Danos, Jim and Danos, Todd

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Date
2007-01-11
Main contributors
Center for Public History, University of Houston; University of Houston Libraries, University of Houston
Summary
This is an oral history interview with Jim Danos and Todd Danos conducted as part of the Houston History Project. Jim Danos grew up on a farm in southeast Louisiana on Bayou Lafourche. He got involved in the tug boat industry through his father. Danos made his career hauling barges for the oil industry through the coastal waters of southeast Louisiana. He started a boat company with his wife in the 1950s to build and operate tug boats. Later, his family owned and operated company diversified into OSVs for the offshore industry. His three sons now run the business. Todd Danos is the youngest of three and runs Galliano Tugs.  Company history/significance: In the early days of the oil industry, operators hired locals who knew the waters to transport oil and supplies from the marshes and rigs to the refineries. They used small tug boats to push barges. As the jack-up boat/rig technology emerged, the industry moved from inland to offshore waters. This reciprocated a need for bigger, steel-hulled vessels to operate in deeper waters. Ship yards, such as Bollinger, began building work boats to service the industry. Boatmen, like Danos and others, had the knowledge and experience of the industry and owned and operated many of the vessels used by the oil companies in this new frontier. Men like Jim Danos designed these boats, while local ship yards, like Bollinger and Chouest, built them. The oil companies became the major customers for small family-owned boat companies who looked to their neighbors, the ship builders, to provide the labor and fabrication for these vessels in demand. Interviewer: Jason P. Theriot.
Genre
interviews
Subjects
Energy development; Petroleum industry and trade; Danos, Jim; Danos, Todd
Location
Lockport, Louisiana
Collection
Oral Histories from the Houston History Project
Unit
University of Houston Libraries Special Collections
Language
English
Rights Statement
In Copyright - Educational Use Permitted
Notes

Collection

University of Houston Libraries Special Collections
Houston History Archives
Oral Histories from the Houston History Project
Other Identifier
Preservation Location: ark:/84475/pm3071nh71w
Resources
Finding Aid
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