Windoc

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Windoc was the name of two Great Lakes freighters owned by Canadian shipping company N.M. Paterson & Sons Ltd., with the second ship named in memory of the first in 1986.

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[edit] Windoc (1): 1927-1967

The first Windoc began as the M.A. Hanna in 1899, a 430-foot (130 m), 4,661-long-ton (4,736 t) steamer built by Globe Iron Works that could carry approximately 7,000 long tons (7,100 t). It was reconfigured and sold to Interlake Steamship Co. in 1913, when it was rechristened the Hydrus (2). A previous Hydrus foundered earlier that year, with all hands lost. After a decade moving primarily coal and ore, Interlake Steamship modernized built four new ships, and sold the Hydrus and 11 other ships to Patterson Steamship Co. of Fort William. It was refitted and rechristened the Windoc in the spring of 1927. The vessel's name comes from the city of Winnipeg, where the owner's head offices were based, combined with the fleet suffix doc, referring to the Dominion Of Canada. Its first transit through the Welland came in 1937, where it made frequent grain and coal runs until it was retired and sold for scrap in 1967.

In October 1938, C.N.R. Bridge #20, a vertical lift bridge spanning the Welland Canal near Humberstone, was lowered onto the Windoc before it had safely passed. Considerable damage was done to the ship's spar, stack, and lifeboats, and the cabins and hold were flooded, but no injuries were reported, and the ship was repaired.

[edit] Windoc (2): 1977-2001

The second Windoc began as ocean-going bulk carrier named Rhine Ore. It was built in Hamburg, West Germany, and launched on April 11, 1959. It was renamed the Steelcliffe Hall after an April 1977 sale, it was rebuilt in Canada that year as a laker, with cargo space added forward of the engine room, and the wheelhouse moved aft above the crew accommodation.

After decades of service and changes to the function and structural conversions of the ship, in 1988 Steelcliffe Hall was given the name Windoc (2) after being acquired by N. M. Paterson & Sons Ltd., following the liquidation of the previous owner, Halco.

In 2001, while travelling through the Welland Canal, Windoc collided with Bridge 11 in Allanburg, Ontario. The accident produced a large fire on board, causing minor damage to the vertical lift bridge, and destroying the ship's wheelhouse and funnel. The vessel caught fire, and was later declared a constructive total loss, but there were no reported injuries, no damage to the $6-$8 million cargo, and no pollution to the waterway. The Marine Investigation Report concluded "it is likely that [vertical lift bridge] operator's performance was impaired while the bridge span was lowered onto the Windoc."

The vessel was towed to Hamilton Harbour for repairs, and in March, 2002, it broke free of its moorings in a 50 mph (80 km/h) winter gale, and ran aground 5 km (2.7 nmi) away in about six feet (2 m) of water, where it was pulled out by four tugs three days later.[1]

N.M. Paterson & Sons left the shipping business the following year, after 87 years, and sued the canal operator, St. Lawrence Seaway Management Corp., for $16.9 million (C). Their remaining four active and three mothballed ships were sold in 2002. The canal operator denies any negligence, and blames the shipping company and the ship's crew for the accident.[2][3]

A Transport Safety Bureau report [4] on the collision points to the bridge operator and bridge operating procedures and policies as major factors.'

[edit] See also

Welland Canal

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "Casualty Reporting." PSi - Daily Shipping Newsletter, 2002-03-13. Retrieved on 2007-08-15.
  2. ^ Ross, Ian. "Paterson a casualty in shipping industry." Northern Ontario Business, Laurenthian Business Publishing Inc., vol. 22, issue 10, page 1(2). via northernontariobusiness.com, 2002-08-01. Retrieved on 2007-08-16.
  3. ^ "Both sides to present arguments in Windoc-bridge collision." Boatnerd.com, 2002-07-15. Retrieved on 2007-08-16.
  4. ^ "TSB Reports - Marine 2001 - M01C0054" bst.gc.ca, Retrieved on 2007-10-20

[edit] References

[edit] External links