Albert Gayer’s photos beckon us back, with this well-known livery and the big white M on a black stack. Mary Moran was built in Beaumont TX in 1941 and was called Mary Moran from 1947 until 1974. Questions I’d have is about the voyages: how far into salt water would she go and same . . . in the Great Lakes and Saint Lawrence. Note the Texaco star on the barge house. Are there photos of her in the Welland Canal?
Seaval was launched in 1950 in New Orleans, and changed hands three times in two years, becoming Seaval in 1952. She kept that name for about a decade. Eventually she was owned by Purves as Anna Marie Altman, who scrapped her in 2021. There must be lots of photos of her working on the Great Lakes. She’s pushing barge Pittston.
Marie S. Moran was built at the same Beaumont TX Bethlehem Steel shipyard as Mary Moran, just six years earlier. In 1961 or 1962, she was sold to Sierra Leonian interests, renamed Afpet (African Petroleum) 5. Note she appears to be getting some repainting on the wheelhouse. There must be many more photos of her on the Great Lakes, since she likely had the same range as the younger Mary Moran. How about a photo of the two of them crossing?
How about this beauty, with what appears to be a wood superstructure?
My question is this: is this the 1914 boat by the name Clayton P. Kehoe or the 1943? My money is on the 1914 boat, which carried that name from 1968 until 1971; recall that Gayer lived until 1976, so he could have taken this photo. Also, the 1943 boat had this name for only a year or less and looks quite different in the photo in the 1943 link. Interestingly, this boat carried several Moran names as well as Dauntless No. 5
in its lifetime and was built at the same Ferrysburg MI yard as Urger.
William J. Moran is a Moran name used at least twice, for a 1916 boat (which foundered in the late 1930s) as well as a 1938. My money says this is the 1938 boat, which was built at Defoe in Bay City MI. Eventually, she may have become Anne Moran and Eklof’s Yankee, which was scrapped in 1993. Here she’s pushing tank barge Seaboard 38.
Recall that the Moran story, told so well in the 1956 book Tugboat by Eugene F. Moran and Louis Reid, begins with Thomas Moran, an immigrant kid in Frankfort NY in the vicinity of today’s lock E-19. That 1956 book is an excellent read.
That was a digression from this last photo for today . . . Sheila Moran, pushing Barrett No. 2. Two boats carried this name, twice very briefly and another launched in 1941, which would carry the name until 1975 (with a very brief interruption. So this is the 1941 boat, also built in Beaumont TX. The 1939 boat carried the name Catherine Moran for most of its career on the Barge Canal from 1947 until 1960, and has appeared on this blog several times. A model of that boat exists at Oswego’s H. Lee White Maritime Museum.
All photos, Albert Gayer and used with permission from the Canal Society of New York, who hold a winter symposium in about a month, although it appears the website has not yet been updated.
Related question: When did the last Moran tugboat exit the Barge Canal?
My sources include these: http://www.tugboatinformation.com/ and https://greatlakes.bgsu.edu/item/438169 and https://gltugs.wordpress.com/
8 comments
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January 26, 2022 at 12:48 pm
CR
Will that is not the tug that became the Yankee. Those tugs had a step down deckhouse.
January 26, 2022 at 7:24 pm
tugster
CR- You might be right; there were two William J. within three years of each other. Thx for the correction.
January 26, 2022 at 3:01 pm
William Lafferty
The Mary Moran was launched as the Thomas E. Moran but requisitioned by the navy before completion on 1 May 1941. It was placed in service as Canonicus YT 187 on 3 June 1942 at Norfolk, and was redesignated YTM 187 on 15 May 1944. Declared surplus by the navy on 30 April 1946 and transferred to the Maritime Commission, it laid up in the James River mothball fleet. Moran purchased it 12 September 1946, renaming it Mary Moran in 1947. It was Diesel-electric, with a Cleveland Diesel 12-278 driving an 800-kW generator supplying a 950-bhp electric motor, the latter units built by Allis-Chalmers. I find the Moran with the barge Seaboard No. 99 entering the Welland on 4 July 1947, perhaps its first trip into the lakes. It generally towed the Seaboard 99, but on the occasions it was a Texaco barge it was almost always the Texaco 326. The Texaco products went from Bayonne to Tonawanda and Toronto. In the 1960s the Mary Moran generally had the Panhandle and Loveland as consorts on the lakes, Seaboard barges. The canal trade dried up by the early 1970s and the Mary Moran was laid up, as best I can figure, in 1973. It became Mary A. owned by Tug Marie A. Corporation, Hoboken, in 1974. Moran built the new harbor assist tug Mary Moran in 1977 for use at Port Arthur. Somebody here probably knows what became of the Marie A. It left documentation between 1982 and 1989.
January 26, 2022 at 3:22 pm
William Lafferty
As for the Clayton P. Kehoe, it doesn’t appear to be either. The 1943 version was a vastly remodeled DPC tug, while this appears to be the former Bridgeport, a canaller built by John H. Mathis & Company at Camden in 1932 for Red Star Towing. Kehoe acquired it in 1972 and it ran under that name 1972-1975 until renamed Martin J. Kehoe. I have several Kodachromes and photographs of the Johnston Bros.’s Philip T. Dodge as the Clayton P. Kehoe and in other incarnations, and it does not look like this vessel.
January 26, 2022 at 7:17 pm
James Ankin
There are 2 or 3 Canal Boats left. See them in New York Harbor during the winter months. Fascinating tugs..worked on the Harriet and Sheila Moran. Both had ,600 HP engines.
January 26, 2022 at 7:25 pm
tugster
James- I think the canalers Harriet and Sheila are long gone.
February 6, 2022 at 1:49 am
Anonymous
I worked on the Harriet. Anne and Sheila Moran as a TOWLINE Photograper for Moran Towing Company in the 70s. Very nice boats
February 6, 2022 at 5:09 am
tugster
Anon– welcome aboard then. If you took photos for TOWLINE, I’ve seen some of your work then. I occasionally go through back issues.