Maritime History of the Great Lakes

New Mills List

Records

Results

We found
6024
matching items
  • Remove search term Groups: New Mills List
  • Chambly (1824)
        146x31x8 Owned by J. Molson & Sons (St. Lawrence Steamboat Co.) Montreal. Built by H. Logan, Montreal and launched 15/05/24. Engine by Boulton & Watt, London England, from "Car of Commerce". Used Mon
      146x31x8 Owned by J. Molson & Sons (St. Lawrence Steamboat Co.) Montreal. …
  • Chambly (1870)
        First Rebuild: Propulsion: Sidewheel Dimensions: 154 x 24 -- 535 tons Rebuilt: in 1898 154x24x8 Owned by J. B. Lamere, Montreal 1870, later Richelieu & Ontario Navigation Co. Built by White, Sorel 18
      First Rebuild: Propulsion: Sidewheel Dimensions: 154 x 24 -- 535 tons Rebuilt: …
  • Chamiss Bay (1928)
        Official No.: 154926; First Rebuild: Official Number: 154926 Propulsion: Screw Dimensions: 66 x 16 -- 62 tons 62x16x8 Owned by R. Kita, Vancouver 1935; R. Carpenter, Bella Bella B. C. 1948.
      Official No.: 154926; First Rebuild: Official Number: 154926 Propulsion: Screw Dimensions: 66 …
  • Champion (1851)
        176x24x11 Owned by Macpherson & Crane, Montreal 1851; to "Rome Watertown & Canada Steamboat Line" (joint firm of U.S. railroad and 2 Canadian forwarders) 1853; J. Hamilton & W. Bowen (Canadian Lake &
      176x24x11 Owned by Macpherson & Crane, Montreal 1851; to "Rome Watertown & …
  • Champion (1860)
        50x14 approx. Owned by Taylor Beach & Co. Built Seton Lake B. C. and launched 10/04/60. Engine 20x36 from San Francisco. (Sternwheel) Proved to be much too slow, abandoned 1863.
      50x14 approx. Owned by Taylor Beach & Co. Built Seton Lake B. …
  • Champion (1864)
        First Rebuild: Propulsion: Screw Dimensions: 106 x 19 -- 161 tons Rebuilt: in 1868 91x19x9 Owned by M. K. Dickinson, Montreal 1864; N. Davis, Montreal 1868; Ottawa & Rideau Forwarding Co 1870; L. Mul
      First Rebuild: Propulsion: Screw Dimensions: 106 x 19 -- 161 tons Rebuilt: …
  • Champion (1865)
        Other Names: J.H. Jerome; Official No.: 51688; Previous Registration: U.S.A. (1867) as J.H. Jerome 71x18x6 Owned by J. Beattie, Wallaceburg Ont. 1867; W. H. Davis, Owen Sound 1869; J. P. Coulson, Owe
      Other Names: J.H. Jerome; Official No.: 51688; Previous Registration: U.S.A. (1867) as …
  • Champion (1868)
        95x15x5 Owned by G. Crandell, Lindsay Ont. Built by T. Walters, Lindsay 1868. Mostly used on Lake Scugog. Custom-House measure (pre-1877) 82t.
      95x15x5 Owned by G. Crandell, Lindsay Ont. Built by T. Walters, Lindsay …
  • Champion (1871)
        Official No.: 64995; 129x22x12 Owned by A. T. Beaulieu, Levis. Built by A,T. Beaulieu, Levis 1871. Engine 30x30 by W. P. Bartley, Montreal. Towboat below Montreal. Sunk in collision with foreign "Sag
      Official No.: 64995; 129x22x12 Owned by A. T. Beaulieu, Levis. Built by …
  • Champion (1877)
        Other Names: Cambria (1888); Official No.: 74297; First Rebuild: Official Number: 74297 Propulsion: Sidewheel Dimensions: 175 x 23 -- 937 tons Rebuilt: Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada in 1889 131x23x11 O
