New York City’s annual Great North River Tugboat Race on Sunday 9th October, though rainy, went off well.
Eight tugboats met at Pier 84 in Manhattan on the Hudson River for the competition. The race passed the city’s West Side piers classed by horsepower, timed line throwing to the pier, and bow-to-bow pushing challenges.
“This is the best seat in the house to see this race,” said John McCluskey, as he narrated the action for about 200 spectators on Sightseer VII (a 151’x23’x11’ Circle Line tour boat).
Despite the weather, the rescheduled event went on without a hitch. The race is a fundraising event for the Working Harbor Committee, a nonprofit group that educates the public about the New York and New Jersey maritime industry.
Buchanan Marine LP’s two 2,200-hp tugs Buchanan 1 and Mister T
Donjon Marine’s 3,000-hp Emily Ann and 2,250-hp Meagan Ann
Miller Launch’s 1,500-hp Susan Miller
Norfolk Tug Company’s James William and Taft Beach
Wittich Bros. Marine’s 1,400-hp Sea Wolf
Class A: First place Emily Ann, 3 minutes 45 seconds; second place Mister T, 3 minutes 54 seconds; third place James William, 4 minutes.
Class B: First place Meagan Ann, 3 minutes 47 seconds; second place Taft Beach, 4 minutes 14 seconds; third placeBuchanan 1, 4 minutes 41 seconds.
Class C: First place Sea Wolf, 4 minutes 28 seconds; second place Susan Miller, 4 minutes 35 seconds.
The Working Harbor Committee regularly hosts two-hour narrated boat tours of working waterfronts in New York and New Jersey, taking people to corners of the still-thriving maritime industry they would not otherwise get to see. The committee also engages with at-risk high school youth, introducing them to the harbor industry and the opportunities and educational requirements for maritime employment.
The tug race started in the early 1990s and was hosted by the Intrepid Sea-Air-Space Museum. In the early days, it ran from the aircraft carrier at Pier 86 to the 79th St. Boat Basin. In the mid-2000s, a former Intrepid staffer, Capt. Jerry Roberts, took over running the event with help from others, including the Working Harbor Committee.
After experimenting at a couple of locations, the organizers settled on Pier 84, between the Intrepid and the Circle Lines terminal at the foot of West 42nd St. Now a park, the location affords spectators a good view of parading tugs and an opportunity to see them and their crews up close.
Source: Workboat.com