2012
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Canadian Pacific's S.S. Keewatin - Date/Photographer unknown.
4 June 2012
In 19 Days Titanic-Era Vessel S.S. Keewatin Docks in Port McNicoll
Port McNicoll Ontario - An illustrious and rare example of Canadian maritime history is finally coming home.
The S.S. Keewatin, the crown jewel in the Canadian Pacific Railway's once-mighty Great Lakes Steamship fleet, is being repatriated by Skyline International
Development Inc. and will arrive at its original home in Port McNicoll, 23 Jun 2012, as part of a community celebration.
In 2011, Skyline's Chairman and President Gil Blutrich announced an agreement with Peterson following four years of negotiation to purchase and repatriate
Keewatin to its original home in Port McNicoll, where the R.J. and Diane Peterson Great Lakes and S.S. Keewatin Foundation will operate and maintain the vessel
as a maritime museum. The Keewatin will be moored in a new waterfront park in Port McNicoll, 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. Once there, restoration work will be completed to
return the ship to her original early 20th century grandeur.
"This vessel 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 with Blutrich to negotiate her repatriation, will chair the R.J. and Diane
Peterson Great Lakes and S.S. Keewatin Foundation.
Constructed five years before the ill-fated voyage of RMS Titanic, the Keewatin is the last surviving vessel in the Great Lakes Steamship fleet and features
many of the same design and construction features of her cousin Titanic, 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 regulations were imposed on wooden cabin steamships
on the Great Lakes after the 1949 S.S. Noronic fire disaster killed 118 passengers and one crew member, making the financial viability of the overnight cruiser
difficult. New modes of transportation also made the vessel largely obsolete.
Launched 6 Jul 1907, the Keewatin was retired in 1966 after almost 60 seasons ferrying passengers from Port McNicoll on Georgian Bay, to Port Arthur (Thunder
Bay) on Lake Superior.
Built by the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company in Scotland as Hull No. 453, the 350-foot long Keewatin carried 288 passengers with a crew of 86,
and cruised at a top speed of 14 knots. Along with her sister ship S.S. Assiniboia, Keewatin was the first Great Lakes ship to boast radar.
Author unknown.
The Ossiwippi Express cars - Date/Photographer unknown.
It looks as if the Ossiwippi Express cars (including ex-CP 37) will be well dealt with.
Four will be going to Port McNicoll to be companions with the S.S. Keewatin.
They are due to arrive there for permanent display on 23 Jun 2012, three weeks from today.
James A. Brown.
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