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James R. Elliott : ウィキペディア英語版
MS Normac

''Normac'' is a floating restaurant boat that was launched as a fire tug named the ''James R. Elliot''. She was built at the Jenks Shipbuilding Company in Port Huron, Michigan, in 1902.
After she lost her usefulness as a fire tug, she was sold in 1930 to the Owen Sound Transportation Company Limited. At that time she was taken to the Georgian Bay Shipbuilding Company at Midland for conversion into a combination package freighter and passenger ferry and from a steamer to a diesel powered vessel.
In 1931 the vessel was renamed the ''Normac'' which was the namesake of captain "Norman Mckay," founder and general manager of Owen Sound Transportation Company Limited, which is still running today. Mckay was the captain of the company flagship SS ''Manitoulin''.
The ''Normac'' sailed the Owen Sound to Sault Ste. Marie route via Killarney and the North Channel, commencing July 16, 1931. From 1932 she sailed the Manitoulin Island - Tobermory route and in later years, along this same route with the S.S. ''Norisle''. After the SS ''Norgoma'' was converted to diesel fuel and placed on the Tobermory run, in 1964 the ''Normac'' took up the role as an automobile ferry across the North Channel from Meldrum Bay to Blind River and Cockburn Island, a portion of its original run from Owen Sound. ''Normac'' remained on this route until the close of the 1968 season when she was retired. She was sold to Donald F. Lee of Port Lambton Ontario, and moved from Owen Sound to Wallaceburg Ontario, where she spent the winter.
She was then sold in 1969, to John Letnik, the ''Normac'' was converted into Captain John's Harbour Boat Restaurant, a floating restaurant in Toronto Harbour. The ''Normac'' arrived at Toronto in her Owen Sound colours, and was soon painted all white. Shortly afterward the steel hull was repainted bright red, to make it more noticeable from the street. Permanently moored at the foot of Yonge Street, she was severely damaged in 1981 when the Toronto Island ferry ''Trillium'' struck her, causing a slow leak and her sinking two weeks later.〔
〕〔

The ''Normac'' was raised in 1986, refurbished to serve as a floating restaurant in other communities. With her amidships state rooms removed, she served as Tokyo Joe's Marina Bar and Grill, a floating restaurant and cocktail lounge at Port Dalhousie, Ontario until she was gutted by fire in 2011.〔 She was restored and became the Riverboat Mexican Grill.〔http://www.boatnerd.com/pictures/historic/perspectives/Normac/default.htm〕
==References==



抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「MS Normac」の詳細全文を読む



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