The world needs more explorers like you sir. Grown up but still having the childish need to see search and learn the natural way. Thanks for taking us along on your journys😊
For a moment I forgot ships are referred to as females (I just finished watching a bunch of ghost town videos, so my brain is still on that lol), and I got really concerned that he’d found an actual woman’s dead body 💀
@@auklin7079they’re not that many antique ships especially ferries like her preserved nowadays, so I wish she was saved she looked so special in a way.
@@randomuser9883 All ships have unique stories. That history, while mildly interesting. Was not special. The current ferries, if they stay in service for 70 years, would have an equally interesting history if washed up on a beach 100 years from now.
you have no idea how much these videos mean to us. this type of quality is hard to find on RUclips, from the soothing background score to the smooth editing, often with on-site footage. i always know that your videos will fulfil my wanderlust for the day and help me to de-stress from this dystopian world we’re living in. Thank you.
Thank you for more Nova Scotian content. It's always nice to learn more history about the Maritimes - and this was a happier story than that of the Atlantic, for sure.
I have a suggestion for a new video: the sinking of the Arabia Steamboat in (i believe) the Missouri river. While the sinking itself might not be so extraordinary they have a beautiful museum in Kansas City and it's like a giant time capsule of that time. It's really interesting how they found the boat, where they found it and how they were able to preserve many of the artifacts inside. They had to develop special "ovens" that very slowly remove the humidity from the objects without damaging them. They also have many different medicine bottles from that time that they refuse to identify because there's a big chance their components are illegal nowadays and if that was the case they would have to dispose of them. I had a great time in that museum
Boss, your channel gives me a old pbs documentary or a Reading Rainbow vibe (also a pbs show), getting a nostalgia feeling over here, man. Do not stop haha
I've never heard of this ship until just now with your documentaries. But looking back, it is such a fascinating vessel, and it's wreck is in such a beautiful locale! You really outdo yourself with every video you release.
I'm a mechanic. I was THRILLED to see the diagram of the steam engine in this video.I absolutely love ALL of your content. You are thorough in your research, humorous and entertaining . Hugs!💘
Thank you for your work, it's always so informative. It's a shame so many cities are hellbent on destroying their culture in place of mind numbing and soulless modern architecture. I get that buildings get old and sometimes need to be replaced, but replacing them with concrete zombie rectangles doesn't have to be mandatory.
I can't quite put my finger on the allur of these great ships; their mystery and fascinating history. This is an exceptional and important site, not to wax purple, but it contains the unlikely combination of factual information and magic.
A good challenge for you would be to try to find the wreck of the chippewa. A ferry that sank in the early 1970s near the near the Collinsville Fishing Resort near stockton, on the sacramento rkver. The resort was bought in the 1980s and demolished, leading some historians to believe this was also the end of the line for chippewa. although no records exist indicating she was scrapped. However, as late as 2020, satellite photos of the area show an unnatural shape on the bottom of the Sacramento River at the site, roughly matching the dimensions of the Chippewa, meaning her hull may have survived, even if as a shipwreck. I can't really go to stockton, not sure if you can either. If that is the case, to anybody reading this, please help us find chippewa's wreck.
@@PhilDockery A team of horses in the middle of the ship walked around a central gear which spun a paddlewheel. I can't be more specific than that because I haven't looked much into it.
It is sad to see these beautiful ships with lots of history rotting away, but another great video! Love the work you do, the music, history, and overall work you put in these amazing videos. Looking forward to the next one!
This, your, documentation of this history, are a major step of “preservation”, in it’s own and even if the remains of the Halifax are ultimately lost. Great and meaningful work. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for another great video. You mentioned the shares were "only $10" in 1885. That needs to be put in context. The average annual income in Halifax 26 years later, in 1911, was $528.94 (Stats Canada). Imagine it was less than that in 1885 (in Quebec it was about $280 per year). In 2022 the average income is almost exactly 100x what it was in 1911, so at a cost of $10 it was the rough equivalent of over $1000 per share in today's money, too rich and too risky for the average citizen. The previous company's $500 per share was a whole year's wage for the average person!
I have enjoyed every one of your videos. Your stories are amazing. with the amount of research you must go through to bring to light these little slices of history. The fact that you can actually go to these places makes me want to go and see and find. Thank you.
Yes- just about EVERY town and city tears down their history and replaces them with "soul-less" square boxes......sad. Was up in Athens,NY a while ago and found the spot of the Swallow wreck. Very cool to have watched your presentation then go to the site. Thanks for another fantastic video!
