Maritime Training Program | Curtin Maritime
The Curtin Maritime Accelerator Program provides personalized training for maritime jobs.
The Curtin Maritime Accelerator Program provides personalized training for maritime jobs.
Curtin Maritime is a leading American-owned and operated marine solutions company that provides a range of maritime services globally.
Do you love being on the water? Are you a welder, engineer or crane operator? Curtin Maritime is hiring for jobs with training, flexibility, and career growth.
Curtin Maritime, Corp. (CMC) has been awarded a contract for a segment of work as part of the Houston Ship Channel (HSC) Expansion Channel Improvement Project (ECIP) Project 11.
Check out this American 250 anchor winch! We found this winch after it had been stashed in a desert and unused for several years.
In 1949, the Port of Long Beach gave this old oil derrick to Captain Jacob Jacobsen to use as a radar tower. This was the first private, shore-side radar in the United States! At the time, radar was new technology.
A team led by the National Transportation Safety Board has successfully recovered the wreckage of TransAir Flight 810, a Boeing 737-200 cargo jet that went down off Honolulu in early July.
Curtin Maritime is expanding to San Diego. Specializing in marine transportation, marine construction, vessel design & construction, we are bringing Full Service Marine Solutions and a full-time dedicated fleet of Floating Cranes, Tugboats, and Barges.
The Becker #1 well, located on Summerland Beach in Santa Barbara County, first made history in the 1890’s when it was one of the first offshore wells drilled in the U.S. and is once again making history as one of the first of these vintage offshore wells to be permanently abandoned. The Becker well is notorious to local beach-goers as it has been the source of visible oil seepage for years.
In the summer of 1991, a 121 foot long Taiwanese long line fishing vessel, the HUI FENG #1, ran aground on an atoll in the middle of the Pacific. With a footprint of just 4.6 square miles . . .