Andrew Higgins was born on 28 August 1886 in
Columbus, Nebraska, the youngest child of John Gonegle Higgins and Annie Long (O'Conor) Higgins. His father was a
Chicago attorney and newspaper reporter who had relocated to Nebraska, where he served as a local judge. Higgins' father died after a fall when Higgins was seven years old. Higgins was raised in
Omaha and completed three years at
Creighton Prep High School before being expelled for brawling. He left Omaha in 1906 to enter the lumber business in
Mobile, Alabama, and worked at a variety of jobs in the lumber, shipping and boat building industries in an effort to gain experience for starting his own company. In 1910 he became manager of a German-owned lumber-importing firm in New Orleans. In 1922, he formed his own company, the Higgins Lumber and Export Co., importing hardwood from the
Philippines,
Central America and
Africa, and exporting
bald cypress and
pine. He acquired a fleet of sailing ships, said to have been the largest under American registry at that time. To service this fleet, he established a shipyard which built and repaired his cargomen as well as the
tugs and
barges needed to support them. As part of his work in boat building and design Higgins completed a program in naval architecture through the National University of Sciences in Chicago, an unaccredited correspondence school, which awarded him a
Bachelor of Science degree. In 1926 he designed the Eureka boat, a shallow-draft craft for use by oil drillers and trappers in operations along the
Gulf coast and in lower
Mississippi River. With a propeller recessed into a semi-tunnel in the hull, the boat could be operated in shallow waters where
flotsam and submerged obstacles could foul the usual types of propellers. He designed a "spoonbill" bow for his craft, allowing it to be run onto riverbanks and then to back off with ease. His boats proved to be record-beaters; and within a decade he had improved the design to attain high speed in shallow water and turn nearly in its own length. Stiff competition, declining world trade, and the employment of
tramp steamers to carry lumber cargoes combined to put Higgins' Lumber and Export Co. out of business. He kept his boatbuilding firm (established in 1930 as
Higgins Industries) in business, constructing motorboats, tugs and barges, for the private market as well as the
United States Coast Guard. ==Military boatbuilding==