John Wanamaker
City's
last tugboat is looking for new home
By Leonard N. Fleming
Inquirer Staff Writer
When
it cruised the Delaware River in its heyday, the City of Philadelphia's John
Wanamaker tugboat had a spare-no-expense paneled interior and an enormous steam
engine that could power the 116-foot vessel through thick ice.
The
tug could easily tow a scow. It also carried gatherings of city officials and
the well-connected, who used the tug as a municipal yacht after its completion
in 1924. But once Philadelphia's newspapers learned of the tug's extravagance,
the John Wanamaker became a scandal.
The
city sold the tug in the 1950s to a private owner, who moved it to New England.
It eventually docked as an elegant seafood restaurant in New Hampshire. In
2002, the restaurant failed, and the John Wanamaker - one of only five
steam-powered tugboats still in existence - became a bankruptcy orphan.
Today,
the once-luxurious vessel is anchored a quarter-mile from an old Rhode Island
naval yard. It's a bit of Philadelphia history with an uncertain future.
Owner
George Walker - who has been unable to use the boat as an attraction near hotel
property he owns in Fairhaven, Mass., because of a stalled marina development
plan - has had offers to sell the vessel for scrap metal.
But
neither he nor tugboat aficionados want to see it follow most of the other
majestic big tugs of its era to the scrap heap.
"It's
the most beautiful tugboat," said tug enthusiast Steve W. Lindsey, who
lives in New Hampshire and wants to see the John Wanamaker preserved in
Philadelphia or New England. "It's really our last chance to save a
steam-powered vessel on the Eastern Seaboard."
The
John Wanamaker was Philadelphia's last city-owned working tugboat and the last
working steam-powered tug on the East Coast. Its electrical system and bilge
pumps are in good shape, Walker said, although its 1,000-horsepower engine has
long been idle. Its hull could easily weather a haul down the East Coast, he
said.
"Generally,
it's in good condition," he said.
Walker,
who bought the vessel from a U.S. bankruptcy trustee after the restaurant
business sank, said he was willing to take offers but only from people
committed to preserving the tug.
"I
guess I'm in a unique position: I have the will to see it preserved," said
Walker, who declined to say how much he paid for the boat. "The only way I
would be willing to part with the vessel is to be convinced beyond a shadow of
a doubt that a buyer would have the demonstrated ability to maintain the
vessel."
David
Boone, a longtime tugboat enthusiast from South Jersey who paints tugs and used
to repair them, said that "it would be nice," but not easy, to
preserve the Wanamaker.
"The
saying always goes, if you have enough to restore an old tugboat, you know
enough not to do it," Boone said. "They are money pits."
The
nonprofit Philadelphia Ship Preservation Guild, which preserves and maintains
historic vessels, has the 1902 tugboat Jupiter and the 1883 sailing vessel
Gazela Primeiro. The diesel-powered Jupiter, owned by the Penn's Landing Corp.,
costs an estimated $40,000 per year to maintain, officials say.
Money
to repair boats worth saving is hard to come by in Philadelphia. The river
doesn't resonate with the public as it does in places such as Baltimore and
Boston, said Ed Stemmler, president of the preservation guild.
Lindsey,
a trustee of the New England Steamship Foundation, said he hoped his
organization would buy the John Wanamaker.
Walker
said he was sure that no matter what happened to the tug, "it'll be
floating long after I'm gone."
Contact
staff writer Leonard N. Fleming at 856-779-3223 or lfleming@phillynews.com.
City
man buys historic tugboat
But plans for vessel-restaurant are up in the air
By JACK SPILLANE, Standard-Times staff writer
|
A local businessman
has rescued a tugboat restaurant with a glamorous history from Portsmouth,
N.H., and brought it to New Bedford Harbor.
George
T.J. Walker, owner of the Holiday Inn Express in Fairhaven, as well as its
related conference center and marina, has gained control of the John Wanamaker.
The
boat was towed from Portsmouth to Fish Island and arrived early Monday morning.
In
Portsmouth, the upscale restaurant-boat's owners had fallen behind on their
rent, and the vessel's hull had fallen into disrepair.
Dunfey's
on the John Wanamaker operated at a berth in Portsmouth Harbor since 1994.
Mr.
Walker said he has considered rehabilitating the boat for operation in New
Bedford Harbor, but his prime goal is to save the historic vessel from sinking.
There
are a limited number of local boatyards that can repair the hull of a vessel
like the Wanamaker's.
"I've
always had a passion for boats," he said.
The
Wanamaker was built in 1923 and is said to have been the last active steam
tugboat in American waters. It originally operated as a tug icebreaker and
fireboat.
A
restaurant has functioned on the tugboat in various locations besides
Portsmouth, including Boston and Camden, Maine.
Mr.
Walker said he does not yet know where the rehabilitated boat will ultimately
be operated.
The
restaurant areas inside the boat are "thoroughly spotless," he said.
He
has had inquiries from both Newport and Boston; both would like to bring the
restaurant-vessel there, he said.
"It's
premature to say where it will ultimately be. It would have to be consistent
with the vision of the harbor for there to be a role for New Bedford or
Fairhaven," he said.
The
main portion of Portsmouth Harbor has long been reserved for working waterfront
purposes, such as fishing and shipping.
New
Bedford has just completed a harbor master plan that would prohibit a boat
functioning as a restaurant anywhere south of Wamsutta Street all the way to
the hurricane barrier.
The
only possible location south of Route 195 would be the Hicks-Logan area.
In
Fairhaven, the only areas outside the designated port areas appear to be a
shallow area near Mr. Walker's Holiday Inn and a marina just south of Route
195.
John
Simpson, executive director of the New Bedford Harbor Development Commission,
said there might be suitable locations for a restaurant boat in the harbor
under certain circumstances.
But
in order to operate a restaurant-boat in a waterway in Massachusetts, the
operator would have to obtain a Chapter 91 permit from the state.
That
permit is granted only if the operator can demonstrate that the operation does
not damage the tidal area and is in the overall community's interest.
"The
benefits have to far exceed the risks to a working waterfront in order to
operate something fixed like that," Mr. Simpson said.
At
least one member of the local business community said a tugboat-restaurant
could benefit the area.
"For
something like that, if he's able to pull it off, there's just no better view
(of New Bedford)," said Jim Mathes, executive director of the Greater New
Bedford Chamber of Commerce.
Davy's
Locker in the South End is the only waterfront restaurant currently operating
in New Bedford.
A
number of years ago, Twin Piers was a well-known restaurant that operated near
Homers Wharf downtown, and Queequeg's was a restaurant on the top floor of the
Bourne Counting House.
Noncommercial
operations on the waterfront must pay a special permit fee to the city.
This story appeared on Page A4 of The Standard-Times on December 5, 2002