- SS Meteor
Infobox_nrhp | name ="Meteor" (Whaleback carrier)
nrhp_type =
caption =The SS "Meteor", the only remaining intact "whaleback",Superior, Wisconsin .
location=Superior, WI
lat_degrees = 46 | lat_minutes = 43 | lat_seconds = 23.42 | lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 92 | long_minutes = 3 | long_seconds = 46.57 | long_direction = W
area =
built =1896
architect= American Steel Barge Company; McDougall,Alexander
architecture= Other
added =September 9 ,1974
governing_body = Local
refnum=74000081 cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]SS "Meteor" is the sole surviving ship of the unconventional "
whaleback " design. Hancock, Pgs. 133-134] The design, created by Scottish captain Alexander McDougall (1845-1923), enabled her to carry a maximum amount of cargo with a minimum of draft. The "Meteor" was built in 1896 inSuperior, Wisconsin and, with a number of modifications, sailed until 1969. She is currently amuseum ship in the city of her birth.History
The "Meteor" was built by the American Steel Barge Company (ASB) at their yard in
Superior, Wisconsin in the summer of 1896 as the "Frank Rockefeller"; number 36 of 44 whalebacks built between 1888 and 1898. McDougall's expense records listed the cost of construction of the "Frank Rockefeller" as $181,573.38. [ cite web|url=http://www.superiorpublicmuseums.org/ssmeteor/CaptainMcDougall.htm |title=Alexander McDougall biography page |work=Superior Public Museum|accessmonthday=August 17 |accessyear=2007 ]She was built for the ASB fleet and joined their barges and steamers in the movement of iron ore from
Lake Superior ports down to the steel mills ofLake Erie and coal back up the lakes. She would also carry the odd loads of grain. As a steamer, she would often tow one or more of the company's "consort" barges to augment her carrying capacity. In 1900, along with the rest of the ASB fleet, she was sold to theBessemer Steamship Company , marine division of the Bessemer Steel Company. A year later, she again changed hands along with the whole of the Bessemer Fleet when it joined with 7 other fleets to form the massive, 112 boatPittsburgh Steamship Company , marine division of the equally massive US Steel. She grounded off Isle Royale on November 2, 1905 after the ship got lost in a snowstorm. Most of the damage from the grounding came from the barge she had been towingendashwhen the ship hit the rocks, the barge get plowing ahead until it crashed into the "Rockefeller"'s stern. Eventually repaired and put back into service, she sailed as a "Tin Stacker" (so called because of the silver painted funnels) until 1927.That year, she was sold for use as a sand dredge and renamed "South Park". As a dredge, she was used to obtain fill for the site of the Chicago World's Fair in 1933. In 1936, she changed hands again and became an auto carrier. She sailed for several years under this new guise, hauling new autos from
Detroit ,Milwaukee andKewaunee until 1942. She was wrecked offManistique that year. Had it not been for the great demand for tonnage inWorld War II , she would have been scrapped. Instead, she was sold to theCleveland Tanker Company , and converted to a tanker. It was at this time that she obtained the name "Meteor", as Cleveland Tanker named their vessels after celestial bodies. As a tanker, she hauled gasoline and other liquids for over 25 years.In 1969, the "Meteor" was the last of the whalebacks left out of the original 43, but that season, she ran aground on Gull Island Shoal off
Marquette, Michigan . Cleveland Tankers chose not to repair the 73-year-old steamer due to how the "Meteor" was asingle-hull tanker and the severe damage that had been done to the hull. Because the "Meteor" was the last surviving whaleback, she was bought, repaired and taken toSuperior, Wisconsin in 1971 for use as amuseum ship . She was berthed at Barkers Island where she remains today.The "Meteor" is the last extant example of an experimental class of lakers, other than wrecks such as the "Thomas Wilson" and the barge Sagamore, a favorite divesite in Whitefish Bay. However, the "Meteor" is at present poorly maintained; her hull is rusting and the interiors are in serious disrepair. Due to her condition, she was named one of the 10 most endangered historical properties by the
Wisconsin Trust for Historic Preservation . [ cite web|url=http://www.wthp.org/2004_ten_most_endangered_histori.htm |title=2004 Most Endangered Site |work=Wisconsin Trust For Historic Preservation site |accessmonthday=August 18 |accessyear=2007 ]Description
The "Meteor" is 380 feet long overall with a 366-foot keel. Other dimensions include a beam of 45 feet and a depth of 26 feet. [ cite web|url=http://digin.bgsu.edu/vsl_sch.htm|title=Search for name "Meteor" and city "Superior" |work=Historical Collections of the Great Lakes site |accessmonthday=August 18 |accessyear=2007 ]
The "Meteor", along with her sister whalebacks, (with one exceptionendashthe "John Ericsson"), were the first major boats on the Great Lakes with all accommodations aft and only a small room for the anchor windlass up at the bow. The "John Ericsson" was the only whaleback with the pilothouse at the bow. The "Ericsson" was also one of the last whalebacks on the lakes with the "Meteor"; she sailed on the Canadian side until 1964 when she was sold to the City of
Hamilton, Ontario for use as a museum. However, the plan failed and the "Ericsson" was scrapped in 1969.Sources
*cite book |last=Hancock |first=Paul |title=Shipwrecks of the Great Lakes |origyear=2001 |publisher=Thunder Bay Press |location=Hong Kong |isbn=1-57145-291-5 |pages=133-134
References
External links
* [http://www.superiorpublicmuseums.org/ssmeteor/ Superior Public Museums: SS Meteor]
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