Ferry

Cranford ferry reef
The Cranford

A ferry is a ship designed to transport people or vehicles across the water on a regular schedule. Ferries generally cover only short distances in protected areas and are not designed for the open sea. The distinction between a ferry and a steamer is a blurred one, though, especially in the waters around New York City, where the same company might operate a cross-river vehicle and passenger ferries, and cross-bay passenger steamers, all for the same commuter service. Some ferries even carried rail cars.

Ferries are often quite specialized designs, with maximum deck area and passenger capacity, and drive-on / drive-off facilities for vehicles. Ferries are either single-deck or double-deck, based not on how many decks the boat actually has, but on how many decks it can simultaneously embark and debark passengers on.

The most specialized ferry design is the double-ended ferry. A double-ended ferry has a rudder, propeller, loading ramps, and wheelhouse at both ends, so that the vessel may be driven in either direction with equal ease. This avoids having to back out of the ferry slip since there is no backward! Of course, a design like this is going to sacrifice a lot in speed and seaworthiness, and so would really only be suited to cross-river services and the like.

double-ended ferry
A typical double-ended ferry
double-ended ferry
A double-ended ferry in dry-dock for repairs, displaying the hull form and propeller to good effect

The End of the Commuter Ferries

commuter ferry City of Keansburg
An old postcard of the City of Keansburg, the last of the New York commuter ferries.

Built in 1926, the City of Keansburg and her sister the City of New York were the last, biggest, and grandest of the old cross-bay ferries. Although the steamboat dock in Keansburg was destroyed in a 1962 storm, she stayed in service at Atlantic Highlands until 1968. By this time, the cross-Hudson ferry service had already ceased. Ferry service, in general, declined in later years, due mainly to the ascendancy of the automobile, and all the bridges and tunnels that have been constructed for it.

A failed attempt to convert the Keansburg to a floating restaurant took it to Florida, where she remains today, rotting in the St. Johns River. One of her triple-expansion steam engines is on display at Allaire State Park.

commuter ferry City of Keansburg
The reverse side, showing the schedule
commuter ferry Alexander Hamilton
Alexander Hamilton, seen here aground on a sandbar in Highlands, circa 1975

The Alexander Hamilton was the last of the steam-powered side-wheel riverboats of the Hudson River Day Line. Built in 1924, she ceased operations in 1971. A well-meaning group pulled the Hamilton from the mud in 1977 and moved her to a temporary berth along the east side of the Navy pier, planning to restore her as a museum. Unfortunately, at the new more-exposed location, the old vessel was sunk and reduced to scrap by a sudden storm in November of that year. The last records indicate that the wreck is still there.

commuter ferry Alexander Hamilton
What a pity. Nothing is discernable above water in satellite imagery, although there is a ship-shaped shadow in the water.

Ferry Service Reborn

fast ferry
Recently, ferry service in the New York area has seen a resurgence, with many modern fast boats plying both the Hudson and cross-bay routes that were once so important.
fast ferry
This should make an interesting reef someday. ( Belford NJ )
fast ferry
Modern fast ferries crowd the docks in front of the USS Intrepid in Manhattan.

Diving Ferries

There are three ferries I know of in the area that are diveable:

Cranford ferry reef
The Cranford was reincarnated as a restaurant before being sunk as a reef in 1982. The vessel was cut down to main deck level, stripped, and gutted before sinking.
Elizabeth ferry reef
CRRNJ ferry Elizabeth was sunk as a reef in 2005. Like her sister Cranford, she also served as a restaurant for a time. Most of the major machinery was removed prior to sinking.
shipwreck Vega ferry
The Vega sank in foul weather while being towed to Florida in 1961. The wreck is upside-down and seldom visited.

Here's a curiosity: the Mary Murray was a Staten Island Ferry, built in 1937. She has been beached on the south bank of the Raritan River in East Brunswick since 1982. Plans to convert her to a restaurant or a nightclub never materialized. Instead, it ended up as a semi-floating storage shed, filled up with scrap metal with steel garage doors welded on both ends. The owners are "waiting for the right offer', although it's hard to imagine what that would be.

ferry Mary Murray
The Mary Murray, as she may be seen from the northbound side of the Turnpike bridge. Since cut-up in place and removed.
ferry Mary Murray
Future artificial reef? I doubt it - judging by her tilt, I would say that she doesn't even float anymore. The other vessel is supposed to have been the yacht of the Shah of Iran. ( Both hulks are gone now. )
ferry Mary Murray
The ferry and her companion, seen from the opposite bank - not an easy place to get to.
ferry Mary Murray
Seen again, from the Turnpike bridge.
ferry Mary Murray

Why so many pictures of this old hulk? I guess I'm kind of intrigued by it. What a great artificial reef this would make - just think of swimming through the interior. But even if she could be floated, I doubt anyone would want to take the chance on moving her - she could sink in the river channel or elsewhere on the way to the reef site, which would be a very expensive accident. It's gone now.

Mary Murray pictures courtesy of Colin Vozeh / AvailableDark.com

Update:

The state finally put their foot down, and both of these vessels were scrapped.

ferry stamp

Shipwreck Vega
Circa 1950, enroute to Staten Island
Type:
shipwreck, ferry, USA
Built:
1925 - Staten Island NY USA
Specs:
( 75 x 40 ft ) 84 tons
Sunk:
Wednesday January 11, 1961
capsized under tow in storm, no casualties
GPS:
40°11.646' -73°56.787' (AWOIS 1990)
Depth:
55 ft


Hooters reef
An undignified end for the sole remaining CRRNJ ferry Elizabeth
Type:
artificial reef, ferry, Central Railroad of New Jersey, USA
Name:
All CRRNJ ferries were named for New Jersey towns - Lakewood, Bound Brook, Red Bank, Plainfield, Elizabeth, Wilkes Barre, Cranford, Somerville, Westfield, and Bound Brook
Built:
1901 Wilmington DE USA, as Lakewood
Specs:
( 200 x 44 ft ) 1016 gross tons
Sponsor:
NJ Coast 2005 Initiative
Sunk:
Wednesday August 3, 2005 - Cape May Artificial Reef
GPS:
38°50.682' -74°43.078'
Depth:
75 ft

The "Regulator Tax" and the Buddy System

You should probably just skip this section

The scuba industry has successfully convinced the diving public that annual servicing of regulators is essential for your safety. Actually, at $50-$100 per regulator per year, annual servicing of regulators is far more essential to their bottom line than it is to your safety. Am I so cheap that I would risk my life to save less than $100? Not really.

All this is mixed up in business, economics, liability, and the fallacious buddy system. As you know, in the buddy system your buddy is theoretically your backup emergency air supply underwater, insuring not only against out-of-air situations, but also against equipment failures, and therefore you need only one tank and regulator. In keeping with this theory, you are sold a wholly inadequate breathing system with no built-in redundancy at all. Then, to try to reduce the inherent danger of diving with such a system, or perhaps just the legal liability in promoting it, you are then "required" to have it "serviced" at least once a year, whether it needs it or not. In fact, this is the icing on the cake for the industry, since such servicing is far more profitable than sales! The real purpose of all this is to lower the entry cost of diving by several hundred dollars, expand the customer base as rapidly as possible, and maximize revenues, and all this is done at the expense of true safety. In an industry that professes to be obsessed with safety at all costs, this hypocrisy is almost beyond belief. ( I'm not saying your local dive shop is evil, but he'll go right along with the industry-standard because everyone else does, and he needs to make a living. )

Printed from njscuba.net