Vintage Girl Scout Online Museum
Home | Site Map | Updates | Contact MeOur Ladies in Khaki and Green  | The Girl Scout Garden | On The Girl Scout Trail |  Girl Scouts On The Move | Special Days and Special Ways of Girl Scouts | National Girl Scout Programs |  Girl Scouts -  A Call To Service | Girl Scout Uniform | Girl Scout Older Girl Programs | Girl Scout Badges, Try-its, IPPs and Council's Own | Troop CrestsGirl Scout PinsGirl Scout LibraryThe Girl Scout Kitchen | Girl Scout Cookies | The Girl Scout Clothes Line | Girl Scout Jewelry Box | The Girl Scout Sewing Room | The Art Of Being Girl Scout |  Girl Scout Conservatory |  | A Girl Scout Is Thrifty  | Girl Scout Collectible  | Girl Scout Camp Equipment | Senior Girl Scout Roundups | Girl Scout Camp Scrapbook | International Girl Guides and Girl Scouts | Mystery Girl Scout and Girl Guide Items | Add Your Stuff!


S.S. Juliette Low


Precious little is known or remembered about the Liberty ship S.S. Juliette Low, save for these photos and this article. She was one of about 2700 Liberty Ships quickly put into service during World War II. She was even built in her namesake's hometown of Savannah at the Southeastern Shipbuilding Corp. Juliette Low's niece Margaret Gordon (Mrs. Samuel Lawrence) christened the ship - see photo, and her cousin Irby Lasseter presented the flag to the captain of the ship. Shown below is a brief article about the S.S. Juliette Low. She was scuttled in 1972.


 As of 2009 an online article noted that a scale model of the S.S. Juliette Low was located at the Ships of the Sea Maritime Museum in Savannah, GA (www.shipsofthesea.org)



June 1944 Girl Scout Leader Magazine cover of S.S. Juliette Low



Home | Up | Girl Scouts - War and Service Awards | Girl Scouts - World War 1 | Girl Scouts - World War II | Girl Scouts At Internment Camps of World War II | S.S. Juliette Low