure problem was compounded by the shipyard's failure to provide any decontamination facilities or work clothes cleaning services during its peak asbestos use period. Workers wore their contaminated clothing home, embraced family members, and sat on household furniture—all while covered in invisible asbestos fibers. Wives who laundered these garments faced particularly concentrated exposure, shaking out dust-laden clothes that released millions of microscopic fibers into the home environment. The fibers embedded in carpets, upholstery, and ventilation systems, creating long-term household contamination that continued exposing family members for years.
* [[Todd Shipyards]]
* [[Bethlehem Shipbuilding]]
* [[Fore River Shipyard]]
* [[Insulation Workers]]
* [[Occupational Exposure Index]]
* [[Statute of Limitations by State]]


== References ==
== References ==


* [https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-lawyer/new-york/ New York Mesothelioma Lawyers | Danziger & De Llano]
<references>
* [https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/mesothelioma-diagnosis/mesothelioma-risk-shipyard-oil-construction-workers-most-at-risk/ Mesothelioma Risk: Shipyard, Oil & Construction Workers]
<ref name="dandell-risk">[https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/mesothelioma-diagnosis/mesothelioma-risk-shipyard-oil-construction-workers-most-at-risk/ Mesothelioma Risk: Shipyard, Oil & Construction Workers], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-compensation/ Mesothelioma Compensation | Danziger & De Llano]
<ref name="dandell-compensation">[https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-compensation/ Mesothelioma Compensation], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/mesothelioma-asbestos-trust-fund-payouts/ Mesothelioma and Asbestos Trust Fund Payouts Guide]
<ref name="dandell-trusts">[https://dandell.com/mesothelioma/mesothelioma-asbestos-trust-fund-payouts/ Mesothelioma and Asbestos Trust Fund Payouts Guide], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/settlements/ Mesothelioma Settlements | Danziger & De Llano]
<ref name="dandell-settlements">[https://dandell.com/settlements/ Mesothelioma Settlements], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/ Asbestos Exposure Lawyers | Danziger & De Llano]
<ref name="dandell-asbestos">[https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/ Asbestos Exposure Lawyers], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-veterans/ Veterans & Mesothelioma Claims | Danziger & De Llano]
<ref name="dandell-veterans">[https://dandell.com/mesothelioma-veterans/ Veterans & Mesothelioma Claims], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/secondary-exposure-to-asbestos-risks-legal-rights/ Secondary Exposure to Asbestos: Risks and Legal Rights]
<ref name="dandell-secondary">[https://dandell.com/asbestos-exposure/secondary-exposure-to-asbestos-risks-legal-rights/ Secondary Exposure to Asbestos: Risks and Legal Rights], Danziger & De Llano</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/entity/new-york-shipbuilding-corporation/ New York Shipbuilding Corporation | Mesothelioma Lawyer Center]
<ref name="mlc-nys">[https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/entity/new-york-shipbuilding-corporation/ New York Shipbuilding Corporation], Mesothelioma Lawyer Center</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/entity/shipyards/ Shipyards & Dockyards Explained | Mesothelioma Lawyer Center]
<ref name="mlc-shipyard">[https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/blog/shipyard-asbestos-exposure-legal-options/ Shipyard Asbestos Exposure: Legal Options], Mesothelioma Lawyer Center</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/blog/shipyard-asbestos-exposure-legal-options/ Shipyard Asbestos Exposure: Legal Options]
<ref name="mlc-jm">[https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/asbestos/manufacturers/johns-manville/ Johns-Manville: Asbestos Use, Lawsuit and Trust Fund], Mesothelioma Lawyer Center</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/asbestos/manufacturers/johns-manville/ Johns-Manville | Asbestos Use, Lawsuit and Trust Fund]
<ref name="mnet-shipyard">[https://mesothelioma.net/shipyard-workers-asbestos-exposure/ Shipyard Workers and Asbestos Exposure], Mesothelioma.net</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomalawyercenter.org/asbestos/manufacturers/owens-corning-corporation/ Owens Corning Corporation | Asbestos Products and Trust Fund]
<ref name="mnet-navy">[https://mesothelioma.net/asbestos-navy-ships/ Asbestos in Navy Ships], Mesothelioma.net</ref>
* [https://mesothelioma.net/shipyard-workers-asbestos-exposure/ Shipyard Workers and Asbestos Exposure | Mesothelioma Risks]
<ref name="mnet-veterans">[https://mesothelioma.net/mesothelioma-and-veterans/ Mesothelioma and Veterans], Mesothelioma.net</ref>
* [https://mesothelioma.net/asbestos-navy-ships/ Asbestos in Navy Ships | Navy Veteran Mesothelioma Risk]
<ref name="mattorney">[https://www.mesotheliomaattorney.com New Jersey Mesothelioma Attorney Resources], MesotheliomaAttorney.com</ref>
* [https://mesothelioma.net/mesothelioma-and-veterans/ Mesothelioma and Veterans | VA Benefits and Healthcare]
<ref name="osha-asbestos">[https://www.osha.gov/asbestos Asbestos], Occupational Safety and Health Administration</ref>
* [https://mesothelioma.net/brooklyn-navy-yard/ Brooklyn Navy Yard | Asbestos Exposure and Mesothelioma]
<ref name="va-asbestos">[https://www.va.gov/disability/eligibility/hazardous-materials-exposure/asbestos/ VA Asbestos Exposure], U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs</ref>
* [https://www.mesotheliomaattorney.com New Jersey Mesothelioma Attorney Resources]
<ref name="cancer-gov">[https://www.cancer.gov/types/mesothelioma Mesothelioma Treatment], National Cancer Institute</ref>
</references>


