Malcom Purcell McLean (born “Malcolm”; but late in life he changed his given name to its historic traditional Scottish spelling) (November 14, 1913 – May 25, 2001), born in Maxton, North Carolina, was an American entrepreneur, often called "the father of containerization". Events 1533 - Conquistadors from Spain under the leadership of Francisco Pizarro arrive in Cajamarca, Inca Year 1913 ( MCMXIII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar of the Gregorian calendar (or a Common Events 1085 - Alfonso VI of Castile takes Toledo Spain back from the Moors. Year 2001 ( MMI) was a Common year starting on Monday according to the Gregorian calendar. Maxton is a town in Robeson County and Scotland County Counties North Carolina, in the United States. Containerization (or containerisation) is a system of Intermodal freight transport Cargo Transport using standard ISO containers In 1956, he developed the metal shipping container, which replaced the traditional break bulk method of handling dry goods and revolutionized the transport of goods and cargo worldwide. Cargo (or freight) refers to goods or produce transported generally for Commercial gain by ship, aircraft, train, He later founded Sea Land Inc. , one of the pioneers in the intermodal cargo transport business. Intermodal freight transport involves the transportation of freight in a container or Vehicle, using multiple modes of Transportation ( [1] McLean was named "Man of the Century" by the International Maritime Hall of Fame. The International Maritime Hall of Fame is a museum honouring people who have made a large contribution in the maritime field
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With only a high school education, McLean pumped gas at a service station near his hometown and saved enough money by 1934 to buy a second-hand truck for $120. He and his sister, Clara McLean, and brother, Jim McLean, founded McLean Trucking Co. Based out of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, McLean Trucking started out hauling empty tobacco barrels – with Malcom as one of the drivers. Winston-Salem is a city in the US state of North Carolina. As of the 2000 census the city population was 185776 in 2004 the city annexed an additional 17483 [2]
From that beginning, with his single pickup truck, he built it into the second-largest trucking company in the U. S. , with 1770 trucks and 32 terminals. On January 6, 1958 (after McLean had sold his interest in the company), McLean Trucking became the first trucking company in the nation to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Events 1066 - Harold Godwinson is crowned King of England. 1205 - Philip of Swabia becomes King Year 1958 ( MCMLVIII) was a Common year starting on Wednesday (link will display full calendar of the Gregorian calendar.
In 1937, McLean was delivering lumber from North Carolina to New Jersey. While sitting on a dock waiting for his truck to be unloaded onto a ship, he was watching other trucks being unloaded. Every crate on every truck had to be unloaded, put in a sling and hoisted up and then down into the hold of the ship. There, more longshoremen took it off the sling and made sure it was properly stowed. This method is called "break-bulk shipping". It was slow and labor intensive, and there was lots of pilferage and accidents. McLean first conceived the idea of using the entire truck trailer itself to load onto and off of a ship. McLean could not develop the idea further because the Interstate Commerce Commission did not, at the time, allow truckers to own shipping companies. The Interstate Commerce Commission (or ICC) was a Regulatory body in the United States created by the Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 which was signed
But in 1955, McLean sold his trucking company for $25 million, moved to New York and bought Pan-Atlantic Steamship Company for $7 million. Sea-Land Service Inc (often referred to by a variety of variations on its name including Sea-Land Services, Sea-Land Corporation, or SeaLand) was a
McLean secured a bank loan for $22 million and in January 1956 bought two World War II T-2 tankers, which he converted to carry containers on and under deck. World War II, or the Second World War, (often abbreviated WWII) was a global military conflict which involved a majority of the world's nations, including McLean oversaw the construction of wooden shelter decks, known as Mechano decking. This was a common practice in World War II for the carriage of oversized cargo, such as aircraft. It took several months to refit the ships, construct containers to carry on and below the vessels’ decks and design trailer chasses to allow removable containers.
