2011
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The Keewatin today at Saugatuck-Douglas, Michigan, USA.
13 October 2011
S.S. Keewatin Coming Home to Canada
Douglas Michigan USA - An illustrious piece of Canadian maritime history is finally coming home.
Skyline International Development Inc. has announced an agreement with Douglas, Michigan, entrepreneur R.J. Peterson to purchase and repatriate the S.S.
Keewatin, the crown jewel in the Canadian Pacific Railway's once-mighty Great Lakes Steamship fleet, to its original home in Port McNicoll, Ontario. Municipal
council in Tay Township, which encompasses Port McNicoll, has passed a motion allowing the vessel to return.
The agreement follows four years of negotiation to relocate S.S. Keewatin from Saugatuck, Michigan, where she has been docked since 1967, after being purchased
by the Peterson family and converted into a maritime museum. The Edwardian-era vessel, launched 6 Jul 1907, was retired in 1966 after spending almost 60
seasons ferrying passengers from Port McNicoll on Georgian Bay, to Port Arthur (Thunder Bay) on Lake Superior.
"We are thrilled to return the world's last Edwardian passenger steamship to the people of Tay Township and Canada," said Skyline chairman and
president Gil Blutrich. "As a passionate maritime history enthusiast, I became interested in the Keewatin's remarkable history, its preservation and
importance to this beautiful part of the country decades ago. I believe the Keewatin will deliver both tourism dollars and wonderful memories to the community
for years to come."
The ship was purchased by Skyline Development and will be donated to the R.J. and Diane Peterson Great Lakes and S.S. Keewatin Foundation, which will operate
and maintain the vessel as a maritime museum. The Keewatin will be moored in a new waterfront park in Port McNicoll, mere steps from the original location
where it was originally tied. The park will feature a replica of the town's original train station and surrounding English Royal gardens.
"The Keewatin truly is one of a kind," said Eric Conroy, author of the book "A Steak In the Drawer", which details his experiences working
on the Keewatin as a 17-year-old. Conroy, a long-time Keewatin volunteer who worked alongside Blutrich to negotiate her repatriation, will chair the R.J. and
Diane Peterson Great Lakes and S.S. Keewatin Foundation. "This announcement is particularly important for me because it brings my earliest memories of the
Keewatin full circle. There are many people in our community who have a decades-long connection to Keewatin and wish to share that passion with their children.
My focus now is on building a cross-generational volunteer organization to ensure this Edwardian treasure remains an important part of our lives."
Tay Township mayor Scott Warnock is confident the vessel will become one of the area's most important tourist attractions.
"Once this plan is fully approved by council, we feel the S.S. Keewatin and the planned park development on Port McNicoll's waterfront could attract
hundreds of thousand of tourists each year," he said. "While she spent most of her life transporting passengers and cargo to ports across the Great
Lakes, Keewatin is now poised to deliver major economic and cultural benefits to Tay Township and the entire region."
Dredging of the Kalamazoo River, funded by the R.J. and Diane Peterson Great Lakes and S.S. Keewatin Foundation, is currently underway to allow the vessel to
be towed to the mouth of Lake Michigan, where Blutrich will meet Peterson in June, 2012, to officially hand over the vessel. From there, S.S. Keewatin will be
towed to its home in Port McNicoll where restoration work will be completed to return the ship to her original early 20th century grandeur.
Built by the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in Scotland as Hull No. 453, the Keewatin, along with her sister ship S.S. Assiniboia, were the
first Great Lakes ships to boast radar. The 350-foot long Keewatin carried 288 passengers with a crew of 86, and cruised at a top speed of 14 knots.
Constructed five years before the ill-fated voyage of RMS Titanic, Keewatin features many of the same design and construction features of her ill-fated cousin
including a quadruple expansion steam engine and "Scottish" boilers, as well as a grand staircase, Edwardian dining saloon, hand painted Italian
glass, and oak trim throughout. Strict fire codes and faster modes of transportation made the wood-cabined vessel largely obsolete by the mid-1960s.
About Skyline International Development Inc.
Skyline is a leader in the operation and development of hospitality resorts and destination communities in downtown Toronto and across some of Ontario's most
important resort regions including Simcoe County, Georgian Bay, and the Muskokas. Founded by visionary entrepreneur Gil Blutrich in 1998, Skyline boasts a
surging asset base that has grown from $26 million to $245 million in little more than a decade. The company employs a staff of 1,500 and has more than 1,052
hectares of land and 1,000 rooms and suites in its holdings, including premiere resort and destination communities such as Port McNicoll near Midland, Ontario,
Deerhurst Resort, and Horseshoe Resort. Skyline's unique urban asset mix includes Toronto's boutique Pantages and Cosmopolitan Hotels, as well as the iconic Le
Meridien King Edward Hotel, a partnership between Dundee Realty Corp., developer Alex Shnaider, Skyline International Development Inc., and Serruya Realty
Group Incorporated. Skylife, the company's innovative lifestyle program, provides its resort community residents and members with unlimited access to
activities such as golf and skiing, as well as discounts on spa services and hotel rooms in Canada and around the world.
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