CCGS Alexander Henry

CCGS Alexander Henry in retirement as a museum ship in Kingston.
History
Canada
Name:
  • Alexander Henry
  • Alexander Henry
Namesake: Alexander Henry, fur trader and entrepreneur
Owner: Government of Canada
Operator:
Port of registry: 310138
Builder: Port Arthur Shipbuilding Co. Ltd., Port Arthur
Laid down: 1958
Commissioned: 1959
Decommissioned: 1984
In service: 1959–1984
Homeport: CCG Base Parry Sound, Parry Sound, Ontario
Fate: Transferred to Crown Assets for disposal and sold to Marine Museum of the Great Lakes as a museum ship.
Status: Museum
General characteristics
Class and type: Light Icebreaker and Supply and buoy tender
Displacement: 1,673.74 tonnes (1,844.98 short tons)
Tons burthen: 575.62 tonnes (634.51 short tons)
Length: 60.29 m (197.80 ft)
Beam: 13.29 m (43.60 ft)
Draught: 5.46 m (17.91 ft)
Installed power: 3,550 bhp (2,650 kW)
Propulsion: 2 × Fairbanks-Morse 10-cylinder 2-cycle diesel model 37F16
Speed: 13 knots (24 km/h)
Complement: >42

CCGS Alexander Henry is a former Canadian Coast Guard Light icebreaker and Buoy tender in the Great Lakes.[1] She is currently a museum ship preserved at the Marine Museum of the Great Lakes in Kingston, Ontario. Previously, during the summer months it was also operated as a bed and breakfast.

Built at Port Arthur Shipbuilding Co. Ltd., Port Arthur, she was commissioned into the Department of Transport's Marine Service as CGS Alexander Henry using the prefix "Canadian Government Ship". She was transferred in 1962 to the newly created Canadian Coast Guard and is named after Alexander Henry the elder, an 18th-century British explorer and fur trader.

CCGS Alexander Henry served her entire coast guard career on the Great Lakes. She was launched in 1958, commissioned in 1959, and retired from service in 1984 after CCGS Samuel Risley entered service.

The Alexander Henry is scheduled to enter Kingston's historic drydocks in 2010.[2]

References

  1. "Ships of the CCG 1850–1967". Canadian Coast Guard. 2008-03-31. Archived from the original on 2009-09-13.
  2. "Alexander Henry goes into dry dock". Kingston This Week. 2010-01-14. Retrieved 2010-01-14.
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Coordinates: 44°13′28.5″N 76°28′56.5″W / 44.224583°N 76.482361°W / 44.224583; -76.482361

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