In some ways, McLean's vision was nothing new. Beginning in 1929, Seatrain Lines had carried railroad boxcars on its sea vessels to transport goods between New York and Cuba. SeaTrain Lines was a Shipping company most responsible for the introduction of the standard international Shipping container, most commonly 8 foot high by 8 foot Likewise, the idea of putting truck trailers on railroad flatcars was a method of moving less-than-railroad carload shipments economically. This integrated transport concept held the hope of competing with trucks, which were taking more and more of this business from the railroads. From 1926 to 1947, the Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad carried motor carrier vehicles and shippers' vehicles loaded on flatcars between Milwaukee and Chicago. The Chicago North Shore and Milwaukee Railroad, often called the North Shore Line, was an Interurban Railroad line that operated between Chicago In the mid-1930s, the Chicago Great Western Railway and then the New Haven railroad began piggy-back service limited to their own railroad. The Chicago Great Western Railway was a Class I railroad that linked Chicago, Minneapolis, Omaha, and Kansas City. By 1953, the CB&Q, the Eastern Illinois and the Southern Pacific railroads had joined the innovation. Most cars were surplus flatcars equipped with new decks. By 1955, an additional 25 railroads had begun some form of piggy-back trailer service. What was new about McLean's innovation was the idea of using large containers that were never opened in transit between shipper and consignee and that were transferable on an intermodal basis, among trucks, ships and railcars.
Using these concepts, McLean initially favored the construction of "trailerships"-—taking trailers from large trucks and stowing them in a ship’s cargo hold. This method of stowage, referred to as roll-on/roll-off, was not adopted because of the large waste in potential cargo space onboard the vessel, known as broken stowage. See also Merchant ship Roll-on/roll-off (RORO or ro-ro Ships are ferries designed to carry wheeled Cargo such as Instead, he modified his original concept into loading just the containers, not the chassis, onto the ships, hence the designation containership or "box" ship.
On April 26, 1956, with 100 invited dignitaries on hand, one of the converted tankers, the SS Ideal-X (informally dubbed the "SS Maxton" after McLean’s hometown in North Carolina), was loaded and left the Port of Newark, New Jersey, for the Port of Houston, Texas, carrying 58 35-foot containers, along with a regular load of liquid cargo. Events 1467 - The miraculous image in Our Lady of Good Counsel appear in Genazzano, Italy. Year 1956 ( MCMLVI) was a Leap year starting on Sunday (link will display full calendar of the Gregorian calendar. Not to be confused with Port Elizabeth New Jersey Port Newark-Elizabeth Marine Terminal is the name for the port facility in The Port of Houston is the Port of Houston Texas, the fourth-largest city in the United States. As the Ideal-X left the Port of Newark, Freddy Fields, a top official of the International Longshoremen’s Association, was asked what he thought of the newly-fitted container ship. Template talkInfobox Union for usage -->The International Longshoremen's Association is a labor union representing Fields replied, "I’d like to sink that son of a bitch. " McLean flew to Houston to be on hand when the ship safely docked. [2]
In 1956, most cargo was loaded and unloaded by hand by longshoremen. [3] Hand loading a ship cost $5. 86 a ton at that time. Using containers, it cost only 16 cents a ton to load a ship, a 36-fold savings.
In the mid-1950s, mechanization overall was entering the shipping industry as operators tried to increase profit margins. The mechanization they had in mind, however, was larger slingloads, palletization, mechanical conveyor belts and other ways of using more machinery to move break bulk cargoes. A pallet (ˈpæːlɨt (sometimes called a skid) is a flat transport structure that supports goods in a stable fashion while being lifted by a Forklift, Pallet McLean's container concept move the mechanization movement ahead by a quantum leap.
In 1957, the first full-celled container ship, the Sea-Land Gateway City, began regular service between New York, Florida and Texas.
McLean’s operation was profitable by 1961 and he kept adding routes and buying bigger ships.
