SS William A. Irvin
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S.S. William A. Irvin
The erstwhile ore boat, The William Irvin is now a
floating museum anchored in downtown Duluth, MN.
S.S. William A. Irvin Ore Boat Museum
350 Harbor Drive
Duluth, MN 55802
218-722-7876
218-722-5573
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In her day, she carried cargoes of over 13 thousand tons of
taconite from Minnesota and Michigan to Ohio and Indiana. In her
sumptuously appointed
staterooms at the bow, she also
carried a bevy of the rich and powerful -- friends, relatives, and
business associates of US Steel upper management as well as other
dignitaries and elected officials.
Eventually, she was eclipsed by longer, deeper, faster ships.
Today, there are just over a dozen "thousand footers" plying the
waters of Gitche
Gumee, carrying cargoes of nearly 70 thousand tons -- and the
children and grandchildren of movers and shakers. There are
numerous less capacious vessels in the fleet, too, but nearly all
now have self-unloaders. This photo index should give you an idea
of how many there are: Fleet Photo Gallery:
History & Photos of Great Lakes Vessels.
Terrorists will be amused to find that they can retrieve near
real-time
locations of some of the major ships on the Great Lakes.
Though not so large as ore boats currently in use, The William A.
Irvin is yet an immense artifact. This notion strikes you as you
climb the stairs to the hatchway accommodating tourists. The tour,
which takes you stem to stern and back, is more than two hours
long, including a stroll through a couple of her three enormous
holds. The cumulative weight of cargo she transported stretches
your imagination to the degree that it dented the steel plates you
walk on. During unloading, they used to lower front-end loaders
into a hold to scrape up the ore that the shore-mounted augers
missed.
The SS William A Irvin -- flagship of the US Steel Fleet --
was built in the late 1930's [and launched on June 25, 1938] just
as the shipping industry was coming out of a long recession and
prior to the WWII shipbuilding frenzy. She was named after the
company president at the time.
The William A. Irvin sailed without incident* for forty years.
On August 27, 1940 she set a record by unloading 13,856 tons of ore
in just 2 hours and 55 minutes -- an astonishing accomplishment for
a boat using shore equipment only. And that record stands to this
day.
Her successful forty years of service fulfilled the wishes of
her namesake: "She will be a triumph of safety, comfort, and
capacity."
At the end of 1978 shipping season, the Irvin was retired for
economic reasons. Specifically she was a slow boat with small holds
and had no self-unloading capability.
The Irwin was saved from the scrapping torch only because of
her status as a flagship. In 1986 she took on a new role as a
tourist attraction for Duluth, Minnesota. Today she is berthed at a
former WWII shipbuilding slip where she is visited by thousands
every year. She has become the proud figurehead of Duluth's
waterfront and offers a glimpse into the world of the merchant
mariner.
Length: 611 ft
Beam: 60 ft
Draft: 33 ft
Speed: 11 mph
Displaced: 22,000 tons maximum
Cargo: Ore 14,088 Tons -- Coal 11,612 Tons -- Grain 10,500
Tons
Engines: Delaval Cross Steam Turbines 2000hp
["Bulk Carrier 'William A. Irvin'." All Wood Wings:
Quality Model Ships & Airplanes Handcrafted from Wood N.
vol. (15 July 2004): 5 pars. Online. Internet. 22 Aug. 2004.
Available http://www.allwoodwings.com/Ships/Commercial/WilliamIrvin.htm.]
*On April 11, 1964, while up bound on Whitefish Bay, Lake
Superior, a boiler burst on board the Pittsburgh Steamship Co.'s
William A. Irvin, killing one of the crew and injuring two
others.
["Great Lakes & Seaway Shipping News Archive March 2009."
Boatnerd. 16 Apr. 2009. 22 Nov. 2009 <http://www.boatnerd.com/news/archive/3-09.htm>.]
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There is an anchor on the
opposite bank. Note the draft markings in feet on her
prow. |
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At her present mooring, The
William Irvin carries no ballast, so her propeller is
visible. |
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She has 18 hatches. 16
covers
can be lifted by the white crane, which follows tracks on the deck.
The other two (not shown) are of a troublesome, motorized,
telescoping variety. |
To handle Great Lakes cargo, a special type of vessel has
evolved ... the North American "laker," the largest [The Paul R.
Tregurtha] being 1,013 feet (335 meters) long, capable of
carrying up to 70,000 tons (70,966 tonnes) of iron ore or 1,700,00
bushels (45,552.5 tonnes) of grain in one trip.
["Welcome to Great Lakes Shipping." Great Lakes & Seaway
Shipping Online N. vol. (20 Feb. 2002): 8 pars. Online.
Internet. 22 Aug. 2004. Available http://www.boatnerd.com/welcome.htm.]
Rhode, Chuck.
"SS William A. Irvin."
The Hi-Line and the Yellowstone Trail: To Glacier Park and Back Again.
1 Sept. 2004.
Lacus Veris.
3 Dec. 2024
<http://lacusveris.com/The Hi-Line and the Yellowstone Trail/The Bois Brule/SS William A. Irvin.shtml>.
Last modified 8 Oct. 2024.
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