Workshop at the Higgins Plywood Plant, Michoud, Louisiana

Gift in Memory of Marvin J. Perrett
Description: 

Photograph. Photograph of a workshop at the Higgins Plywood Plant, Michoud, Louisiana. Also known as the veneer mill, the Higgins Industries Plywood Plant was located on the old Michoud plantation property [previously spelled Michaud] next to the massive Higgins Michoud facility in New Orleans east. This image shows a workshop in the plywood plant that splices and presses plywood. The row of machines in the front of the image are veneer splicers. In the center of the image, under the large chimney, is a hot press that is used to press veneers together to create plywood. Pressed sheets are visible on the upper right side of the image. The back of the photo has a Higgins Industries official photo stamp and "79-C" written in pen. Higgins Industries, Plywood Plant, Michoud, Louisiana. Between 1942 and 1945

Image Information

Accession Number: 
Date: 
1942
1945
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Items from the service of Marvin J. Perrett. Marvin James Perrett was born on September 17, 1925 in New Orleans, Louisiana. After attending Warren Easton High School, Perrett joined the United States Coast Guard [USCG] the day after his eighteenth birthday. Upon completing boot camp at the Ponce de Leon Hotel in St. Augustine, Florida, he was sent to the Amphibious Training Base at Camp Lejune, North Carolina, for boat handling school. Perrett's last training assignment was the Landing Barge School in Little Creek, Virginia, where he learned how to coxswain the Landing Craft Vehicle, Personnel [LCVP]. Perrett was assigned as a boat operator to the attack transport USS Bayfield (APA-33). On June 6, 1944, Perrett guided his landing craft, PA-33-21, in the first wave of assault craft to hit Utah Beach in the Normandy Landings. Perrett survived the Invasion of Normandy and went on to make landings in Southern France before the Bayfield was redeployed to the Pacific. During the Invasion of Iwo Jima Perrett was stranded on the beach when his LCVP swamped in the surf. Perrett was able to safely make it back to the Bayfield despite machine gun and shell fire on the beach. He later piloted a landing craft in operations supporting the Invasion of Okinawa before he was discharged from the USCG after the end of the war. This collection consists of Higgins Industries photographs and documents that Perrett used as educational tools. There is also a single bound unit history of the 156th Infantry Regiment.
Geography: 
Michoud Canal
Latitude: 
30.017
Longitude: 
-89.900
Thesaurus for Graphic Materials: 
Factories--United States
Industrial buildings--United States
Lumbering--Machinery--United States
Lumber industry--United States