Pan-Atlantic became Sea-Land Service, Inc in 1960. Sea-Land Service Inc (often referred to by a variety of variations on its name including Sea-Land Services, Sea-Land Corporation, or SeaLand) was a In 1964, McLean opened a 101 acre port at Elizabeth, New Jersey, to handle even more container traffic. The development of the container market was slow until the late 1960s. Many ports did not have the cranes to lift containers on and off ships and change was slow to come to an industry steeped in tradition. Moreover, unions resisted an idea that threatened their very livelihood.
As America's involvement in the Vietnam War grew in the 1960s, McLean profited from carrying cargo to Southeast Asia for US military operations. Ultimately, it took McLean’s success in supplying U. S. forces in Vietnam to persuade the world of the container potential.
To achieve the dramatic reductions in labor and dock servicing time, McLean was vigilant about standardization. His efforts to increase efficiency resulted in standardized container designs that were awarded patent protection. Believing that standardization was also the path to overall industry growth, McLean chose to make his patents available by issuing a royalty-free lease to the Industrial Organization for Standardization (ISO).
The move toward greater standardization helped broaden the possibilities for intermodal transportation. By the end of the 1960s, SeaLand Industries had 27,000 trailer-type containers, 36 trailer ships and access to over 30 port cities.
As the advantages to McLean's container system became apparent, competitors quickly developed. They built bigger ships, larger gantry cranes and more sophisticated containers. Sea Land needed cash to stay competitive. McLean turned to Reynolds Tobacco Company, a company he knew from his trucking company days when his trucks transported Reynolds cigarettes across the U. R J Reynolds Tobacco Company ( RJR) based in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and founded by R S. Reynolds agreed in January 1969 to buy Sea Land for $530 million in cash and stock. McLean made $160 million personally[4] and got a seat on the company’s board. To carry out the purchase, Reynolds formed a holding company, named R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. , which bought Sea Land in May 1969.
Under Reynolds, Sea Land’s profits were intermittent. By the end of 1974, Reynolds had put more than $1 billion into Sea-Land, building huge terminals in New Jersey and Hong Kong and adding to its fleet of containerships.
Sea-Land's biggest expense was fuel, so in 1970, RJR bought the American Independent Oil Co. , better known as Aminoil, for $56 million. RJR put millions into oil exploration, trying to get Aminoil to the size to compete in the world exploration market.
In 1974, R. J. Reynolds Industries had its best year. Sea Land's earnings increased nearly 10 times, to $145 million. Aminoil's earnings soared to $86. 3 million. Dun & Bradstreet, the financial-ratings firm, named RJR one of its five best-managed companies in America. The Dun & Bradstreet Corporation ( headquartered in Short Hills New Jersey, USA, is a provider of credit information on businesses and corporations But in 1975, Sea-Land's earnings dropped sharply, along with Aminoil's.
Increasingly frustrated with the conservative culture within Reynolds, McLean gave up his Reynolds board seat in 1977 and cut ties with the company.
In June 1984, R. J. Reynolds Industries, Inc. spun-off Sea-Land Corporation to shareholders, as an independent, publicly held company, with stock trading on the New York Stock Exchange. Sea-Land achieved the highest revenues and earnings in its 28-year history.
In September 1986, Sea-Land Corporation merged with CSA Acquisition Corp. The A P Moller-Maersk Group ( AP Møller-Mærsk Gruppen) is an international Business conglomerate more commonly known simply as Maersk. , a subsidiary of CSX Corporation. CSX Corporation ( was formed in 1980 by the merger of Chessie System and Seaboard Coast Line Industries and eventually merged the various railroads Sea-Land Corporation common stock was exchanged for $28 per share, cash.
Sea Land’s international services were sold to Maersk in 1999 and the combined company was named "Mærsk Sealand", which, in 2006, became known simply as Mærsk Line. The A P Moller-Maersk Group ( AP Møller-Mærsk Gruppen) is an international Business conglomerate more commonly known simply as Maersk.
The former Sea Land's domestic services now operate as Horizon Lines, Inc. , which accounts for approximately 36% of the total U. S. marine container shipments between the continental U. S. and the markets of Alaska, Hawaii and Puerto Rico, and to Guam. The company is headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina.
