Steven McAllister

Steven McAllister reef
Type:
artificial reef, tugboat, McAllister Towing, USA
Built:
1949, Jakobson Shipyard, Oyster Bay, NY USA, as Paterson
Specs:
( 95 x 25 ft )
Sponsor:
Hudson River Fishermen's Association of New Jersey
Sunk:
Friday September 22, 2000 - Sea Girt Artificial Reef
GPS:
40°06.883' -73°41.534'
Depth:
125 ft
Steven McAllister reef
As Paterson - at some point the wheelhouse must have been cut down, and other modifications made.
Steven McAllister reef
compass

This tug now lies upright with a slight list to starboard on a hard sand bottom. The top of the wreck is at a depth of 90 ft while the main deck is at 110 ft. The engine was removed prior to sinking.

Built in 1949, by Jakobson Shipyard of Oyster Bay, New York as the Paterson for the Erie Railroad Company of Jersey City, New Jersey. In 1960, the Erie Railroad Company became the Erie Lackawanna Railroad Company of Jersey City, New Jersey, where the tug retained her name. Later acquired by the McAllister Brothers Towing Company of New York, New York, where she was renamed Steven McAllister. She was a single screw tug, rated at 1,000 horsepower.

tugboatinformation.com

HRFA-NJ reef
Steven McAllister reef
Bill Figley - New Jersey Artificial Reef Coordinator

The old boat was sunk by opening the seacocks, which took much longer than anticipated - about 8 hours longer.

HRFA-NJ reef
The crew of the Mary L McAllister hosed water into the wreck for hours, trying to speed things up.
HRFA-NJ reef
Finally, moments before sinking, the Mary L unties and moves away.
HRFA-NJ reef
HRFA-NJ reef
HRFA-NJ reef

In the end, the "HRFA" sank so fast that I didn't even get a shot of it ! These were taken by Captain Steve Nagiewicz. It took less than a minute for the old tug to roll over and sink.


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cave diver
A cave diver. This doesn't look very "minimalist" to me. In fact, this pile of junk would probably get you killed in the North Atlantic.

"DIR" or "Doing It Right" is a system of diving developed by cave divers which involves extremely rigid gear configurations and methodologies. To its adherents, DIR takes on an almost religious significance. For the true follower of DIR, no deviation may be tolerated, because DIR is perfection.

GUE

DIR is designed for cave diving. The usual object of cave diving is to go in and come back out alive. In line with this goal of accomplishing essentially nothing, DIR espouses an absolutely minimal equipment kit: "When in doubt, leave it home." DIR also espouses teamwork, mutual interdependence, and close lock-step buddy diving, things that are pretty much unavoidable in the confines of a cave anyway.