Around the World
Jun 2023 | By Pat Brennan
The first time the S.S. Keewatin went through the Welland Canal, it had to be cut in three pieces in Sorel, Quebec. At 106 metres in length, it was too long for the canal’s original locks, and disassembly was the only way forward. It was stitched back together in Buffalo, and continued on to Port McNicoll to become the principal connection between Southern Ontario and Western Canada for nearly 60 years.
As soon as Georgian Bay was free of ice this April, Keewatin – called The Kee by its fans – departed its home in Port McNicoll to make the trek back to the Welland Canal to drop anchor at Kingston’s Maritime Museum of the Great Lakes. Over the past 11 years, it has tried unsuccessfully to be a floating museum since landing back in Port McNicoll on June 12, 2012 – exactly 46 years to the hour since it left the port on its last voyage to Thunder Bay. Unfortunately, there’s not enough tourism traffic through the region to sustain Keewatin as a museum, and so Keewatin’s fate has changed once more.
After its last trip in 1967 to Thunder Bay – then known as Port Arthur and Fort William – CP Railway planned to scrap Keewatin. Before the order could be given however, Michigan entrepreneur R.J. Petersen saved it from the cutting torches, purchasing the vessel and moving it to Saugatuck Harbour near Chicago as a floating museum. Years later, at age 86, Petersen wanted to see The Keewatin returned to Canada before his death, fearing that his sons would convert its steel hull into razor blades and car bumpers.
There’s a dry dock beside the waterfront museum in Kingston which, for many years, was occupied by the retired Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Alexander Henry. The icebreaker was operated for many years as a B&B until it was discovered that it contained a high volume of asbestos insulation and was not fit for habitation. The Kingston museum site was sold for a future high-rise condominium, but as the project never came to fruition, it remains the Maritime Museum.
The Alexander Henry was going to be scrapped with the museum sale, but Thunder Bay entrepreneurs raised enough money to tow the icebreaker to the Lakehead as they had originally attempted with Keewatin prior to its purchase by Skyline Developments. This fortuitous conclusion gives both ships a dignified end, and benefits both cities by incorporating them into community spaces.
After Port Weller, The Kee will head across Lake Ontario to enter the western gap at Toronto Harbour where the William Lyon Mackenzie – Toronto’s fire boat – will escort her with its powerful water cannons gushing out a salute. Keewatin will leave the harbour via the eastern gap and carry on to Kingston.