This was an excellent video, being a proud Nova Scotian it's always lovely to find historical content on my home province. And seeing a cousin's name pop up in the credits was a real hoot too!
Thanks for the interesting video on The Dartmouth and her possible final resting place. I've always had an interest and fascination with anything historic and maritime and really enjoyed this bit of the history of Nova Scotias' ferry fleet. I had remembered reading about the great Halifax harbor explosion and the Dartmouth and her crew were extremely lucky to come through that in better shape than others. It's too bad that something of the vessel wasn't saved for history but back then I guess that just wasn't as important as other things.
Very well done..! I enjoyed immensely my short time in Halifax when I was there to meet my ship, the Okeanos Explorer. The Museum of the Atlantic occupied several visits, as well as just hanging about the waterfront and riding across on the water taxis. Thanks for the memories..!
What a great story Thomas. Thanks so much for doing this and the other historical pieces you do. So much of our history is being forgotten. Your comment about the loss of our heritage buildings being replaced with “sterile soul less blocks” is sad but true. Please keep doing these. I am now a huge fan!
I've lived in Yarmouth, NS for over 30 years and have never heard of this! It's amazing to see one of my favorite youtubers walking down our Water Street while listening to a part of the town's history that I doubt most of us know :/
Another great video. And to split the finest hairs, but Liverpool and it’s Mersey ferry is just about in the western hemisphere. But regardless, still a precious piece of Nova Scotian history.
I love you content. This is the only time I think I’ve said this. You are so compressive, you tell a fantastic story from what evidence you find. Fantastic work, keep it up 👍🏼
Same! I was like, "How... how would that even work?" I also thought maybe they had horses aboard and they had them trot or something, and... yeah, I kinda stopped after that...
@@fisheyenomiko YO! I thought about them being on the inside too! I was wondering, maybe it's like an old sailing anchor hoist but with a horse at each leg? Wild stuff to imagine!
I grew up in the area and I have been to the wharf at the end of that road literally hundreds of times since the late 60s. I played on that very same beach as a kid all through the 1970s and I took my older son there in the 1980s. All that time I never even knew that there was the remains of a hull there. It wasn't until hurricane Juan that it became visible. I thought the storm dislodged it from out at sea and brought it to where it is now but apparently it was always there. It was just covered in sand. I heard that it was used as a barge for carrying sand but I never heard that it had that much history !!!
Thank you Sir for making all your videos... I think you are the best at what you do. I love the railroad videos too, but your seafaring tales of ships and their fates are the best. God bless you Sir. Cant wait until your next!
A very nice video about a very interesting piece of maritime history. One minor point: At about 13:50 you refer to the ferry as "SS Dartmouth". It is my understanding that, at the time, SS stood for "screw steamer" and PS stood for "paddle steamer." It wasn't until later, when the paddle steamers were mostly gone that SS shifted to "steam ship." Is that your understanding as well? If so, she should be "PS Dartmouth"
I know it's only vaguely related, but as an Australian I feel I can add a small note here. The second HMAS Sydney, launched in 1934 as the HMS Phaeton, was famously lost off the coast of Western Australia in a battle with a German cruiser called the Kormoran in 1941. Nobody knew exactly where the battle had taken place or where the wreckage was for decades, until it was finally found in 2008. There's been a lot of speculation about the whole event and it's worth looking into for anyone who's interested.
Did Cunard build anything that didnt sink? Seems as if the company was cursed. Glad to see you back. I had ancestors in Nova Scotia. Great you went to see it. Thx so much!
@@jamesfracasse8178 When my son & I saw there was a part of a pharaoh's sarcophagus on the Titanic we looked at each other & said That's why she sank. Yeah both lines seem to be cursed!
Hey ik you mainly only talk about things that happened in the US but the story of ship SS Park Victory is something that may interest you. It was an American cargo ship made at the end of ww2 and in 1947 at the night of Christmas Eve it sunk near the island of Utö, Finland. 10 out of the 48men crew perished but the 38 men mainly survived bc of the heroic action's of the citizens of Utö.
I mainly talk about stories I can get to, so if I make it out to Finland, I'd love to cover that! I've been to Finland before, but didn't get a chance to explore much. Thanks for the suggestion!
Fascinating stories, all represented by some worn out timbers. Thank you for the film - I really enjoyed it. Must admit, when I saw the title I thought you meannt Dartmouth, Devon, England! There are some interesting wrecks lying in the Dart estuary there, with some good back stories too.