      Other Names: Cambria (1888); Official No.: 74297; First Rebuild: Official Number: 74297 …
  • Champion (1880)
        Official No.: 80017; 122x24x6 Owned by G. McLeod, Saint John N. B. 1886; A. Tapley, St. John 1895, 1901; Partington Pulp & Paper Co., Saint John 1914. Miramichi River tug.
      Official No.: 80017; 122x24x6 Owned by G. McLeod, Saint John N. B. …
  • Champion (1897)
        Other Names: Hamiltonian (1946); Official No.: 103975; 114x26x8 Owned by Maritime & Industrial Co. Levis 1901, 1915; to Thousand Islands Navigation Co. 1926, 1935. Built by J. Davie. Levis 1897. Engi
      Other Names: Hamiltonian (1946); Official No.: 103975; 114x26x8 Owned by Maritime & …
  • Champion (1899)
        Official No.: 107728; 85x20x7 Owned by S. K. Champion, Vancouver. Destroyed by fire 18/10/03 Ladysmith B. C.: unslaked lime in cargo. ; Final Location: Ladysmith, British Columbia, Canada, Burnt
      Official No.: 107728; 85x20x7 Owned by S. K. Champion, Vancouver. Destroyed by …
  • Champion (1904)
        Official No.: 116756; 69x13x5 Owned by T. H. Wood, Orillia 1907; to Severn River & Lake Couchiching Navigation Co. c1911, 1915; Montreal River Navigation Co. 1917. Built by T. Wood, Orillia 1904. Eng
      Official No.: 116756; 69x13x5 Owned by T. H. Wood, Orillia 1907; to …
  • Champlain (1852)
        First Rebuild: Official Number: 73091 Propulsion: Sidewheel Dimensions: 99 x 18 -- 195 tons Rebuilt: in 1874 99x18x7 Owned by Sincennes Bros. 1871, 1874; D. P. Sincennes, Montreal 1877. Built by A. C
      First Rebuild: Official Number: 73091 Propulsion: Sidewheel Dimensions: 99 x 18 -- …
  • Champlain (1901)
        Other Names: Lanoraie (1910); Official No.: 126858; 79x18x7 Owned by Dominion Government.
      Other Names: Lanoraie (1910); Official No.: 126858; 79x18x7 Owned by Dominion Government.
  • Champlain (1904)
        Official No.: 116999; Later Registration: Newfoundland (1942) 120x30x10 Owned by Dominion Government, to Gulf of St. Lawrence Shipping & Trading Co. 1920; to Dominion Towing Co, 1928; to Sincennes-Mc
      Official No.: 116999; Later Registration: Newfoundland (1942) 120x30x10 Owned by Dominion Government, …
  • Chance (1895)
        Official No.: 103443; 43x7x4 Owned by J. R. Arnoldi, Ottawa 1895; J. Hewton, Kingston 1901; O'Connor Steamboat Co. 1917. Passenger vessel on Lake Temagami.
      Official No.: 103443; 43x7x4 Owned by J. R. Arnoldi, Ottawa 1895; J. …
  • Charlemagne (1874)
        Official No.: 70289; 67x13x3 Owned by A. Neill, Charlemagne 1877. Built by P. Dauphinais, Sorel 1874. Engine 8x32 by builder. Sternwheel tug Montreal-Sorel.
      Official No.: 70289; 67x13x3 Owned by A. Neill, Charlemagne 1877. Built by …
  • Charlemagne (1891)
        Official No.: 100180; 88x19x8 Owned by Charlemagne & Lac Ouvreau Lumber Co. 1895, 1901. Built by Cantin, Montreal 1891. Engine 30x22 by J. & R. Weir, Montreal. Tug.
      Official No.: 100180; 88x19x8 Owned by Charlemagne & Lac Ouvreau Lumber Co. …
Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy




