Showing posts with label Great Lakes Cruising. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Lakes Cruising. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 13, 2021

Tragedy Aboard the Noronic


                                                         Noronic Brochure

 Cruising America's rivers and coasts has once again become popular. However, it was the Great Lakes destinations that remained the premier attraction for travelers both Canadian and American at the turn of the century. To meet this demand the Canada Steamship Lines set about building stately passenger ships. The “Noronic,” launched in 1914, joined her sister ships the “Huronic” and the “Hamonic.” All told the Canada Steamship Lines grew to include more than 100 of these luxurious vessels. The big steamers became known as the “Great White Fleet.” “Noronic's” beauty caused many to refer to her as the “Queen of the Lakes.” 


Noronic
                                                 Charles E. Frohman Collection 

                                                     
Built for both safety (steel-hulled and double-bottomed) and passenger comfort, the “Noronic” featured an orchestra, spacious staterooms and elaborate woodwork. She had five decks and room for as many as 600 passengers and 200 crew.

On the fateful night of September 16, 1949, the “Noronic” docked at Pier 9 in Toronto. In the early morning hours, a passenger smelled smoke coming from a locked linen closet. A bellboy retrieved the keys to the closet. When he opened the door, the fire exploded into the hallway fueled by fresh air and fed by the heavily oiled woodwork. Fire extinguishers proved useless and the ship's fire hoses were out of order. When the vessel's alarm whistle sounded 8 minutes later, more than half the decks were on fire.

Noronic Ablaze
Courtesy Creative Commons



When pumpers arrived, flames were as high as the ship's mast. With stairwells on fire, passengers (some engulfed in flames) jumped into the frigid waters below. Others climbed down ropes as the “Noronic's” gangplank extended only to a single deck. Crew members broke stateroom windows, but many had already suffocated or were burned alive in their cabins. Fire boats, ambulances, and more pumpers arrived. When the first extension ladder reached B deck, it quickly broke under the weight of dozens of panicked passengers. Some fell into the water, others tumbled to their deaths on the pier. As the heat intensified, the decks buckled. So much water had been poured into the “Noronic,” that the vessel began to list. Firefighters were forced to stop until she again righted herself. When recovery operations began, firefighters found passengers trampled in their attempt to reach the decks via the burning stairwells. Many were found burned beyond recognition.  Of the 582 passengers 119 perished, all American save one.

No cause of the fire was ever determined, but the crew was blamed for cowardice and negligence. Too few (only 18) remained on board the “Noronic” that night. No one provided passengers with evacuation procedures or awakened them as the flames spread. Some of the crew even fled the ship. Using dental records for the first time, it took investigators nearly a year to identify the dead. “Noronic's” hull was eventually re-floated and scrapped at Hamilton, Ontario. The tragedy sounded the death knell for Canada Steamship Lines' cruises. Only a few years later, CSL, amid lawsuits and new regulations,  brought a sad end to  its once famous Great Lakes cruise line.


Tuesday, April 7, 2020

Cruisin' the Inland Seas

"North American" Loaded with Passengers
Charles E. Frohman Collection


Until only very  recently, the "cruise industry" has flourished. It was possible to book a cruise to any destination in the world - the Mediterranean, Chile, Panama Canal, or Iceland. Even here in the United States, cruising the Mississippi and the Great Lakes has once again become popular. 

But one hundred years ago, most vacationers dreamed of visiting Niagara Falls, Mackinac Island, and Montreal. Indeed, cruising the Great Lakes was a popular past time in the first half of the 20th century.  In 1913, the first ship built anywhere in the world exclusively for cruising was laid down in Ecorse, Michigan. The "North American" was steel hulled, more than 250 feet in length, and carried as many as 500 passengers.


Balcony on the interior of the "North American"
Charles E. Frohman Collection

Owned and operated by the Chicago Duluth Georgian Bay Transit Line, the "North American" offered vacationers week long trips between Detroit and Duluth and Detroit and Montreal. Sailing 2,200 miles, she made stops at Sault Ste. Marie, Mackinac Island, Buffalo, Sarnia and Niagara Falls. 

Much like today, passengers enjoyed fine dining, dancing, entertainment, and sight-seeing at scenic ports-of-call. She became known as the "Queen of the Great Lakes." So popular were these cruises. that the company was unable to accommodate the numbers of vacationers, honeymooners, and European tourists.  The following year, the company added a second vessel. For the next fifty years, the "North American" and her sister ship plied the waters of the Great Lakes. Even during the Depression, the demand remained strong.

"North American" Cruise Guide
Charles E. Frohman Collection

So - whatever happened to the "North American"? Although she had undergone a total upgrade that featured all of the modern conveniences, times began to change. Interest waned. With more discretionary income, vacationers sought new destinations. Heavy industrialization and pollution took their toll. The Great Lakes and her ports had lost much of their former luster.


"North American" on the Detroit River
Charles E. Frohman Collection

The "North American" was sold to the Canadian Holiday Company in 1963 for cross-lake service between Port Dover, Ontario and Erie, Pennsylvania. But even that run proved to be a losing proposition. The following year, the "Queen of the Great Lakes," the scene of  fun, relaxation, and so many good times for tens of thousands was finally retired. Sold and resold in several shaky deals, the "North American" finally found a new owner after four long years. The Seafarers International Union bought her hoping to give her a new life as a training ship.

"North American"  Heading into Port
Charles E. Frohman Collection

Under tow by the tug "Michael McAllister," the great, old cruise ship left her port in Erie, heading for Newport News for a total overhaul. A short time after entering the Atlantic, the "North American" faced the first swells of an approaching hurricane. While the seas were only moderate, they proved too much for the old Great Lakes queen.She  quickly sank from sight. 

"North American" at Georgian Bay
Charles E. Frohman Collection

But that was not the last she was ever heard from. During the summer of 2006, Quest Marine research team found her in 250 feet of water close to the continental shelf some 140 miles off Nantucket. The news of her discovery evoked fond memories for those who had sailed on the "Queen of the Great Lakes" in her heyday.