Save the tugboat Urger
by Will Van Dorp (Tugster)
by Will Van Dorp (Tugster)
. . . illustrating what will be lost if present course is maintained. If you don’t know what’s likely to happen imminently, Urgeris NOT to be reefed. But, it’ll be beached at Thruway Lock 13 “living history” exit, with holes “punched” in the hull and that beaching will cost –I’m told–over $3 million.
Why should you care?
First, listen to this engine, as I recorded it four years ago on a calm day above Amsterdam NY. Click the thumbnail below left for the sound from inside the engine room and . . . right, from outside. It’s like the steady panting of a racing horse. Click here for a list of remaining Atlas-Imperial engines, although I don’t know how out-of-date this info may be.
Here’s that same engine as seen from below, starboard looking aft, and
here, the camera is looking aft along the port side.
Here’s the view port side looking down.
For whatever value it has, Urger is
one of about two dozen NY vessels on the National Register of Historic Places, has been on that list since November 29, 2001. Click here for what that means in terms of significantly changing the historic floating structure.
Urger was built by Johnston Brothers Shipyard in Ferrysburg, Michigan, in 1901, originally as H. J. Dornbos, a fish tug. My point . . . if she’s been around this long and is in this good shape, that’s prime reason to keep her that way.
Urger faced significant change before, back in the late 1980s, ending Canal maintenance duty in October 1987. Then, Schuyler Meyer (1918–1997) stepped forward with a proposal to save her by making her the “ambassador vessel” of the NYS Canals that she did become. During those ambassador years, scores of thousands of folks–especially school kids–saw her, walked on her, learned from her about NYS. Read the whole article below if you have time, but signifiant info is concentrated in the rightmost column. Look at the image he’s holding in the photo.
Urger is a flagship of NYS history, having made public appearances all over the confluent waterways of the state from Lockport (I don’t have photos of her in Buffalo) to
the famous culvert east of Medina to
Oswego, shown here at Lock O-8 with tug Syracuse to
the Upper Bay of New York City, and all the great little towns in between. I lack the photos myself, but I know she’s been to the southernmost point of the Finger Lakes and upper reaches of Lake Champlain from this video clip.
So what can be done . . . especially since, given the imminence of converting Urger to a “static display,” time is so short?
First, share this post with anyone you know who might care about Urger. Seek out your loud, articulate, reasonable, and well-known advocates who know [connected] people and can speak out in the meetings, press, and blogs. It’s summer, so key political and agency leaders might not be reading their mail, forwarding it to folks with less decision-making power. Congressman Paul Tonko would like to hear from you. State legislators might be contacted in their home districts, where you can even walk into their local offices. Talk to your local mayors, business leaders, and union officials. I was born upstate but haven’t lived there since the 1960s.
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