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Decelles

Canadian List of Shipping 1956: Decelles [C.173253] registered at Montreal; Built at Owen Sound in 1941. 51'7 x 13'5 x 6'; 23 g.t.; 11 n.t.; 160 hp. Owned by The Canadian International Paper Co., Ltd., Montreal. Canadian List of Shipping 1970: Steel tug Decelles [C.173253] registered at Montreal. Built at Owen Sound in 1941. 52'; 23 g.t. Transport Canada List 2003: Owned by Cliff McKay, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario.

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Image from company brochure Steelcraft Hydraulic Steering Gears. Caption reads: "50 foot Warping Tug Decelles equipped with Steelcraft Hydraulic Steering Gear."

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Photo from Company Brochure Circular 46A, Steelcraft Warping Tugs

Lacroix Dam, Baskatong resevoir in September 1979, Basko (trimmed in red), Imelda M. is tied beside Basko, Decelles is tied at the end of the pier. W.J. Williamson (the biggest thing ever on the Gatineau River) is on the other side of the dock. (Not a Russel...) Photo courtesy Doug Gagnon.

 

JP notes: Decelles at Mercier dam base, Baskatong Reservoir, 1987
(note extensive attenna array).

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John Pomeroy notes: Baskatong Reservoir, 1987. Doug Gagnon notes (Jan. 2008): Decelles at Lacroix Depot at Baskatong, with two fully equipped Russel's . The first one (closest to Decelles.....bow at Decelles stern) is the Imelda M. the other one is the T.F. Whalen. Sad to say, T.F. Whalen was scrapped in the early 90's. Dan Stosic of Maniwaki had bought a bunch of Russel's when the drive stopped. He bought Basko ( donated to Municipality of Montcerf/Lytton) T.F Whalen, Bertrand, Faustina and Gyp. T.F. Whalen's engine was shot and because of this, couldn't find a buyer, she sat in his machine yard for a couple of years and was finally cut up and sold for scrap. So, in that pic of John's, from the top down, you've got Decelles, Imelda M, and T.F Whalen.

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Decelles, Pythonga and two accommodation barges, Baskatong Reservoir, 1991. Photo by John Pomeroy.
Dan McKay bought it either later in 1991, or in 1992.

 

c. 1997 from the Soo tug races.
http://www.ssm.thegreattugboatrace.ca/Pictures.html

 

Scottish Thistle in front of Decelles, Soo ON, Aug. 2nd, 2002.

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Decelles (Martin E. Johnson in background).
Photo by N. Schultheiss, boatnerd.com.

 

Decelles
Photo by N. Schultheiss, boatnerd.com.

 

2003 Great Tugboat Race programme courtesy Jeanette Cox. "The Decelles was built in 1941 by Russel Bros. for Canadian Pacific Forest Products. CP took her to Lake Decelles Reservoir in Quebec. In 1974 she was moved and landlocked to the Baskatong Basin in Quebec. Purchased in January of 1994 by Cliff McKay, she was then dismantled and moved overland to Sault Ste. Marie. The Decelles is now working under McKay Marine Service."

 

RBF notes: Used as Pleasure Tug (Soo, ON July 2, 2004)

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2004 Great Tug Boat Race in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Photos by Rob Farrow.

 

2004 Great Tug Boat Race in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Photo by Daniel Sauve.

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Decelles on ice. 50 foot Russel tug rebuilt by DAN AND CLIFF MCKAY of
Sault Ste Marie, ON 2006-03-23. Photo by Robert B. Farrow.

tugfest.net: Uploaded by: tuggboatt [17-02-2006 21:52:01 EDT]

 

Decelles alongside Mikayla, the former PPM 32. Photo by Ted Vince of the Soo, Aug. 2006.

 

Dan McKay's Decelles and Mikayla snowbound, 2006.

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c. 2011 from the Soo tug races.
http://www.ssm.thegreattugboatrace.ca/Pictures.html

 

The Great Tugboat Race July 2011, Soo. Photos by Ted Vince.

 

Mikayla and Decelles in the Soo
March, 2012. Photo by Ted Vince.

 

June 8, 2013. The Mikayla & The Decelles, Bellevue Marina, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Photo by Michael Greco.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/grecomix/9002723218/

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Decelles and Mikayla in Sault Ste. Marie. 2013-08-16. Photo by Eira Voth.

 

June 27, 2014. Photo by lucky via flickr.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/image_mine/14719767746

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34th annual Great Tugboat Race, on the St. Marys River. June, 2015.
https://www.sootoday.com/local-news/tugs-away-on-the-st-marys-river-8-photos-181515

 

The Tug Boat Race in 2015.

