Bruce Hudson (ship)

The barge-tanker Bruce Hudson was left adrift on Lake Erie when the tug Ethel ran out of fuel.
History
Name: Bruce Hudson’’ later ‘’Coastal Cliff, ‘’Witcroix’’
Builder: Horton Steel Works
In service: 1935
Identification: Canadian registry #158658
General characteristics
Type: steel tank barge
Tonnage: 452; increased to 753 in 1939; increased to 1,071 in 1947; increased to 1,319 in 1957
Length: 164.2 ft (50 m); lengthened to 172 ft (52 m) in 1939; lengthened to 212.7 ft (65 m) in 1947; lengthened to 205.3 ft (63 m) in 1957
Beam: 30 ft (9 m)
Decks: 1
Installed power: barge, converted to oil-fired boilers 1939; converted to diesel engines in 1957
Propulsion: twin propellers

The Bruce Hudson was an oil tanker which mainly carried petroleum products on the North American Great Lakes.[1] She was built in 1935 by the Horton Steel Works Ltd. of Fort Erie.[2] Originally the Bruce Hudson, and sister ships, were unpowered tank barges, that relied on tugboats to tow them from port to port. This did not prove very workable. In July, 1935, the Bruce Hudson capsized in high seas off Cobourg, Ontario while being towed from Montreal to Port Credit, Ontario with a load of crude oil.[2] She was towed upside-down to St. Catharines, Ontario, siphoned out, righted, and returned to service. In November, 1935, the crew of the Bruce Hudson were removed from the barge in high seas, again off Cobourg,[3] when the tug Ethel ran low on fuel and had to leave the vessel adrift on Lake Ontario. The steamer Brulin took the barge in tow and won salvage fees in Exchequer Court of Canada.

In 1939 the vessel underwent the first of several refits.[2] She was lengthened and had a pair of used engines added.

On July 26, 1943, while preparing to ship a highly volatile petroleum product called casinghead gas from East Chicago, Indiana the Bruce Hudson cargo exploded—sending flames shooting hundreds of feet in the air.[4] Her Captain, his son, and two other crew members were horribly burned, and later died of their burns. Despite heavy damage to her superstructure, the Bruce Hudson was repaired and returned to service.

In 1947, the Bruce Hudson underwent a second refit, being lengthened and deepened in St. Catharines.

In 1948, the Bruce Hudson was sold to Transit Tankers & Terminals Ltd. of Montreal.

In August, 1951, the Bruce Hudson ran aground at Wellesley Island, New York[5] in the Thousand Islands archipelago in the Saint Lawrence River.

In 1952, the Bruce Hudson was sold to Coastalake Tankers Ltd. and renamed Coastal Cliff.

In 1957, the Coastal Cliff underwent a third refit, being lengthened and re-engined in Montreal.

In 1969 the Coastal Cliff was sold to West Indies Transport and renamed Witcroix.

In 1983, the Witcroix was scrapped at Cartagena, Colombia.

References

  1. "Lloyd Tanker Bruce Hudson, Adrift, Lake Erie". City of Mississauga. Retrieved 2013-09-06. The tankers were Bruce Hudson, Joan Virginia, and the Roy K. Russel, and were pulled by three tugs, Ajax, Ethel, and Muscallonge.
  2. 1 2 3 "Lloyd Tankers Limited". Scanner magazine. 1973-01. Retrieved 2013-09-06. Prior to the building of the barge BRUCE HUDSON in 1935, the principal carrier used was the barge ROY K. RUSSELL which began life in 1872 at Buffalo as the crack passenger and freight propeller JAPAN of the Anchor Line. After the advent of the HUDSON, both barges were employed bringing crude from Montreal East to Port Credit. The first tug used was MUSCALLONGE and she used to tow the two barges in tandem. As MUSCALLONGE was too large to lock through the St. Lawrence Canal locks with a barge, they took along on the tow the small wooden tug AJAX for use in the locks. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. "Hudson, Bruce". Sterling Berry. Retrieved 2014-07-19.
  4. "Bruce Hudson Again". Scanner magazine. 1973-04. Retrieved 2013-09-06. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "Maple, 1939" (PDF). U.S. Coast Guard. Retrieved 2014-07-19.
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