5:58 That designation of one saloon for women and one for men continued on the Dartmouth-Halifax ferries until the probably the early 1970s, I remember it. Then it became smoking and non-smoking; when the wooden ferries were scrapped, the new ones were open plan inside and smoking was outside on the upper deck only.
Next time you are in Halifax I would recommend a stop if you're allowed in there. It may be something of a trade secret but I am not sure and was never told directly not to mention it so... if you can get in there, I would highly recommend checking out the attic in Province House and the signatures on the ceiling. It's not spectacular by any means but I am struggling to recall how far back the signatures go.
Something puzzles me: These remains are clearly visible as such. I would tend to assume they always have been. Would there not be a "word of mouth" local lore to corroborate the idea that it is the Dartmouth? Or was it completely buried long enough that such knowledge would have been lost by the time it was visible again?
The island seen at 4:16 in yarmouth has a tiny abandoned house on it and there used to be an old boat wreck that was beached due to the ships declining conditions...they removed it in like 2020
I'm glad the province has so few issue's that removing a wreck thats been quietly rotting for 80 years hurting no one is near the top of their todo list
If the city plans to remove it, perhaps one of the naval museums could relocate it to their grounds as an exhibit. The likely wreck of the ferry dartmouth. Could probably get it out of there for a few hundred bucks and a flatbed
The world needs more explorers like you sir. Grown up but still having the childish need to see search and learn the natural way. Thanks for taking us along on your journys😊
Yes. I am so obsessed with his videos.
Sad to see her just laying there, decayed and forgotten. Thanks to you, for keeping the story alive. ❤
❤
Unfortunately, if we kept all these old artifacts, we'd be overflowing in them. Objects dedicated to the sea are especially difficult to preserve.
For a moment I forgot ships are referred to as females (I just finished watching a bunch of ghost town videos, so my brain is still on that lol), and I got really concerned that he’d found an actual woman’s dead body 💀
@@auklin7079they’re not that many antique ships especially ferries like her preserved nowadays, so I wish she was saved she looked so special in a way.
@@randomuser9883 All ships have unique stories. That history, while mildly interesting. Was not special. The current ferries, if they stay in service for 70 years, would have an equally interesting history if washed up on a beach 100 years from now.
The quality of your video is insane
you have no idea how much these videos mean to us. this type of quality is hard to find on RUclips, from the soothing background score to the smooth editing, often with on-site footage. i always know that your videos will fulfil my wanderlust for the day and help me to de-stress from this dystopian world we’re living in. Thank you.
If you were really living in a dystopian world, you'd surely be wanting to see footage of the catastrophic 'World Voyager' disaster of 2097...
Thank you for more Nova Scotian content. It's always nice to learn more history about the Maritimes - and this was a happier story than that of the Atlantic, for sure.
I make lamps as a hobby. Your lamp, repurposed from a kerosene lamp, to electric, is very nice.
I have a suggestion for a new video: the sinking of the Arabia Steamboat in (i believe) the Missouri river. While the sinking itself might not be so extraordinary they have a beautiful museum in Kansas City and it's like a giant time capsule of that time. It's really interesting how they found the boat, where they found it and how they were able to preserve many of the artifacts inside. They had to develop special "ovens" that very slowly remove the humidity from the objects without damaging them. They also have many different medicine bottles from that time that they refuse to identify because there's a big chance their components are illegal nowadays and if that was the case they would have to dispose of them. I had a great time in that museum
I second this. I've been to the Steamboat Arabia museum. Inordinately fascinating!
Boss, your channel gives me a old pbs documentary or a Reading Rainbow vibe (also a pbs show), getting a nostalgia feeling over here, man. Do not stop haha
Love seeing folks paying attention to these shallow water wrecks. I’ll be doing a shallow water wreck adventure myself in September.
I've never heard of this ship until just now with your documentaries. But looking back, it is such a fascinating vessel, and it's wreck is in such a beautiful locale! You really outdo yourself with every video you release.
This channel never disappoints!
So glad you made it to Nova Scotia. Welcome to my beautiful country, man! 🇨🇦❤
I'm a mechanic. I was THRILLED to see the diagram of the steam engine in this video.I absolutely love ALL of your content. You are thorough in your research, humorous and entertaining . Hugs!💘
Thank you for your work, it's always so informative.
