You are currently browsing the daily archive for January 21, 2022.
Daily Archive
Canal Tug Project B
January 21, 2022 in Barge Canal, collaboration, East Coast, Great Lakes, McAllister, photos, puzzles | Tags: Albert Gayer, Atlantic, Canal Society of New York, Edward Matton, Eileen McAllister, K. Whittelsey, Morania No. 9, Seneca, Thomas A. Feeney, tugster | 16 comments
Thomas A. Feeney tows an unidentified barge, which appears to be wood.
A closeup of the same photo shows the tug is clearly Thomas A. Feeney, the founder of the shipyard that built wooden barges. Any idea where Thomas A. Feeney may have been built? Her fate? Openings can be seen at the top of the wheelhouse as well.
K. Whittelsey, was built in 1930, scrapped in 2008, and of course there were a lot of stories found in legal decisions–and photos— in between.
Here she transits westbound at lock E-8. She spent some of her working years as a OTCo boat, a sad few years sunk in Gowanus Canal.
Tug Seneca pushing tank barge Atlantic. Any ideas on which Seneca this was? Note the “Observe Safe Boating Week” banner and the laundry hanging below along the port side. The gentleman standing on the gate almost appears to be holding a cell phone to his left ear.
This would be the 1907 Eileen McAllister.
Morania No. 9 was built at Matton Shipyard in 1951
and christened Edward Matton. Was that upper house removed?
I’m left to wonder about the conversation between the formally dressed man-in-black on shore and crewm,an on the boat. But more important, if this is also No. 9, what happened to then portholes in the wheelhouse?
In 2000, she was reefed off Manasquan River as Patrick J. McHugh as part of the Axel Carlson Artificial Reef.
As I stated yesterday, I have hundreds of these images for not only tugboats but also canal motor ships. Besides these, I’m told the Canal Society has thousands more negatives in storage, yet to be scanned or even inventoried.
I’m posting these in small batches to elicit what memories and associations are out there. Although I also post on Facebook to widen the cast, please comment here rather than on FB so that your comments remain with the post, not lost in the FB feed and flow.
As a way to begin working through the cache, I have jumped into this without a thorough plan; more Conners and Blue Line and Feeney images will follow. Using the tags, you can link to what’s been done in the past by clicking on a given tag [but maybe you already know that.]
Recent Comments