[[Category:Shipyards]]
[[Category:Shipyards]]

Latest revision as of 09:56, 6 April 2026


New York Shipbuilding Corporation
Camden, New Jersey (1899-1967)
Location Camden, New Jersey
Peak Employment 30,000+ (WWII)
Current Status Closed (1967)
Vessels Built 670+
Mesothelioma Risk 5.07x higher
Risk Level Extreme
Free Case Review →

Executive Summary

The New York Shipbuilding Corporation in Camden, New Jersey built over 670 vessels during its 68-year history from 1899 to 1967, at one point becoming the world's largest and most productive shipbuilding facility with over 30,000 workers at its World War II peak.[1] Founded by Henry G. Morse with revolutionary vision, the facility applied assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding decades before other yards adopted similar methods. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including legendary vessels such as USS South Dakota, USS Indianapolis, and USS Saratoga — the Navy's first "fast" carrier capable of 33.91 knots.

The facility created what industrial hygienists describe as "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness. A landmark epidemiological study found shipyard workers have 5.07 times higher mesothelioma mortality risk compared to the general population, with risk increasing to 6.27 times for those employed ten years or longer.[2] Pipefitters and insulators worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — 40-200 times current OSHA safety limits[3] — with 21.2% showing lung abnormalities. An Italian shipyard study found an asbestosis standardized mortality ratio of 2,277, meaning workers were over 2,000 times more likely to die from asbestosis than the general population.

The legal landscape for New York Shipbuilding workers has produced substantial compensation. Major verdicts include $25 million for a Virginia shipfitter and $115 million for 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses.[4] Corporate documents revealed shocking callousness, with Johns Manville's president stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers "work until they dropped dead."[5] Over 60 active bankruptcy trusts contain more than $30 billion for victims, while New Jersey's 2-year statute of limitations from diagnosis preserves legal options for workers developing symptoms decades after exposure.[6]

At a Glance

  • 5.07x higher mesothelioma risk — shipyard workers face more than five times the general population's mortality risk from mesothelioma[2]
  • 6.27x risk for long-term workers — employees with 10+ years at the yard face even greater danger[2]
  • 40-200x OSHA limits — pipefitters and insulators breathed 4-20 fibers/cc, far exceeding the current 0.1 f/cc standard[3]
  • 30,000+ workers exposed — peak WWII employment represented roughly 25% of Camden's total population[7]
  • 670+ vessels built — warships, carriers, cruisers, and landing craft over 68 years of operation[7]
  • $30 billion+ in trust funds — over 60 active bankruptcy trusts hold compensation for asbestos victims[8]
  • 2-year filing deadline — New Jersey's statute of limitations runs from date of diagnosis, not date of exposure[9]
  • 100% VA disability — veterans with mesothelioma automatically qualify for $4,044.91+ per month[10]

