History
                    
                
            
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                Westwood Shipping Lines is integrated to the Swire Shipping brand.
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                                    Swire Shipping acquires Westwood Shipping Lines at the end of June. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood begins calling the Port of Seattle. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood begins calling the Port of Tacoma. - 
                
                
                                    J-WeSco acquires Westwood Shipping Lines from Weyerhaeuser. - 
                
                Westwood begins service from Portland to Japan.
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                                    Westwood begins regular monthly service to China. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood and Star Shipping’s space-sharing and sailing agreement ends. Westwood charters three replacement vessels. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood and Star Shipping initiate a space-sharing and sailing agreement. - 
                
                
                                The Westwood Columbia, Westwood Victoria, and Westwood Olympia join the Westwood Rainier. - 
                
                Westwood begins regular service to Hitachinaka, Japan.
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                                    Westwood places order for new state-of-the-art vessels. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood begins performing all sales and customer services in North America. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood celebrates our first decade of transpacific shipping. - 
                
                Westwood begins offering a weekly Pacific eastbound container and breakbulk service.
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                Westwood withdraws from the north Europe market to focus on the strategically important transpacific market.
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                                    A joint sailing agreement is launched with Gearbulk Container Services to upgrade eastbound transpacific service to weekly frequency. - 
                
                
                                    Westwood receives the first of five newly built, state-of-the-art "S" ships, the Westwood Marianne, under long-term contract with Saga Forest Carriers. - 
                
                
                                    Transpacific service is upgraded to 10-day eastbound frequency with a Canadian Transport Company joint sailing agreement. - 
                
                Full-fledged transpacific container/breakbulk service is inaugurated by Westwood with two "M" ships and two "J" ships.
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                                    Westwood enters into a joint venture with Hoegh, named Westwood Transpacific Service. - 
                
                Weyerhaeuser changes its name to Westwood Shipping Lines and commences service as a container and breakbulk common carrier between the North American West Coast and northern Europe.
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                                    The Hoegh Mascot briefly strands on a Columbia River shoal caused by mud flow from the eruption of Mt. St. Helens. - 
                
                
                                    Two new "J" ships enter service to carry newsprint from the newly opened Weyerhaeuser/Jujo NORPAC mill at Longview. - 
                
                Weyerhaeuser contracts with Hoegh to build six open-hatch, gantry-crane vessels (second generation of "M" ships) to carry forest products to Europe.
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                                    Calmar Line ceases intercoastal service on which Weyerhaeuser was a major shipper. - 
                
                
                                    The last two Weyerhaeuser Liberty ships are sold. - 
                
                Weyerhaeuser obtains the first major charter contract for foreign shipping. The First set of "M" ships is chartered to carry forest products to Europe.
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                Weyerhaeuser Line headquarters moves from San Francisco to Tacoma.
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                Weyerhaeuser's first transportation of finished products (forest products) to a foreign market (Australia) was completed.
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                                    Weyerhaeuser begins chartering logships to Japan following the Columbus Day 1962 windstorm, which left an abundance of fallen timber in the Northwest. - 
                
                Weyerhaeuser Line is established after Weyerhaeuser Steamship becomes a division of Weyerhaeuser Company.
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                                    Six Liberty ships are rehabilitated in the most extensive Liberty ship reconstruction to date. - 
                
                Pacific Coast Direct Line is purchased; Weyerhaeuser Steamship moves from Newark to San Francisco.
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                                    Four World War II Liberty ships purchased for Weyerhaeuser return to intercoastal service. - 
                
                
                                The Potlatch and the Heffron are sunk by torpedoes fired from German submarines. - 
                
                
                                    Four ships are diverted on orders of the U.S. government to rush war supplies to British forces in Egypt; later, all eight of the company's vessels are requisitioned by the War Shipping Administration. - 
                
                Weyerhaeuser Steamship Company establishes marine operations; headquarters moves from Tacoma to Newark, New Jersey.
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                Weyerhaeuser's first ocean shipping operation is launched with purchase of two freighters, the Pomona and the Hanley, to carry lumber from the Northwest to the East Coast.
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                Weyerhaeuser Timber Company is established at Tacoma, Washington, after 900,000 acres of Northwest timberlands are purchased.
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                                    The F. Weyerhaeuser, a 140-foot sternwheeler built for towing logs, is christened by Weyerhaeuser and Denkman Company (a Midwest Partnership). 
	