Harold Tartell and Jan van der Doe were 100% correct in their identification of the white-striped red self-unloading vessel in Road Fotos 11. It is the Arthur M. Anderson. I didn’t get to see it close up, but through the magic of YouTube, it’s rubbing-or-scrapping distance here. At about a minute into the video, you learn how the can be that close.
One of the joys of gallivanting is meeting new folks; this was especially true here. One person on this waterfront had a focus I recognized; he carried a zoom camera and looked at the same things I did. Seeing me take a foto of Arthur M. Anderson, he said its name (which I’d not been thinking of). Then he added, “And farther down there, it’s American Integrity.” Check out Ken’s blog here. Here are some highlights of Ken’s blog: American Century, the Westcott delivering mail to a passing vessel, Stephen B. Roman, a 1000-footer dwarfed by “big mac“, and check this one . . . the Huron Lightship . . . which I spotted from the Blue Water Bridge but couldn’t quite figure out. When I have more time, I plan to digest Ken’s archives, now added to my blog roll.
Here are my shots of Westcott and Hogan. I’d love this job although it has risk.
My zoom camera quit as this vessel approached, frustrating because I’d recognized the Algoma bear logo. And I’d assumed it was a bulk carrier too, as I thought that was Algoma’s only business, but Algosar is a tanker. See her history here.
Just south of the Ambassador Bridge, Dutch-flagged Moezelborg transfers cargo near the now-abandoned Boblo Island Detroit dock building. Boblo lives on but only in the way that this whole list of defunct amusement parks does. When Moezelborg left the international port of Detroit, she headed north, west, and south for the next international port of Chicago.
Here’s another shot of the two steamers that served Boblo Island, SS Columbia and SS Ste Claire. I wanted to get better shots but even as I got this–along with my anonymous partner–we were threatened with arrest for trespassing, which I firmly believe we were NOT doing. Here and here are more links for Ste Claire. The second one is a video of a tour of Ste Claire, interesting video but unfortunate audio.
I hope to return to Detroit in August, and at that time, hope to arrange for a boat tour of the waterfront, possibly to get better shots of these vessels.
I have returned to the sixth boro, but part of my heart got left behind in Detroit, a place of both rust and new molten steel.
Here, fun but otherwise a propos of nothing except a post on the official end-of-hurricane-season, check out “bone in its teeth” blog.
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November 30, 2011 at 10:24 am
Philip Orton
If you return to Detroit let’s talk- my parents have a boat just north of Detroit and love shipwatching … They way want to take a tour of Detroit River with you.
November 30, 2011 at 10:25 am
Philip Orton
Correction- just east, at the start of Lake St. clair.
November 30, 2011 at 11:40 am
Joe
Tugster you ole coot! You keep messing about in them flat water ponds you’ll forget about the real ocean! Just stay the hell out of Superior, its that time of year!
November 30, 2011 at 2:35 pm
Harold E. Tartell
More Info On Algoma Central Corp. at this link: http://www.algonet.com/. Some of their bulkers have been up the Hudson River In The Past, and have unloaded at Cementon.
December 1, 2011 at 12:48 am
Ken
Algoma owns a few tankers. If you are interested in the ships of the Lakes, check out boatnerd.com. And if you come back to Detroit, check out either the Diamond Jack or Diamond Star both offer tours of the River. And if you have a little more time to kill, you should check out Port Huron.