Key Facts

Metric Finding
Mesothelioma mortality risk 5.07x higher than general population (epidemiological cohort study)[2]
Long-term worker risk (10+ years) 6.27x higher mortality risk[2]
Airborne fiber concentration 4-20 fibers/cc for pipefitters and insulators (OSHA limit: 0.1 f/cc)[3]
Lung abnormality rate 21.2% of pipefitters and insulators showed radiographic changes[2]
Asbestosis SMR (shipyard cohort) 2,277 — over 2,000x the expected death rate (Italian shipyard study)[9]
Peak employment 30,000+ workers during WWII[7]
Total vessels constructed 670+ across 68 years (1899-1967)[7]
Asbestos-containing ship parts 300+ distinct components per vessel[11]
Electrician mesothelioma risk 16x higher than general population (2018 study)[2]
Ship repair worker asbestosis rate 86% developed asbestosis in analyzed cohort[12]
Available compensation $30 billion+ across 60+ active bankruptcy trusts[8]
New Jersey filing deadline 2 years from date of diagnosis (discovery rule)[9]

What Was New York Shipbuilding Corporation?

Henry G. Morse, an accomplished engineer with 25 years of experience building iron bridges, railroad tunnels, and other infrastructure projects, founded the New York Shipbuilding Corporation in 1899 with a revolutionary vision: applying assembly-line production and interchangeable parts concepts to shipbuilding.[7] After securing substantial financing from Pittsburgh's industrial elite — including Andrew Mellon as primary investor, Henry Clay Frick, and steel magnates Henry and Jay Phipps — Morse established the facility in Camden, New Jersey.

Camden proved an inspired choice, offering established iron industry infrastructure, strategic Delaware River access directly across from Philadelphia, abundant land for future expansion, and excellent rail connections to the national network. Morse's groundbreaking approach included applying bridge construction methods to shipbuilding, introducing assembly-line production with interchangeable parts, building covered shipways for all-weather construction, and connecting all yard sections with overhead cranes.

By 1917, New York Shipbuilding had become the world's largest shipyard. By 1921, 30% of all battleships in commission in the U.S. Navy were New York Ship products, including 25% of first-line battleships and 43% of second-line battleships.[7]

"New York Shipbuilding represents one of the most significant occupational asbestos exposure sites in American history," explains Paul Danziger, Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.[13] "The 30,000+ workers who built America's naval supremacy deserve full compensation for the diseases they developed."

Economic and Community Impact

At its peak, New York Shipbuilding employed over 30,000 workers — approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000 — making the shipyard the dominant employer in the region.[7] The facility's payroll supported not just workers and their families but also thousands of local businesses, from restaurants to rooming houses to retail stores.

The concentration of workers created tight-knit communities throughout Camden and surrounding South Jersey towns, where multiple generations of families worked at the yard. When asbestos diseases began manifesting decades later, entire neighborhoods experienced the loss of fathers, grandfathers, and neighbors to mesothelioma and asbestosis. The closure of the shipyard in 1967, combined with the delayed health impacts that followed, fundamentally transformed Camden from a prosperous industrial city into one struggling with economic decline.

Today, the former shipyard's transformation into the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal represents an economic revival, while USS New Jersey — berthed at the site since 1999 — serves as a memorial to the workers who built her and the many who died from the exposure they suffered during construction.

What Vessels Did New York Shipbuilding Build?

The shipyard's production roster reads like a who's who of American naval history.[7]

Battleships

USS South Dakota (BB-57), commissioned March 20, 1942, served with distinction throughout the Pacific War, downing 26 Japanese aircraft at the Battle of Santa Cruz Islands.

USS Oklahoma (BB-37), part of the revolutionary Nevada-class as America's first oil-burning dreadnoughts, met tragedy at Pearl Harbor when five torpedoes caused her to capsize in just 20 minutes, with the loss of 429 crew members.