My favourites lets you save items you like, tag them and group them into collections for your own personal use. Viewing "My favourites" will open in a new tab. Login here or start a My favourites account.

thumbnail








New Mills List


INTRODUCTION

The aim of this List is to include all inland and coastal steam and motor vessels operating in Canada, over about 45 feet in length for 19th Century vessels, and about 60 feet for those between 1900 and 1930, though some smaller vessels have been listed as well. A few that were registered outside Canada have been included where they ran for an appreciable time in Canadian service (e.g. charter). In the years covered here, British registered ships could operate here on the same basis as Canadian. Warships and those used in transocean services have been excluded. Gross tonnage is used. Listings are under the earliest name held as a Canadian vessel, with references to the last-previous or first-subsequent foreign name where known. Two unregistered vessels that never received names are shown following “Z’.

Much information here, particularly for earlier listings, has been derived from contemporary newspaper news reports and advertisements. In areas not yet penetrated by railways, shipping was of vital interest to all, and the doings and mishaps of steamboats were carefully noted. In the absence of modern news services, the papers copied freely from each other so that a general coverage can be obtained. In a remarkable number of cases this primary source contradicts information contained in other records and has usually been used here; thus this List does not always agree with data appearing elsewhere.

Another source is the Reports of the Board of Steamboat Inspection published annually from 1868 to 1920. These suffer badly from misprints and no single Report can in itself be taken as “gospel”. However if they are systematically tabulated year by year, anomalies can be detected and ignored. The tonnages given can be relied on since many tolls and charges (including the inspection fee itself) were based on them. These Reports have been the source of information on many rebuildings and renamings. Disappearance from the Reports is usually a better indication of retirement than the date of Removal from the Register since the latter date can be twenty years or more after the fact; it is used here only when no more specific information is available.

The Lists of Wrecks and Casualties appearing with the Inspection Reports are less useful than they seem, both because of the misprint problem and also because of the questionable nature of the dates given, which sometimes seem to be the date the “Casualty” was reported rather than the date of the mishap itself. Different dates for the same event are sometimes given in different sections of the same Report, or a different date appears under each name for a mishap (e.g. collision) affecting more than one vessel. This is one reason why dates are given in year/month format only. (The other is that when reading a report in a weekly paper, quoting another weekly, each published on different days of the week, it is impossible to tell what day is meant by (e.g.) “last Tuesday”.)

REGISTRATION IN EARLY DAYS

Registration in the nineteenth century was somewhat haphazard and some vessels in outlying areas were never registered at all, and are given here with such information as is available. They are denoted by “U” in the Official Number column.

The biggest problem is the eccentric history of registration (or non-registration) on the inland waters of Eastern Canada. Originally there was no Canadian register as such; “sea-going” vessels (a very all-inclusive category) were registered at Quebec or Montreal under the Imperial Merchant Shipping Act. They had to be measured for tonnage at one or other of these ports, and since it was impossible for those located above the Lachine Rapids to reach them they were simply ignored, officially speaking. In practical terms all vessels on the Great Lakes and Upper St.Lawrence River before 1845 were unregistered, and are shown by “N” in the Official Number column.

Late in 1845 the Province of Canada (as it then was) passed the Inland Navigation Act which created a Provincial registry system, the Collectors of Customs being required to act as Registrars of Shipping. The purpose was primarily to establish ownership, and hence liability, in case of accident; no central registry existed and records were kept in the various Customs offices. Virtually all of them have disappeared, and there is no official data on any of these vessels unless they lasted long enough to appear on the first List of Shipping published in 1873. Registration under the Inland Act was limited to Canadian-built boats, and it was the custom to register foreign-built craft at Montreal under the Imperial Act regardless of where they were located.

Unregistered vessels could use any name their owners chose, and later apparently the Custom-House authorities were not careful of this matter; the newspapers have proved invaluable in attempting to unravel this particular snarl.