It's a shame so many cities are hellbent on destroying their culture in place of mind numbing and soulless modern architecture. I get that buildings get old and sometimes need to be replaced, but replacing them with concrete zombie rectangles doesn't have to be mandatory.
You're absolutely right. The story of this once beautiful city is very sad.
I can't quite put my finger on the allur of these great ships; their mystery and fascinating history. This is an exceptional and important site, not to wax purple, but it contains the unlikely combination of factual information and magic.
it’s crazy that H.R.H. Duke & Duchess of Cornwall & York are a part of its history. Another great video bro
Honestly, after a long and stressful day, this is the first video I clicked on to watch. It's so relaxing, calm music, upbeat voice and cool history
A good challenge for you would be to try to find the wreck of the chippewa. A ferry that sank in the early 1970s near the near the Collinsville Fishing Resort near stockton, on the sacramento rkver. The resort was bought in the 1980s and demolished, leading some historians to believe this was also the end of the line for chippewa. although no records exist indicating she was scrapped. However, as late as 2020, satellite photos of the area show an unnatural shape on the bottom of the Sacramento River at the site, roughly matching the dimensions of the Chippewa, meaning her hull may have survived, even if as a shipwreck. I can't really go to stockton, not sure if you can either. If that is the case, to anybody reading this, please help us find chippewa's wreck.
Really enjoy your videos! I'm from Ireland and really wanna visit Canada some time and do a historical maritime trail!
You should! I'd also love to get back to Ireland and film some stories out there
@@PartTimeExplorer yeah, plenty of maritime history here too 😁
@@PartTimeExplorer Tom, can you explain a little about "horse" powered ferries??
@@PhilDockery A team of horses in the middle of the ship walked around a central gear which spun a paddlewheel. I can't be more specific than that because I haven't looked much into it.
I live 30 minutes from Yarmouth if you come to visit I'll give a toor
Great video, really enjoyed this
It is sad to see these beautiful ships with lots of history rotting away, but another great video! Love the work you do, the music, history, and overall work you put in these amazing videos. Looking forward to the next one!
Unfortunately it seems like we only started caring about certain parts of history a few decades ago.
This, your, documentation of this history, are a major step of “preservation”, in it’s own and even if the remains of the Halifax are ultimately lost.
Great and meaningful work.
Thanks for sharing.
Fantastic video again, Tom! Great job, and very informative! THANKS!
Amazing video as always! Ever thought about looking into the S.S. Keewatin or other passenger ships of the Great Lakes?
Thanks for another great video.
You mentioned the shares were "only $10" in 1885. That needs to be put in context. The average annual income in Halifax 26 years later, in 1911, was $528.94 (Stats Canada). Imagine it was less than that in 1885 (in Quebec it was about $280 per year). In 2022 the average income is almost exactly 100x what it was in 1911, so at a cost of $10 it was the rough equivalent of over $1000 per share in today's money, too rich and too risky for the average citizen. The previous company's $500 per share was a whole year's wage for the average person!
I have enjoyed every one of your videos. Your stories are amazing. with the amount of research you must go through to bring to light these little slices of history. The fact that you can actually go to these places makes me want to go and see and find. Thank you.
Yes- just about EVERY town and city tears down their history and replaces them with "soul-less" square boxes......sad. Was up in Athens,NY a while ago and found the spot of the Swallow wreck. Very cool to have watched your presentation then go to the site. Thanks for another fantastic video!
So good to see another video. Time must be rare with a baby but I really appreciate the time it takes to create these videos.
You make your videos so interesting.I love to watch them and learn from them. Thank you
Always love watching your videos on what ever subject
From yarmouth and living in dartmouth now. Thank you for covering local history and ships.
This was an excellent video, being a proud Nova Scotian it's always lovely to find historical content on my home province. And seeing a cousin's name pop up in the credits was a real hoot too!
Really enjoyed the video! keep it up man❤
❤
Thanks for the interesting video on The Dartmouth and her possible final resting place. I've always had an interest and fascination with anything historic and maritime and really enjoyed this bit of the history of Nova Scotias' ferry fleet. I had remembered reading about the great Halifax harbor explosion and the Dartmouth and her crew were extremely lucky to come through that in better shape than others. It's too bad that something of the vessel wasn't saved for history but back then I guess that just wasn't as important as other things.
Very well done..! I enjoyed immensely my short time in Halifax when I was there to meet my ship, the Okeanos Explorer. The Museum of the Atlantic occupied several visits, as well as just hanging about the waterfront and riding across on the water taxis. Thanks for the memories..!