Heavy Cruisers

USS Indianapolis (CA-35) served as Admiral Raymond Spruance's flagship from 1943-1945. In July 1945, she delivered atomic bomb components to Tinian, but on July 30, Japanese submarine I-58 torpedoed her, resulting in the worst naval disaster in U.S. history — only 316 of 1,196 crew members survived.[11]

Aircraft Carriers

USS Saratoga (CV-3) became the U.S. Navy's first "fast" carrier, capable of 33.91 knots. She survived the entire war — one of only three pre-war carriers to do so.

USS Kitty Hawk (CV-63) represented the pinnacle of conventional carrier design, serving 48 years until decommissioning in 2009.[11]

WWII Production

  • Nine Independence-class light carriers
  • All three Alaska-class "large cruisers"
  • Four Baltimore-class heavy cruisers
  • 98 Landing Craft Tank vessels (many participated in D-Day)

What Asbestos Products Were Used at New York Shipbuilding?

Asbestos pervaded every shipboard system built at New York Shipbuilding, creating what one report called "an asbestos den" where workers couldn't see across rooms due to dust thickness.[2]

Specific Materials

Boiler rooms contained insulation with approximately 15% asbestos content, with walls, ceilings, doors, and floors all insulated with asbestos materials.[9]

Steam pipes throughout ships were wrapped with felt insulation containing 5-50% asbestos.

Electrical panels were made with asbestos cement and ebonized asbestos lumber, with wire insulation containing 75-85% chrysotile asbestos.[12]

Arc chutes in circuit breakers contained approximately 36% asbestos.

Transite asbestos cement provided structural fire protection throughout vessels.

Over 300 different ship parts contained asbestos components.[11]

"The evidence typically shows that companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned," notes David Foster, Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.[13] "Internal documents revealed Johns Manville President Lewis Brown stating in the 1940s that the company saved money by letting workers 'work until they dropped dead.'"[5]

Who Faced the Greatest Exposure Risk?

Highest-Risk Occupations

Pipefitters and insulators worked in average airborne fiber concentrations of 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — twice as high as non-shipyard settings and 40-200 times current OSHA limits.[3] Studies found 21.2% showed lung abnormalities.[2]

Boilermakers faced perhaps the worst conditions. One report stated "no profession was more exposed to asbestos than boilermakers."[12] They worked in confined boiler rooms where asbestos dust accumulated to dangerous levels.

Electricians faced 16 times higher mesothelioma risk than the general population according to a 2018 study.[2] They handled asbestos-containing wire insulation and electrical components throughout vessels.

Welders inhaled toxic smoke from asbestos-coated welding rods that broke down during use, in addition to ambient exposure from nearby insulation work.[9]

Scale of Exposure

During peak operations, over 30,000 workers — approximately 25% of Camden's total population of 118,000 — labored in environments saturated with deadly fibers.[7]

"We've observed that workers in virtually every trade developed asbestos-related diseases from New York Shipbuilding," explains Anna Jackson, Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.[13] "The confined nature of ship construction meant that everyone was exposed."

What Are the Health Consequences for New York Shipbuilding Workers?

The health consequences documented among New York Shipbuilding workers are devastating:[2]

  • Mesothelioma — 5.07 times higher risk, increasing to 6.27x for workers employed 10+ years
  • Lung cancer — Standardized mortality ratio (SMR) of 1.26
  • Asbestosis — Italian shipyard study found SMR of 2,277 (over 2,000 times higher than general population)

Approximately 86% of ship repair workers in one analysis developed asbestosis, while 60% of mesothelioma patients also had mild asbestosis.[12] The World Health Organization estimates over 200,000 annual deaths globally from occupational asbestos exposure, representing 70% of all work-related cancer deaths.[14]

"The latency period of asbestos diseases means that workers exposed in the 1940s through 1960s are still developing fatal diseases today," notes Larry Gates, Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.[6] "The good news is that compensation remains available."

What Did Companies Know About Asbestos Dangers?

