MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood


Docking in Argentia, Newfoundland and Labrador
Career
Name: Joseph and Clara Smallwood (1989-2011)
Smallwood (2011)
Owner: Government of Canada
Operator: Marine Atlantic
Port of registry:  Canada St. John's
Route: Channel-Port aux BasquesNorth Sydney (fall, winter, spring)
Argentia-North Sydney (summer)
Ordered: 1987
Builder: MIL-Davie Shipbuilding
Laid down: 1987
Launched: 1989
Christened: 1989
Completed: 1989
Maiden voyage: 1989
In service: 1989
Out of service: 2011
Identification: IMO number 8604797
Status: Broken up in 2011
General characteristics (as built)
Class and type: Gulfspan class icebreaking ropax ferry
Tonnage: 27615 GT (gross tonnage)
Length: 172.76 m (567 ft)
Beam: 24.99 m (82 ft)
Draught: 12.19 m (40 ft 0 in)
Ramps: shore-based bi-level ramps
Ice class: Lloyd's 100A1, Northern Baltic 1A Super
Installed power: 4 × MaK 8 cylinder diesels
combined 20600 kW
Propulsion: 2 propellers
2 bow thrusters
2 stern thrusters
Speed: 22 kn (40.74 km/h) (maximum)
15 kn (27.78 km/h) (service)
Capacity: 1200 passengers
370 cars, 77 trucks
1,800 m (5,906 ft) lane metres
Crew: 106 (summer), 68 (winter)

MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood was a Marine Atlantic passenger/vehicle ferry which operated between Newfoundland and Cape Breton Island in eastern Canada. She is named after one of the former Newfoundland and Labrador premiers, Joseph R. Smallwood and his wife Clara.

Contents

Concept and construction

Entering service in 1989, she was built by MIL Davie Incorporated in Lauzon, Quebec, and is specifically designed for the 280 nautical mile (520 km) seasonal route across the Cabot Strait between North Sydney, Nova Scotia and Argentia, Newfoundland and Labrador. A roll-on, roll-off design with a bow visor, the Joseph and Clara Smallwood has 2 vehicle decks and 5 decks above, the main passenger deck being Deck 5. She measures 179 metres in overall length and 25 metres in breadth, weighing 27,614 tons. Her capacity includes 1,200 passengers and 370 automobiles or 77 tractor trailers. She had up to 106 crewmembers.

Her sister ship, MV Caribou's design had been commissioned by CN Marine in the early 1980s and was the culmination of years of research into effective icebreaking ship designs. The resulting hull design which MV Caribou and MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood were built to is called "Gulfspan", named in part after the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The "Gulfspan" hull is unique among Canadian icebreakers in that the ship slices through sea ice, rather than using its weight to ride up onto and crushing the ice underneath. This design permits the sister ships to maintain close to regular operating speed.

Service history

After MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood replaced MV Ambrose Shea in 1989, the North Sydney-Argentia crossing was reduced from 18 hours to a 14 hour schedule. During the northern hemisphere fall, winter and spring seasons, MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood joined her sister ship Caribou, along with MV Leif Ericson on Marine Atlantic's 96 nautical mile (178 km) primary route between North Sydney, NS and Channel-Port aux Basques, NL. As of March 10, 2011, the Smallwood has been retired to make way for the MV Blue Puttees and MV Highlanders which are on a 5 year charter from Stena Line.

Sale

On August 11, 2011, it was announced that MV Joseph and Clara Smallwood had been sold to a company from the Marshall Islands.[1] Her name was shortened to MV Smallwood and she sailed to Alang, India for scrap along with her elder sister MV Caribou. [2][3]

References