I’ve seen this image printed and framed somewhere . . . in a lower Mohawk town, but I don’t remember where. The lines are quite similar to those of Urger. As to Schenectady she was ex-Buffalo, George W. Aldridge, and City of Schenectady. Around 1910 the name was shortened to just Schenectady. Per her state description card, she was 50′ x 15.4′ x 5.9′ tug, crewed by three. By 1924 she was back in Buffalo doing commercial work. The last mention of Barge Canal work is 1922.
For anyone who can colorize this, I wonder what the color scheme was. As to the quayside scene, I gather this is what the Waterford canalside buildings looked like in 1915.
Below is the view of Schenectady from canal side as shown above. Beyond the Fourth Street bridge, that’s E-2, the first lock of the Flight of Five, numbered 2 through 6. Yes, that can be confusing.
Here’s the view from the Fourth Street bridge above, with a lot of cargo barges waiting their chance to transit. And the two men atop the wheelhouse appear to be operating a motion picture camera on a tripod, no doubt filming their and possibly others’ passage through the flight. That tells me Schenectady was working as a press boat here, not the attraction.
This photo begs the following question: Which larger boat and smaller motor launch are those in the lower right hand side of the photo? Double click on this link from the NYS Archives Digital Collections to learn what dignitaries were on the unidentified and very crowded boat partly obscured lower right. The small motor launch might be NYS Police, which had been created only a month before by the Governor, who happens to be on the crowded boat below. It’s hard to overstate the importance of May 15, 1915 for NYS politics and Barge Canal history.
Wouldn’t this be lock E-4, white ink captioning notwithstanding? Adjacent to lock E-3 westbound, there’s a dry dock. And it’s been a couple years, might I be remembering this wrong?
And below is a different state boat farther west and at lock E-12, tug Buffalo, built in 1923 as a steam tug, westbound here with some heaping cargo on a deck barge. Could that be trash? If so, where might it be headed? Notive the crewman on the barge about midships? In 1948 she was sold to a private company. Currently she has a 1931 Cooper-Bessemer diesel engine which ran in 2010. Before 2017, when she was sold to Buffalo interests, tug Buffalo was a fixture at the Waterford Tugboat RoundUps, as captured here by Fred Tug44 at the 2010 Round Up. I don’t know its current disposition.
Many thanks to the Canal Society of New York for letting me wander through these archives and post my best information. Any additions/corrections are welcomed.
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April 6, 2022 at 11:48 am
joshua richardson
The picture of Schenectady is framed and hanging up in the Lock House at E2. Perhaps that’s where you remember it from?
April 6, 2022 at 12:03 pm
joshua richardson
Actually the picture was hanging at E3’s Lock house.
April 6, 2022 at 12:34 pm
joshua richardson
I believe that is a photo of Lock 3. In that angle the embankment on the left side forms the corner of the dry dock that is on that side heading west.
April 6, 2022 at 2:46 pm
tugster
More on all this later, but I’ve been reading as follows. Link is given below: “There were no grand celebrations to recognize the opening of New York’s new canal system on May 15, 1917, as there had been in October 1825 when the original Erie Canal opened from Buffalo to Albany — no cross-state flotilla led by the governor; no relay of cannon shots to announce the event; no parties or parades; no “Wedding of the Waters” ceremony. Twentieth-century Americans were preoccupied with the war in Europe and simply put the state’s new transportation system to use. Work remained to be done. A number of bridges were incomplete. Several channel sections needed to be dredged (or re-dredged) to full dimensions. (Channels provided full 12’ depth throughout the system but the bottoms of some sections were too narrow to allow two fully laden vessels to pass.) Many terminals were far from complete, especially those on New York Harbor, where goods were expected to be transferred from canal boats to ocean-going vessels bound overseas.114 Yet all four branches of New York’s Barge Canal were open, and the emphasis shifted from design and construction under the state engineer and surveyor to operations, maintenance, and promotion of canal traffic under the DPW.115
Federal Control of Barge Canal Traffic – 1918-21
Now that it was open end-to-end, promoting use of the canal became a priority. An acute shortage of canal boats was one of the first problems. Traffic had declined and boat operators complained of inconveniences and delays during the construction period. Many boats were simply worn out because operators had been unwilling to invest in new boats of Enlarged Erie dimensions after 1903, knowing that they would soon be obsolete. They were even less likely to commission new boats of larger dimensions until they were certain that the new canal was going to open. Canal officials lamented the tired state of most canal boats and highlighted work by General Electric and other companies to design a new class of Barge Canal vessels, yet none of the new boats had been built before the canal opened.” page 47. Here’s the link: https://eriecanalway.org/application/files/8114/5158/2846/03_Summary_Section8_final.pdf