PS Frontenac

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Career
Name: Frontenac
Route: Kingston, York (now Toronto) - Niagara-on-the-Lake
Cost: ₤15,000
Laid down: 1816
Launched: 1817
Out of service: 1827
Fate: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type: paddle steamer

Frontenac was a steamboat, the first paddle steamer launched on the Great Lakes, in 1817.

Built in Ernesttown, Ontario, by American contractors for Kingston businessmen during 1816 at a cost of ₤15,000, she entered service in spring 1817. Frontenac conducted regular runs across Lake Ontario between Kingston, York (now Toronto), and Niagara-on-the-Lake, but rarely managed to make money in eight years; the provincial population was simply too small.

Frontenac was sold for ₤1550 to John Hamilton in 1824, who persisted two more unsuccessful years before selling her for scrap at Niagara in 1827. Before she could be scrapped, she burned to the waterline due to arson.

Sources

  • Lewis, Walter. "Frontenac", in The Canadian Encyclopedia, Volume 2, p.850. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishers, 1988.