I really enjoyed that Tom! You're videos are of outstanding quality and interest. Thanks
What a great story Thomas. Thanks so much for doing this and the other historical pieces you do. So much of our history is being forgotten. Your comment about the loss of our heritage buildings being replaced with “sterile soul less blocks” is sad but true. Please keep doing these. I am now a huge fan!
Great video, thanks!👍
Sir, I’ve just started watching your videos. Excellent historical commentary. Thank you so much for your intelligent programs.
LOVE HOW YOU PUT A LOT OF DETAIL INFORMATION INTO YOUR VIDEOS .
I've lived in Yarmouth, NS for over 30 years and have never heard of this! It's amazing to see one of my favorite youtubers walking down our Water Street while listening to a part of the town's history that I doubt most of us know :/
Thank you for making these videos!
Thanks for a history lesson from my city that i knew nothing about!
Love your comment on the building plans in halifax. It’s so sad.
Love the videos as always tom!
Another great video.
And to split the finest hairs, but Liverpool and it’s Mersey ferry is just about in the western hemisphere. But regardless, still a precious piece of Nova Scotian history.
There it is! at !0:40, the comedic beat that we have all come to expect and love!
So glad this popped back up in my feed! This is the first time I've noticed RUclips unsubscribing me from a channel I enjoy.
I love you content. This is the only time I think I’ve said this. You are so compressive, you tell a fantastic story from what evidence you find. Fantastic work, keep it up 👍🏼
Great video I'm from Nova Scotia and I really enjoyed the local history
Amazing how clean the city looks when compared to other places. The video was well done.
Your videos are so interesting and informative. Thank you!!
I love all your videos!! You are so complete in them! So interesting to learn these stories!! Thank you for the history lessons!!
1:59 "The earliest ferries were horsepowered" immediately brought to mind the comical mental image of swimming horses tugging a boat along
Same! I was like, "How... how would that even work?" I also thought maybe they had horses aboard and they had them trot or something, and... yeah, I kinda stopped after that...
@@fisheyenomiko YO! I thought about them being on the inside too! I was wondering, maybe it's like an old sailing anchor hoist but with a horse at each leg? Wild stuff to imagine!
I lived near canals in Pennsylvania. In colonial times, the barges would float down the canals with horses on either side pulling it along.
@@GrumpyMeow-Meow that's fascinating, thank you! Makes a lot more sense too 😅
Love seeing some local history here! I'd heard about the plan to destroy her, glad it seems to have been forgotten
I grew up in the area and I have been to the wharf at the end of that road literally hundreds of times since the late 60s. I played on that very same beach as a kid all through the 1970s and I took my older son there in the 1980s. All that time I never even knew that there was the remains of a hull there. It wasn't until hurricane Juan that it became visible. I thought the storm dislodged it from out at sea and brought it to where it is now but apparently it was always there. It was just covered in sand. I heard that it was used as a barge for carrying sand but I never heard that it had that much history !!!
this is like the most relaxing channel I have watched in a long time
Thank you Sir for making all your videos... I think you are the best at what you do. I love the railroad videos too, but your seafaring tales of ships and their fates are the best. God bless you Sir. Cant wait until your next!
Ahh the lad and his ability to tell a story indented in history is second to none. 🥈
Awesome history thank you 🙏 ❤
🙏❤
She saw so much 😢 I actually feared up in this one. Apologies from Australia for that ship almost annihilating her 😅
Hmm.... maybe this was what gave her bad karma? :/ Yeah, leading to thhat.. later thing... which was quite unfortunate. :(
A very nice video about a very interesting piece of maritime history. One minor point: At about 13:50 you refer to the ferry as "SS Dartmouth". It is my understanding that, at the time, SS stood for "screw steamer" and PS stood for "paddle steamer." It wasn't until later, when the paddle steamers were mostly gone that SS shifted to "steam ship." Is that your understanding as well? If so, she should be "PS Dartmouth"
Usually yes, but in most period documents I've seen about the Dartmouth, it's referred to as "SS" by her owners
Yet another great story told, Tom. Thank you.
I know it's only vaguely related, but as an Australian I feel I can add a small note here. The second HMAS Sydney, launched in 1934 as the HMS Phaeton, was famously lost off the coast of Western Australia in a battle with a German cruiser called the Kormoran in 1941. Nobody knew exactly where the battle had taken place or where the wreckage was for decades, until it was finally found in 2008. There's been a lot of speculation about the whole event and it's worth looking into for anyone who's interested.
