Titanic-era steamship S.S. Keewatin chugs by Windsor on voyage to new home - Action News
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Titanic-era steamship S.S. Keewatin chugs by Windsor on voyage to new home

The S.S. Keewatin is a Edwardian-era steamship that was a contemporary of the Titanic. Formerly located at Port McNicoll north of Barrie, the ship was towed along the Detroit River Wednesday night as it made its way to Kingston, with a stop along the way in Hamilton for repairs and restoration.

The historic vessel will be based at the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes in Kingston

A Titanic-era steamship chugs down the Detroit River to its new home

2 years ago
Duration 0:23
The SS Keewatin sails past Windsor on its way to Kingston

A big piece of maritime history chugged right past Windsor Wednesday night.

The S.S. Keewatin is a Edwardian-era steamship that was a contemporary of the Titanic. Formerly located at Port McNicoll north of Barrie, the ship was towed along the Detroit River Wednesday night as it made its way to Kingston, with a stop along the way in Hamilton for repairs and restoration.

"For the Keewatin, it means that it's going to be around in another 100 years," said Eric Conroy, retired president and CEO of Friends of Keewatin. "The Keewatin is a tremendous treasure."

A photo of a steamship dating to 1907 being tugged through the river, with the Ambassador Bridge and sunset in the background.
The S.S. Keewatin made its way along the Detroit River Wednesday evening, en route to its new home at the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston. (Kerri Breen/CBC)

The ship's new home will be at the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes at Kingston, after it was donated to the museum by the ship's longtime owners. It will receive about $2 million in restorations and repairs before opening to the public, tentatively scheduled for spring of 2024.

Conroy, who worked on the ship as a teenager, said the interior of theship was lovingly maintained by volunteers in Port McNicoll, and the $2-million restoration will replace the deck, among other features.

Eric Conroy, president and CEO of the Friends of Keewatin.
Eric Conroy, president and CEO of the Friends of Keewatin. (Submitted by Eric Conroy)

"The volunteers there have worked very hard to make it back to as close to what it was over its working life," Conroy said. "When it goes to Kingston now, they're doing things that needed to be done there ... They're doing all kinds of cosmetics and they're really going to make it look incredible.

"You put those two things together, you've got quite a piece of equipment, but it is spectacular."

Keewatin older than the Titanic, last of its kind

The Keewatin was built in 1907 by the Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company of Glasglow, Scotland, according to the Marine Museum. It was one of 3,800 similar ships built from 1900 to 1920 and is the same type of ship as the Titanic, built in 1912.

S.S. Keewatin telegraph.
S.S. Keewatin telegraph. (Submitted by Friends of Keewatin)

Today, the Keewatin is the last of those 3,800 ships, and its sister ship, the S.S. Assinibioa was scrapped in the 1970s after a fire. It was featured in Season 7, Episode 1 ofMurdoch Mysteries.

Unfortunately, Conroy said the ship can't remain in Port McNicoll because of the location and expense of keeping up the entirely wood-and-steel ship. Kingston makes a fitting home, Conroy said, because of the dry dock where the ship will be parked and the well-known marine history museum.

A ship in the Detroit River at sunset.
The S.S. Keewatin pictured in the Detroit River near Windsor on Wednesday, April 26, 2023. (Kerri Breen/CBC)

According to information on the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes a Kingston's website, the Keewatin will undergo repairs this spring and summer before arriving at the museum'sdry dock this fall. The cost of the restoration is carried by the museum and its donors. The ship will be open to the public for tours, historical program and exhibits.

The ship was moved once before, to bring it from Michigan to Port McNicoll. At that time, they had to dig a channel to move the ship making this move somewhat easier. But it still took 27 volunteers seven weeks, for seven days a week, to secure the ship and pack its contents for the move.

"[The Keewatin] has got so much going for it," Conroy said. "Being in a dry dock and being with the money will keep it well-maintained and the people there know about it means it'll be around for my grandchildren's, grandchildren's, grandchildren."

A ship in the Detroit river at sunset.
The S.S. Keewatin was pulled by a tugboat through the Detroit River on Wednesday, April 26, 2023. It was headed to the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes in Kingston. (Kerri Breen/CBC)