Tug caught fire and burned 57' x 15' x 7' more »
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Tugboat -unknown origin more »
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Tug towing barge Cleveco sank in a storm. Size: 93' x 22' x 12' more »
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Tug sprang a leak and sank. Size: 69' x 17' x 11' more »
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Fishing tug collieded with another tug and sank. more »
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Tugboat sank Size: 75' x 20' x 12' more »
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Tug sank while being towed Size: 120' x 22' x 10' more »
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Fishing tug scuttled by the owner Size: 48' x 13 x 4' more »
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Fishing tug - ice punctured a hole in the hull and the Wilma sank Size: 68' x 16' x 7' more »
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Wooden fishing tug sank in a storm Size: 75' x 17' x 8' more »
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Wooden tug boat - Crossed path of steamer Chemung and sliced in two pices. more »
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The debris field of the remains of the tug boat Elsie K. It appears that the engine and other useable items where salvaged from this vessel. The Elsie K was dynamited by the Army Corps of Engineers to prevent it from being a hazard to navigation. Found by... more »
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The wooden tug Acme collided with the vessel that she had in tow. Scattered pieces remain in the area today. more »
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The Muscallonge was a wooden tugboat that was built at Port Huron, Michigan in 1896. While towing a barge enroute to Toronto the tug caught fire. The Muscallonge was then run aground and all of the crew got off safely. Eventually the tug broke in two as... more »
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The Florence, a wooden tug was built at Levis, Quebec in t 1885. She worked in the St Lawrence River and Lakes Erie and Ontrio until springing a leak and sinking in November 1933. Her engine and propeller were removed. Much of the tug is now broken up due... more »
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A scuttled wooden tug boat named "Terry's tug" is unidentified tug but is believed to be from the Collins Bay Rafting and Forwarding Company that worked out of the local area. more »
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The Frontenac was built by Calvin's son in 1900 at their shipyard on Garden Island, specifically for towing rafts. In the early 1900's rafts became fewer and fewer, and the company went out of business at the outset of the First World War. In 1912, the... more »
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Launched at Desronto in 1888, this was one of the only tug boats built with a centerwheel paddle. more »
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The Cormorant was built in 1941. In 1949 she was renamed the Russell 4 and was sold to the Newton Creek Towning Company of New York. Merrit, Chapman & Scott repurchased her and renamed her the Cormorant. The tug sank was swamped by a large wave near... more »
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Tugboat foundered near Oswego in 1957. more »
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Steam powered wooden tugboat more »
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