Collingwood Shipbuilding and the Howard M. Hanna Jr.

1913 has been a recurrent theme as of late, both on the blog and then in my professional life. Collingwood Shipbuilding constructed the ill-fated James Carruthers and also its follow-on ship, the J.H.G. Hagarty. In the months following the Carruthers’ loss, the yard’s superintendent, John Leitch, carried on correspondence with the firm’s leadership regarding how to address the perceived shortcomings of the design. The A.A. Wright, the head of the St. Lawrence and Chicago Steam Navigation Co., the owner of the Carruthers and the Hagarty had his own ideas of how to improve the design. As Leitch observed in a letter on July 20, 1914, “we do not want a repeat of the Carruthers.

Leitch’s letterbooks, housed at the Town of Collingwood Museum, provide some insight into both that process and then their view on their major repair task, the Howard M. Hanna, Jr. The Hanna, built by the American Shipbuilding Company facility at Cleveland, Ohio in 1908 was a standard steel bulk freighter of the early twentieth century. In the 1913 storm the Hanna was driven onto the Port Austin Reef on the tip of Michigan’s Thumb on Lake Huron. Salvaged the the Reid Wrecking and Towing Company, the Hanna made it to Sarnia under its own steam and was offered for sale. James Playfair, operator of the Great Lakes Transportation Company agreed to purchase it and have it reconditioned at Collingwood Ship.

When the Hanna arrived at the yard, Leitch had few complimentary things to say. Though the vessel suffered splits in the hull, and then significant denting and damage to the outer hull, it had not split in half completely. However, the cabins of the Hanna had taken significant damage and Leitch observed that this was exactly what the redesign of the Hagarty would avoid. He also noted that: “The starboard side of the forecastle has been stove in with heavy seas and the structure there shows how lightly she was built.” The discussion in the letters appears to ignore the fact that much of the critique of the Hanna ignores the loss of the supposedly superior Carruthers. That sense of ego jars with the seemingly lack of hubris that the Carruthers had sailed with the prior year, harking back to a similar sense with the Titanic.

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The Hanna as built with an open pilot house in the service of the Hanna Furnace Company.
Photo from Fr. Edward J. Dowling, S.J. Marine Historical Collection, University of Detroit Mercy.

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On the Port Austin Reef after the storm.
Photo from Fr. Edward J. Dowling, S.J. Marine Historical Collection, University of Detroit Mercy.

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In dry dock of the Collingwood Shipbuilding Company – note the damage to the starboard bow on the Hanna as noted in Leitch’s letter.
Photo from Fr. Edward J. Dowling, S.J. Marine Historical Collection, University of Detroit Mercy.

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After rebuilding as the Glenshee in the Playfair fleet.
Photo from Fr. Edward J. Dowling, S.J. Marine Historical Collection, University of Detroit Mercy.

Rebuilt and put back into service, the Hanna would go on until 1983 as the Lionel Parsons when it was scrapped after serving as a grain storage facility. The Hagarty would sail on until it was sold for scrap in 1968.

I.L.I 105 – A Ghost of Arthur Kill, Staten Island

Of the many creations of Alexander McDougall, only a few of them remain for viewing in one form or another. The the Meteor (originally the Frank Rockefeller), the tugboat Islay, and though not fully McDougall’s design, the Day Peckinpaugh., formerly the I.L.I. 101 (the initials stood for “Interwaterways Line Incorporated”), and the Michigan, formerly the I.L.I. 105. The latter boats were a series of designs intended to operate both on the Great Lakes and the New York State Barge Canal. McDougall’s major backer for the McDougall-Duluth Company, Julius Barnes, went forward from the company’s original vessel the Robert L. Barnes to create these vessels. Constructed from 1920-1922 at the Duluth yards, they were the last vessels built there during its first phase of operation.

The final vessel built, the I.L.I. 105 was renamed the Michigan in the 1930s and vanished from documentation during the 1970s. From some contacts, I am pretty certain that the remnants of the vessel are lying partially scrapped in the famous ship graveyard of the Arthur Kill near Staten Island, directly behind the Fresh Kills landfill. The company the last owners had sold the hull to for scrapping went out of business before it completed the scrapping process.

I have heard that the remains left at this site are either going to be or are currently being disposed of to clear the waterway. What the impact of Superstorm Sandy has been on these hulls is unknown at this time. The ghosts of the Arthur Kill will not last forever.ILI105aThe I.L.I. 105 as originally configured – sometime in the 1920s.
ILI105dAnd then later on after being renamed and reconfigured.
Michigan-ILI105-ArthurKill2011Aerial view from Bing maps in 2011.
Michigan-ILI105And then sent to me from a blogger from closer up. Fresh Kills Landfill in the background where the 9/11 debris was examined.