Perhaps most disturbing is the extensive documentation proving companies knew of asbestos dangers decades before workers were warned:[5]

  • 1932 — Metropolitan Life documented 20% asbestosis rates at Johns Manville factory
  • 1933 — When a plant physician requested asbestos warning posters, management rejected them due to "legal situation" concerns
  • 1930s — Industry-funded studies linked cancer to asbestos, but this information was deliberately suppressed
  • 1943 — Navy issued "Minimum Requirements for Safety" recognizing asbestos respiratory risks[1]
  • 1944 — U.S. Maritime Commission released a report on known asbestos risks in shipbuilding

Internal corporate documents revealed shocking callousness.[5] A Bendix Corporation memo cynically noted, "If you have enjoyed a good life while working with asbestos products, why not die from it." Dow Chemical conducted a "cost per cancer" analysis, determining that continuing asbestos use was more profitable than a $1.2 billion plant conversion.

Major verdicts demonstrate the significant compensation available:[4]

  • $25 million — Virginia shipfitter
  • $115 million — 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses
  • $8.45 million — Plumber exposed to boiler asbestos

Over 60 active bankruptcy trusts contain more than $30 billion for victims, with multiple trusts recognizing New York Shipbuilding as a confirmed exposure site.[8]

"Workers can pursue both trust fund claims and lawsuits against solvent defendants simultaneously," explains Paul Danziger, Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.[6] "This multi-track approach maximizes total compensation."

How Do Workers File Compensation Claims?

New Jersey Statute of Limitations

New Jersey provides a 2-year statute of limitations from diagnosis for personal injury claims.[15] The discovery rule starts the clock at diagnosis rather than exposure date.

Required Documentation

Successful claims require:[6]

  • Medical records confirming asbestos-related disease diagnosis
  • Employment records from New York Shipbuilding with dates and job titles
  • Evidence of specific asbestos products encountered
  • Documentation of specific vessels worked on
  • Witness statements from coworkers if available

Multi-Track Compensation Strategy

  1. Asbestos bankruptcy trusts — File against Johns-Manville, Owens-Corning, and other suppliers[8]
  2. Personal injury lawsuits — Pursue solvent defendants for additional compensation[4]
  3. VA benefits — Veterans receive automatic 100% disability for mesothelioma ($4,044.91+ monthly)[10]
  4. Workers' compensation — Longshore Act benefits may apply[12]

"Time is critical in asbestos cases," emphasizes Paul Danziger, Founding Partner at Danziger & De Llano.[6] "We work on contingency with no upfront costs."

What Is the Current Status of the Site?

Today, the former shipyard site operates as the Port of Camden's Broadway Terminal, handling over 2 million tons of cargo annually since reopening in 1971.[7] The 180-acre complex ranks among America's largest ports, with storage capacity exceeding 1.1 million square feet.

USS New Jersey arrived on Veterans Day 1999 to serve as a museum ship, drawing 50,000 onlookers. Opening October 15, 2001, the battleship attracted over 500,000 visitors in its first three years and continues offering daily tours.

Historic Preservation

The Camden County Historical Society maintains 31 linear feet of New York Shipbuilding Corporation records. In 2015, the New Jersey Historic Preservation Office deemed the shipyard eligible for National and New Jersey Registers of Historic Places.

Fairview (formerly Yorkship Village), America's first federally funded planned community built in 1918 to house shipyard workers, received listing on National and New Jersey State Registers of Historic Places in 1974.

How Did Secondary Exposure Affect Families?

Workers' families faced significant secondary exposure from contaminated work clothing and equipment.[16] Studies documented that workers brought asbestos home daily on clothing, shoes, hair, and personal items.

Research on shipyard workers' families found:[9]

  • 11% of wives developed lung abnormalities
  • 7.6% of sons showed asbestos-related disease
  • 2.1% of daughters developed asbestos-related disease

"We've represented numerous family members who developed mesothelioma from secondary exposure," notes Yvette Abrego, Client Advocate at Danziger & De Llano.[16] "These cases require documentation of the household exposure pathway, but they remain fully compensable."