 

Scottish Thistle, Mikayla & Decelles. Taken on January 9, 2018 by Rick McCutcheon. Ice-locked tugboats, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. This is a study in patience. I saw this as a possible image six days ago. Six days in a row I went out with my gear waiting for the light to come in with the sun going down, the pinkish sky behind, the yellow of the tugs lit by evening sun, and no intrusions. Each night until this evening I was foiled by one thing or another, and even on this evening I waited two hours to get this image. This evening I went with only old school manual focus lenses, many 30 or more years old. This is the much acclaimed 135mm, f/2.8 AI-S lens, mounted on one of Nikon's newest bodies, sitting on a tripod of course.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/89374305@N00/38707335795

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Scottish Thistle, Mikayla and Decelles in Sault Ste. Marie, March 18, 2018. Photo by Dan Mckay.

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Aug. 30, 2018. Sault Ste. Marie. Mikayla & Decelles, along with the young lady Mikayla is named for. Photos by Dan McKay.

 

The Ottawa Citizen Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Mon, 15 Nov 1993, Page 11

Logging boat on the beach. Surplus vessel to be cut up after its sale
By Sean Upton Citizen Outaouais bureau.
MEMORIES: Rheal Lafontaine stands aboard the Williamson with smaller logging vessels in the background

 
The W. J. Williamson, the biggest logging boat to ever sail a river or lake in the Outaouais, will leave the Baskatong Reservoir the way it got here: in pieces. It's too heavy to load on a trailer in one piece and, even if it wasn't, it would be too tall to slip under the hydro lines that cross the highways going north and south. After 49 years on the Baskatong, a man-made lake 50 kilometres north of Maniwaki, Canadian Pacific Forest Products is selling the Williamson along with the smaller logging boats that drove the logs down the Gatineau River to the paper plant in Gatineau.

The log drive stopped in 1991 but the firm has been using some of the boats to clear the river of logs that slipped out of booms and created jams in the river's bays, says spokesman Andre Trudel. The cleanup is almost over and CP wants to sell the nine boats that are left from a fleet that once totalled more than 30, says Trudel.

The Williamson is double the size of most of the other boats to be sold. It is 24.4 metres long, and six metres wide, three storeys high, and made of steel. Its diesel V 12 motor produces 600 horsepower. Its size and weight make it impossible to move in one piece. It will have to be cut with torches before it goes anywhere, says Trudel. "I wouldn't go to watch that," says Rheal Lafontaine, the man who was the Williamson's captain for the last 27 years of duty. "It's the end of an era it's a shame."

He lived on the boat more than he lived with his family in Maniwaki during those 27 years. When he first took the wheel, he and his crew of six lived on the Williamson for four weeks at a time. After they were unionized, they got to go home every weekend. As much as he loves his family, he loved every minute of his life on that boat, Lafontaine says. And he would be happy to take the wheel again now, at 67. "I loved my work a lot. I would have liked to continue ... for a couple of years," he says.

Before becoming captain of the Williamson, Lafontaine handled smaller boats, including the Pythonga, the second largest of the fleet, skippered for most of the last 20 years by his brother, Armand. In all, Lafontaine spent 47 seasons (April to November) on the log drive. He started as a draveur, one of the men who walked on the logs to pry and push them on their way. After two seasons he got a job as a deck hand on a small boat and worked his way up to the helm of the Williamson.

The tug came from Halifax in 1943, where it had served as a harbor tugboat, and was named for William Joseph Williamson, a manager for CP. To make it to the Baskatong, it was cut in three pieces, loaded on a train, then re-welded at the lake. The Baskatong, the largest body of water in the Outaouais, was created by damming the Gatineau, and Gens-de-Terre rivers and smaller rivers and streams.

The Williamson hauled booms of logs from the mouths of the rivers across the lake to the Mercier Dam log-slide that spilled them in to the Gatineau River. It could pull three booms of logs, about 3,500 cords. But for all its horsepower, the Williamson had an average speed of one mile an hour when it was pulling booms. (Faster if there was a tailwind, slower in a headwind.) The Williamson probably won't pull wood ever again. Like the Gatineau paper plant, most mills get their wood by truck; log drives are no longer practical, says Trudel. CP is hoping to find a buyer and Trudel estimates the boat is worth between $50,000 and $100,000. It might be worth that if it was on another body of water, says Charles Bond, owner of Bond Marine Contracting. He's bought seven of the steel 12-metre logging boats since CP started selling them. They can be moved in one piece. Bond uses them for work on the Ottawa, Rideau and St. Lawrence rivers.

"It's worth zip. It's worth a buck as it sits," he says of the Williamson. "It's going to cost (too) much to take it out." There are skeptics, but CP hopes to sell it to someone who will use it. Marcel Guilbeault, the caretaker at the Lacroix Dam where the Williamson is in dry dock, recently gave it a new coat of silver paint. It was used once this summer when a movie company used it for a period, made-for-television film, be Chant de la Silouette. The movie company had added its own paint job to make it look old and ratty.

Before it is shown on television, the movie will be shown at a theatre in Maniwaki in March. In the audience will be Lafontaine, watching what he thinks was the last-ever voyage of the Williamson. There is no doubt it was its last voyage on the Baskatong.

 

For more Russel exhibits visit Owen Sound Marine & Rail Museum 1165 1st Ave West, Owen Sound, ON N4K 4K8
(519) 371-3333     http://marinerail.com