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The ''Ned Hanlan'' is a steam-powered tugboat that spent her career in Toronto, Ontario. She displaces approximately 200 tons, and for many years was mounted beside a former nautical museum housed in the old Stanley Barracks on the grounds of the Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto. The boat is not open to the public. In June 2012, she was moved to a new home on Hanlan's Point on the Toronto Islands.〔()〕 The ''Ned Hanlan'' is in reasonably good shape, with little rust, and a slight dent in her port gunwale just fore of the wheelhouse. The screw and rudder have been removed. The tugboat is named after Ned Hanlan, a 19th-century Toronto resident, and world champion rower. ==Specifications== * Owner: Toronto Transportation Commission., 1932, Canada * Builder: Toronto Dry Dock Co., 1932, Canada, Ontario, Toronto * Engine Builder: John Inglis, 1932 * Year Built: 1932 * Year Engine Built: 1932 * Final Disposition: Exhibit ship in Toronto. * Registry Number: C. 157362 * Hull Number: None * Vessel Type: Tug and Ferry * Length: * Width: . * Height: * Gross Tonnage: * Net Tonnage: * Materials: Steel * Engine Type: Fore and Aft * Piston #1: * Piston #2: * Stroke Length: 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「Ned Hanlan (tugboat)」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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