The secondary exposure problem was compounded by the shipyard's failure to provide any decontamination facilities or work clothes cleaning services during its peak asbestos use period. Workers wore their contaminated clothing home, embraced family members, and sat on household furniture — all while covered in invisible asbestos fibers. Wives who laundered these garments faced particularly concentrated exposure, shaking out dust-laden clothes that released millions of microscopic fibers into the home environment. The fibers embedded in carpets, upholstery, and ventilation systems, creating long-term household contamination that continued exposing family members for years.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I still file a claim if I worked at New York Shipbuilding decades ago?

Yes. New Jersey's discovery rule starts the 2-year statute of limitations from the date of diagnosis, not the date of exposure.[15] Because mesothelioma has a latency period of 20-50 years, workers exposed in the 1940s through 1960s are still receiving new diagnoses and filing successful claims today.[6]

What compensation is available for New York Shipbuilding workers?

Workers can pursue multiple compensation sources simultaneously: asbestos bankruptcy trust fund claims (60+ trusts holding $30 billion+), personal injury lawsuits against solvent defendants, VA disability benefits for veterans (100% disability rating for mesothelioma), and workers' compensation through the Longshore Act.[8] Major verdicts for shipyard workers have reached $25 million and higher.[4]

Which jobs at the shipyard had the highest asbestos exposure?

Pipefitters and insulators faced the greatest exposure at 4-20 fibers per cubic centimeter — 40-200 times current OSHA limits.[3] Boilermakers, electricians (16x higher mesothelioma risk), and welders also faced extreme exposure.[2] However, the confined nature of ship construction meant that workers in virtually every trade were exposed to dangerous levels of asbestos fibers.[12]

Are family members of shipyard workers eligible for compensation?

Yes. Studies have documented significant rates of asbestos-related disease among family members through secondary (take-home) exposure — 11% of wives, 7.6% of sons, and 2.1% of daughters developed lung abnormalities.[9] Family members who laundered contaminated work clothes or lived in households with shipyard workers may be eligible for compensation.[16]

Do veterans who served on ships built at New York Shipbuilding qualify for VA benefits?

Veterans diagnosed with mesothelioma automatically receive a 100% disability rating from the VA, providing monthly compensation of $4,044.91 or more.[10] Additional benefits include Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) for surviving spouses and Aid & Attendance for those needing daily assistance.[17]

How much asbestos was in ships built at New York Shipbuilding?

Each vessel contained over 300 different asbestos-containing parts.[11] Asbestos was used in boiler insulation (15% asbestos content), steam pipe wrapping (5-50% asbestos), electrical panels (75-85% chrysotile asbestos in wire insulation), circuit breaker arc chutes (36% asbestos), and transite structural panels throughout the ship.[12]

What is the latency period for mesothelioma from shipyard exposure?

Mesothelioma typically develops 20-50 years after initial asbestos exposure.[14] This means workers exposed during New York Shipbuilding's peak operations in the 1940s and 1950s have continued receiving new diagnoses into the 2000s and beyond. The long latency period is why the discovery rule — starting the statute of limitations from diagnosis — is critical for protecting workers' legal rights.[6]

Quick Statistics

  • 68 years of operation — New York Shipbuilding operated from 1899 to 1967[7]
  • World's largest shipyard by 1917 — surpassing all competitors in output and facility size[7]
  • 30% of Navy battleships — by 1921, nearly one-third of all U.S. Navy battleships in commission were built at the yard[7]
  • 300+ asbestos-containing parts — every vessel contained hundreds of components with asbestos materials[11]
  • 86% asbestosis rate — among ship repair workers in analyzed cohort studies[12]
  • 200,000+ annual deaths globally — WHO estimate for occupational asbestos exposure fatalities[14]
  • $25 million top verdict — awarded to a Virginia shipfitter in asbestos litigation[4]
  • $115 million group verdict — awarded to 21 steelworkers with asbestos-related illnesses[4]
  • 60+ active trusts — bankruptcy trusts holding $30 billion+ for asbestos disease victims[8]
  • $4,044.91+ monthly — VA disability compensation for veterans with mesothelioma (100% rating)[10]

Get Help

If you or a loved one worked at New York Shipbuilding Corporation and have been diagnosed with mesothelioma or another asbestos-related disease, experienced attorneys can help you explore your legal options.

See Also

References

Page Author: Paul Danziger, Founding Partner, Danziger & De Llano, LLP