TONNAGE AND NUMBERS

During the period of dual registration (Imperial or Inland), tonnage was computed on different formulae by the two authorities, the one used by the Inland Act (called Custom-House Measure) giving a smaller figure since less of the space above the main deck was counted. The new Dominion of Canada rationalized the system and after 1874 all new registrations were made under new regulations equivalent to the Imperial Act. In 1877 and 1878 all vessels using Custom-House Measure were resurveyed, sometimes with startling effects on their official particulars; the tonnage of some large passenger boats virtually tripled overnight. The resurveyed figure has in all cases been used here.

Official Numbers were assigned from blocks in the British series set aside for the purpose. The use of Official Numbers began in 1855; at that time all vessels then operating and registered under the Imperial Act were given numbers, those in the Province of Canada (registered at Montreal or Quebec) in the 32000/33000 series and those in the Maritime Provinces in the 34000/35000 series. It should be noted that those transferred from British to Canadian register retained their British numbers unchanged. Early registrations before the creation of Official Numbers are also indicated by “N”.

The Custom-House authorities did not use numbers and such vessels are indicated by a dash in the Official Number column. When they were incorporated into the unified Canadian register no numbers were assigned to them unless a resurvey was required due to rebuilding. The last steamer with no Official Number (PIERREPONT) was withdrawn in 1930. The Federal Government did not register many of its own vessels until the time of World War I. The record is unquestionably held by TRUDEAU which was purchased in 1876 but not registered until 1914, almost at the end of her long career.

I must express my appreciation to Prof. Eugene Clevenger and Mr. Charles Rae for their expertise and hard work in the computerization of these records, condemned as they were to work with a computer-illiterate Luddite; also to Mr. Maurice Smith and Dr. Gordon Shaw for their help and encouragement. Most of the research was performed over a period of almost thirty years in the extensive library collection of the University of Toronto, whose staff could not have been more helpful.

John M. Mills

MYSTERY SHIPS

The following vessels were in service as indicated, but are known only from newspaper references and/or Inspection Reports. Any additional information would be greatly appreciated.

Alma: Rideau-Ottawa 1858-62
Augusta: Upper St. Lawrence 1848-50
Beaver: Saskatchewan River 1901-05
Brantford: Grand River 1843
British Queen: Rice Lake Ont. 1850’s
Cornwall: Upper St. Lawrence 1823-32
Dalhousie*: Montreal 1820
Dragon: Upper St. Lawrence 1838-40
Empire: Rideau Canal 1848-49
Felicite: Montreal 1833-36
Fly: Kawartha Lakes 1855-60
Georgie: Fraser River B.C. 1878-80
Glengarry: Upper St. Lawrence 1854
H.P. Redner: Lake Ontario 1860-65
Hastings: Thames River 1848-55
Hope: Lake Ontario 1851-59
Locomotive: Lake Ontario 1855
Longueuil: Montreal 1858
Mohawk: Rideau Canal 1840-42
Moira: Lake Ontario 1844-47
Napoleon: Lake Ontario 1854-56
Neptune: Grand River 1842
Newcastle: New Brunswick 1868-73
Nil Desperandum: Ottawa River 1880’s
North Star: Cobden Ont. 1855-57
North Star: Minden Ont. 1874
Ontario: Ottawa-Rideau 1860-63
Prescott: Ottawa-St. Lawrence 1861-71
Rival: Upper St. Lawrence 1845
St . Anne: Trois Rivieres Que. 1864-70
St. Eustache: Ottawa River 1864-65
St. Paul: Trois Rivieres Que. 1866-72
Sarah: Lake Ontario 1869-71
Victoria: Upper St. Lawrence 1841
Victoria: Lake Ontario 1851-65
Watchman: Lake Superior 1877-83
Welland: Toronto 1856-68

*Note: This is not the better-known steamer on the Upper St. Lawrence 1822-34.