PS Waubuno

{{Short description|Side-wheel paddle steamer}}

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|Ship name=Waubuno

|Ship owner=Georgian Bay Transportation Company

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|Ship builder= Melancthon Simpson, Port Robinson

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|Ship completed=1865

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|Ship fate=Lost in a storm on 22 November 1879 with all hands

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|Ship tonnage= 193 tons

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|Ship length= 135 feet

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|Ship power=Steam

|Ship propulsion=Paddle steamer

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Waubuno was a side-wheel paddle steamer that conveyed passengers and freight between Collingwood and Parry Sound in the 1860s and 1870s.[http://www.southchannel.org/history/area-shipwrecks.html Georgian Bay South Channel - Area Shipwrecks, accessed August 31, 2009] She sank with all hands during a gale on November 22, 1879 (probably around 10 a.m.{{cite news|title=Mr Long and the Waubuno|journal=Parry Sound North Star|date=December 12, 1879}}), though the exact cause of her sinking is unknown.

Waubuno was built by Melancthon Simpson at Port Robinson in 1865 for J. & W. Beatty and Company,Hayes, Adrian. Parry Sound: Gateway to Northern Ontario. p.5 Natural Heritage Books. 2005. 1-89621-991-8 and was later owned by the Georgian Bay Transportation Company.[http://www.hhpl.on.ca/GreatLakes/Wrecks/details.asp?ID=18524 Maritime History of the Great Lakes: Shipwrecks: WAUBUNO, accessed August 31, 2009] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606173354/http://www.hhpl.on.ca/GreatLakes/Wrecks/details.asp?ID=18524 |date=June 6, 2011 }} Her main purpose was to run passengers and freight from the Northern Railway's railhead at Collingwood to places further north, including Parry Sound and Thunder Bay. She advertised "Cheap Pleasure Excursions", specifically a trip that was "short, attractive and cheap. Freight and passengers carried at the lowest rates".{{cite book|author=Bill Hester|title=Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|year=c. 2004|publisher=According to the reference librarian at Collingwood Library, on 30 May 2022: "The book was added to the collection in 2004." Hester's sources appear to include the Huron Institute Papers, Pioneer Papers of Simcoe County, Ontario Historical Society journals and newspaper clippings from newspapers of Barrie, Owen Sound, Collingwood, etc.}}

Her name was derived from Algonquin and means "black magician" {{cite web |title=Transcripts: Sinking of the Waubuno |url=http://www.parrysound.com/fun/explore/238/ |website=parrysound.com |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080907122551/http://www.parrysound.com/fun/explore/238/ |archive-date=2008-09-07 |access-date=2024-01-05 }} or "sorcerer".{{Cite magazine

|last = Hunter

|first = Douglas

|author-link =

|title = The sorcerer's ship: The sinking of the oddly named Waubuno is one of the strangest in Georgian Bay's history

|newspaper = The Beaver

|pages = 30–34

|date= June–July 2009

|id = {{Gale|A201801754}}

}}

Last voyage

= Background =

As of October 1879, the Georgian Bay Transportation Company planned to replace the Waubuno with a boat with "more modern engines and boiler" in time for the spring 1880 season.{{cite web|url=https://images.maritimehistoryofthegreatlakes.ca/7066/data|title=From a October 1879 article in the Parry Sound North Star newspaper (reprinted on 23 October 1879 in the Orillia Times).}} So by November 1879, the aging Waubuno was finishing its final season of cheap pleasure excursions. According to a 24 November report (two days after the boat sank), the Waubuno was "by many considered quite unfit for the route, especially at this season of the year".{{cite news|newspaper=Orillia Times|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|date=December 4, 1879}} According to a 12 December report, the boat was equipped with the same false sides that had been installed in 1865 to make the boat "seaworthy at all", and "the boat was leaking badly and had to be pumped while lying at the dock the Sunday before her loss, in fact that during Saturday night the water got up to the fire hole. The Captain stated... that he was afraid to put her out in heavy weather as she was not fit; the engines are also said to have been in very bad condition."{{cite news|newspaper=Parry Sound North Star|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|date=December 12, 1879}}