Can you do the concrete ship off cape may nj? Its a very interesting story and i grew up around there!
I did! That’s one of my earlier videos
Did Cunard build anything that didnt sink? Seems as if the company was cursed. Glad to see you back. I had ancestors in Nova Scotia. Great you went to see it. Thx so much!
Cunard line, White Star Line could not possible build indestructible liners so yeah! 3:37
@@jamesfracasse8178 When my son & I saw there was a part of a pharaoh's sarcophagus on the Titanic we looked at each other & said That's why she sank. Yeah both lines seem to be cursed!
Mauritania
@@therailfanman2078 Very good, ty for the reply!!
Fabulous and love to see old film of Halifax
Great story. Well done, sir !
Standing in the presence of an old wreck does something to my soul. I will go well out of my way to see them, no mater their state.
This is so informative!!! Fantastic reporting; I love this kind of content!🌻🌼🐝
Hey ik you mainly only talk about things that happened in the US but the story of ship SS Park Victory is something that may interest you. It was an American cargo ship made at the end of ww2 and in 1947 at the night of Christmas Eve it sunk near the island of Utö, Finland. 10 out of the 48men crew perished but the 38 men mainly survived bc of the heroic action's of the citizens of Utö.
I mainly talk about stories I can get to, so if I make it out to Finland, I'd love to cover that! I've been to Finland before, but didn't get a chance to explore much. Thanks for the suggestion!
I love your love of history! Another fantastic video.
Fascinating stories, all represented by some worn out timbers. Thank you for the film - I really enjoyed it. Must admit, when I saw the title I thought you meannt Dartmouth, Devon, England! There are some interesting wrecks lying in the Dart estuary there, with some good back stories too.
5:58 That designation of one saloon for women and one for men continued on the Dartmouth-Halifax ferries until the probably the early 1970s, I remember it. Then it became smoking and non-smoking; when the wooden ferries were scrapped, the new ones were open plan inside and smoking was outside on the upper deck only.
I am from ns and I appreciate these videos
Thank you for another interesting and beautifully produced documentary! Subscribed.
i love the music in the background, im not even a country person but its so relaxing i wish there was a source for the music!
Well done Tom. Another great video.
Very fascinating !
The Mersey is in the western hemisphere. Only just, though, by about 100 miles 🙂
Drats, you’re right
Next time you are in Halifax I would recommend a stop if you're allowed in there. It may be something of a trade secret but I am not sure and was never told directly not to mention it so... if you can get in there, I would highly recommend checking out the attic in Province House and the signatures on the ceiling. It's not spectacular by any means but I am struggling to recall how far back the signatures go.
Something puzzles me: These remains are clearly visible as such. I would tend to assume they always have been. Would there not be a "word of mouth" local lore to corroborate the idea that it is the Dartmouth? Or was it completely buried long enough that such knowledge would have been lost by the time it was visible again?
Great video as always sir
I am impressed by your ability to take a bunch of decaying ship's timbers
and spin it into a tale of human endeavour!
I always look forward to your new videos!
I think it is true.
and is Samual Cunard the founder of the Cunard Company who built The Lusitania and Mauritania?
I knew it.@@MrDakns
Fantastic video, as always. You should be a fulltime explorer!
Great video Tom!
I really enjoy your videos, thanks for making them
Great video, I watched if as I rode the bus from Dartmouth to Halifax
The island seen at 4:16 in yarmouth has a tiny abandoned house on it and there used to be an old boat wreck that was beached due to the ships declining conditions...they removed it in like 2020
I'm glad the province has so few issue's that removing a wreck thats been quietly rotting for 80 years hurting no one is near the top of their todo list
Love this story!! 🛳️🛳️🛳️🛳️🛳️🛳️🛳️
If the city plans to remove it, perhaps one of the naval museums could relocate it to their grounds as an exhibit. The likely wreck of the ferry dartmouth. Could probably get it out of there for a few hundred bucks and a flatbed
Another fantastic video!
Please do more NS videos.
This was very interesting. Thank you.
Pretty cool. As a Nova Scotian it would be pretty neat to go see this um uh 'wreck'. Thanks for sharing this bit of Canadian history
2:55 approximately $275 and $13750 today
Amazing. I would like to see that. Thank you for your work.
Excellent video!