In 1978, McLean purchased United States Lines. There, he built a fleet of 4,400-TEU container ships that were the largest afloat at the time. The ships, operating in round-the-world service, were designed in the aftermath of the 1970s oil shortages and were fuel-efficient but slow, and therefore not well-adapted to compete in the subsequent period of cheap oil. USL went bankrupt in 1987. McLean took very personally the criticism directed against him after the collapse of USL and the resulting loss of many jobs associated with and dependent on USL.
In 1991, at 78, McLean founded Trailer Bridge, Inc., which operates between the US mainland (Jacksonville, Florida), Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. Trailer Bridge Inc ( is a freight service company headquartered in Jacksonville Florida that was the first company to provide a unique combination of over-the road and
McLean also developed non-maritime inventions, including a means of lifting a patient from a stretcher onto a hospital bed.
McLean’s "containerization” process of using large containers to hold goods on cargo ships allowed huge increases in port and ship productivity, helping to lower the cost of imported goods. The container transformed economic geography, devastating traditional ports such as New York and London and fueling the growth of previously obscure ones, such as Oakland, California and Tanjung Pelepas, in Malaysia. Oakland (ˈoʊklənd founded in 1852 is the eighth-largest city in the U The Port of Tanjung Pelepas ( Abbreviation: PTP, UN/LOCODE MYTPP) is a Port for Container ships located on the eastern mouth of the Pulai By making shipping so cheap that industry could locate factories far from its customers, the container paved the way for Asia to become the world's workshop and brought consumers a previously unimaginable variety of low-cost products from around the world.
When McLean died at his home on the East Side of Manhattan in 2001, age 87, the US Secretary of Transportation made the following statement:
I would like to extend my deepest sympathies to the family of Malcom McLean. A true giant, Malcom revolutionized the maritime industry in the 20th century. His idea for modernizing the loading and unloading of ships, which was previously conducted in much the same way the ancient Phoenicians did 3,000 years ago, has resulted in much safer and less-expensive transport of goods, faster delivery, and better service. We owe so much to a man of vision, ‘the father of containerization,’ Malcom P. McLean.
– Norman Y. Mineta, Statement of U. S. Transportation on the Death of Malcom P. McLean
McLean died in relative obscurity, although he was influential in the world's economy growth in the 20th century. In an editorial shortly after his death, the Baltimore Sun stated that "he ranks next to Robert Fulton as the greatest revolutionary in the history of maritime trade. The Baltimore Sun (officially just The Sun) is Maryland ’s largest general circulation daily newspaper and provides comprehensive coverage Robert Fulton ( November 14, 1765 &ndash February 24, 1815) was a U "[5] Forbes Magazine called McLean "one of the few men who changed the world. Forbes is an American Publishing and media company Its flagship publication Forbes magazine is published bi-weekly " [5]
On the morning of McLean's funeral, container ships around the world blew their whistles in his honor.
Fortune magazine inducted McLean into its Business Hall of Fame in 1982. Fortune is a Global Business Magazine published by Time Inc's Fortune|Money Group In 1995, American Heritage magazine named him one of the ten outstanding innovators of the past 40 years. American Heritage is a monthly magazine dedicated to covering the history of the United States for a mainstream readership And in 2000, he was named Man of the Century by the International Maritime Hall of Fame. The International Maritime Hall of Fame is a museum honouring people who have made a large contribution in the maritime field
In 2000, Mclean received an honorary degree from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. The United States Merchant Marine Academy is one of the five United States service academies.
McLean is the only person to found three companies that were later listed on the New York Stock Exchange (plus two others on the NASDAQ).
Trailer Bridge, Inc. , which McLean founded in 1992, annually awards the Malcom P. McLean Innovative Spirit Award. And, the annual McLean Award recognizes an outstanding graduating student at George Mason University, selected by professors. George Mason University (also referred to as GMU or Mason) is a large Public university in the United States.