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Tug Urger offers History lesson in Palmyra

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Having the Canal Corporation’s Tug Urger make a stop in Palmyra at Lock 29 on its journey back east on October 21st is an unexpected gift.
It is expected that Pal-Mac 4th graders will be touring during school hours, but the tug will be open to the public later in the day.
While the Port of Palmyra would have been an ideal location to dock and tour, it turns out the Port is not deep enough to accommodate the Tug.
The tugboat “Urger” is the flagship of the fleet of vessels operated by the New York State Canal Corporation on the 524-mile Canal System.
Built in 1901 in Ferrysburg, Michigan, this venerable tug is one of the oldest working vessels in the country still afloat. Originally built for use as a commercial shipping vessel, the “Urger” was originally christened the “Henry J. Dornbos,” after a prominent Michigan merchant. She was described in the Detroit Free Press as the “finest fishing boat in the local fishing fleet.”
In the early 1920s, the tug was sold, renamed the “Urger,” and entered the New York State Canal fleet. Stationed in Waterford, the “Urger” served more than 60 years hauling machinery, dredges and scows on the Erie and Champlain Canals until she was retired from service in the 1980s.
A New Life as a “Teaching Tug”
In 1991, the “Urger” was called back into service with a new mission. She now serves as the focal point of a program to educate school children and adults about the importance of New York’s historic Canal System and the role that inland waterways have played historically, and continue to play, in the lives of people who live along them.
In the spring and fall, the “Urger” visits communities along the Canal System where students in fourth-grade classes at local schools take field trips to the Tug and participate in shoreside “hands-on” educational sessions. There they learn about the history of the Canals and the role construction of the Erie Canal played in making New York the “Empire State.”
The educational program is presented by the New York State Canal Corporation at no charge to the participating schools.


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