= Departure =

The trip was likely to be the last voyage the ship could make before ice made future trips impossible for the winter. The ship, skippered by George Plumpton Burkitt, had been trying to leave the southern Georgian Bay town of Collingwood, Ontario since November 18, 1879, but snow and fierce winds had kept the ship in port. The ship set off during a break in the weather at 4 a.m. on Saturday November 22 with 24 crew and passengers[http://www.diversnook.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=30&Itemid=72 Divers' Nook - The Waubuno, accessed August 31, 2009]

and a "heavy load" / "heavily laden"{{cite news|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|newspaper=Orillia Times|date=December 4, 1879}} with $10,000 of freight.{{cite news|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|journal=Parry Sound North Star|date=November 28, 1879}}

The ship was last spotted afloat near Christian Island (35 km north of Collingwood and 60 km south of her destination of Parry Sound, on her regular course) by the island's lighthouse keeper who noted that the ship was faring well.[http://www.elisedallaire.com/49/the_waubuno_s_battle.htm The Waubuno's Battle -- Elise Dallaire, accessed August 31, 2009] Winds intensified during the day and the ship probably sank between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. The Steamer Magnettawan left later on the same morning as Waubuno and after sheltering overnight at Christian Island, arrived at Parry Sound November 24, never having spotted the other ship.{{cn|date=April 2025}}

Search and speculation

When Waubuno failed to turn up at her destination, the tug Millie Grew was sent out to look for the paddle steamer. She returned to report that they had found a portion of the wreck. A contemporary article on the disaster from the Parry Sound North Star says that the crew of Millie Grew

{{cquote|...could find no trace of the crew, but picked up several articles that they knew belonged to the missing vessel, consisting of a metallic life boat turned bottom up and stove in at both ends, a life-preserver with the ships name on it, several articles of furniture out of the cabin, the ships ledger, and a part of the paddle Box with the letters W.A. on it. Barrels of apples, flour, and different articles of freight were distributed along the shore in abundance.}}

Another article stated similarly and added that "everything goes to show that she is literally torn to pieces".{{cite news|journal=The London|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|date=November 25, 1879}} No bodies were ever recovered.[http://www.ontarioplaques.com/Plaques_PQR/Plaque_Parry06.html The Sinking of the 'Waubuno' 1879 Historical Plaque, accessed August 31, 2009]

In the days after the accident, some speculated that after the Waubuno passed Christian Island, "she then directed her course towards Moose Deer Point [northeast of Christian Island on the eastern shore of Georgian Bay], in order to get into shelter as soon as possible. But unfortunately she never reached it. It was blowing a living gale, and a blinding snow falling at the same time, and owing to her very heavy load, and as swell after swell struck her, it is very reasonable to suppose foundered." Two captains working that weekend speculated respectively that "the steamer foundered not far from Lone Rock [25 km southwest of Parry Sound, where] the force of the waves under her guards parted her and she filled with water", or, "she struck one of the rocks belonging to the [Western Islands]", 35 km southwest of Parry Sound.{{cite news|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|journal=Orillia Packet|date=December 5, 1879}} Others claimed that "The supposition is that with the heavy load and the gale... a wave struck her and stove in her hold after filling her hold with water and thus causing her to sink at once [and] from the point where the portions of the wreck have been found, and the direction of the prevailing winds, [this probably occurred] only some six or seven miles south of the Western Islands on her regular course".{{cite news|title=As referenced in Georgian Bay Navigation, 1847-1882|newspaper=Enterprise|date=November 28, 1879}} Somewhat in contradiction with guesses made about what happened to her... in more recent times divers have discovered her anchors and windlass on the bottom off Haystack Rock, and her engine inshore of them. Clearly she had tried to come to anchor when it was realized she had missed the passage and had reefs under her lee. For a time the anchors held, and presumably this is when her distress signals were heard. Then her windlass was torn from her deck, letting the vessel come downwind onto the reefs where after striking her machinery fell through her bottom and her destruction proceeded.

Notes

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Further reading

  • Hunter, Douglas. "The Sorcerer's Ship: The sinking of the oddly named Waubuno is one of the strangest in Georgian Bay's history", (June–July, 2009). The Beaver.
  • Ratigan, Bill. Great Lakes Shipwrecks and Survivals. Grand Rapids: WB Eerdmans, 1977. {{ISBN|0-8028-7010-4}}.

{{1879 shipwrecks}}

{{Recreational dive sites|wresit}}

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Category:Ferries of Ontario

Category:1865 ships

Category:Great Lakes ships

Category:Shipwrecks of Lake Huron

Category:Maritime incidents in November 1879

Category:Ships lost with all hands

Category:Ships built in Ontario