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SS Noronic


 
 

The SS Noronic was a passenger shipPassenger ship

A passenger ship is a ship whose primary function is to carry passengers....
 that was destroyed by fire in Toronto HarbourToronto Harbour

Toronto Harbour is a bay on the north shore of Lake Ontario, in Canada....
 in 1949, with serious loss of life.
The ShipThe
SS Noronic
was launched in 1913 in Port ArthurPort Arthur, Ontario

Port Arthur, Ontario, was a city in Northern Ontario which amalgamated with Fort William, Ontario and the townships of Neebi...
, OntarioOntario

Ontario is the most populous and second-largest in area of Canada's ten provinces....
, CanadaCanada

Canada is the world's second-largest country by total area, occupying most of northern North America....
. She was built for the Northern Navigation Company, an operating division of Canada Steamship Lines, to perform passenger and package freight service on the Great LakesGreat Lakes

The Great Lakes are a group of five large lakes in North America on or near the Canada-United States border....
. She had five decks, was 362 feet (110 metres) in length, and weighed 6,095 tons (5.5 million kilograms). At maximum capacity, she could hold 600 passengers and 200 crew. One of the largest and most beautiful passenger ships in Canada at the time, she was nicknamed “The Queen of the Lakes."

Passenger decks were labelled A, B, C and D, and none had direct gangplank access to the dock.






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Timeline

1949   Canadian steamship SS Noronic burns in Toronto Harbour with the loss of over 118 lives.






Encyclopedia



The SS Noronic was a passenger shipPassenger ship

A passenger ship is a ship whose primary function is to carry passengers....
 that was destroyed by fire in Toronto HarbourToronto Harbour

Toronto Harbour is a bay on the north shore of Lake Ontario, in Canada....
 in 1949, with serious loss of life.

The Ship

The
SS Noronic
was launched in 1913 in Port ArthurPort Arthur, Ontario

Port Arthur, Ontario, was a city in Northern Ontario which amalgamated with Fort William, Ontario and the townships of Neebi...
, OntarioOntario

Ontario is the most populous and second-largest in area of Canada's ten provinces....
, CanadaCanada

Canada is the world's second-largest country by total area, occupying most of northern North America....
. She was built for the Northern Navigation Company, an operating division of Canada Steamship Lines, to perform passenger and package freight service on the Great LakesGreat Lakes

The Great Lakes are a group of five large lakes in North America on or near the Canada-United States border....
. She had five decks, was 362 feet (110 metres) in length, and weighed 6,095 tons (5.5 million kilograms). At maximum capacity, she could hold 600 passengers and 200 crew. One of the largest and most beautiful passenger ships in Canada at the time, she was nicknamed “The Queen of the Lakes."

Passenger decks were labelled A, B, C and D, and none had direct gangplank access to the dock. The only exits were located on the lowest deck, E deck. There were two gangplanks on the portPort (nautical)

Port is the nautical term that refers to the left side of a ship, as perceived by a person facing towards the bow....
 side and two on the starboardStarboard

Starboard is the nautical term that refers to the right side of a vessel as perceived by a person on board the ship and faci...
 side, and only two were operational at a time.

The SS Noronic had two sister ships, the SS Huronic and the SS Hamonic. The Hamonic burned in 1945, with the loss of one life.

The Fire

On September 14, 1949, the Noronic embarked on a 7-day pleasure cruise of Lake OntarioLake Ontario

Lake Ontario , bounded on the north by Ontario and on the south by Ontario's Niagara Peninsula and by New York State, is one...
 from Detroit, MichiganMichigan

Michigan is a Midwestern state of the United States, located in the east north central portion of the country....
. The ship was to make two overnight stops in Canada before returning to Detroit. Most of her 524 passengers were Americans, and 171 crew members were aboard as well. The captain on the voyage was Capt. William Taylor.

The Noronic docked for the night at PierPier

A pier is a raised walkway over water, supported by widely spread piles or pillars....
 9 in Toronto HarbourToronto Harbour

Toronto Harbour is a bay on the north shore of Lake Ontario, in Canada....
 on the evening of Friday, September 16.

At 2:30 a.m., passenger Don Church noticed smoke in the aft part of the starboard corridor on C-deck. Church followed the smell of smoke to a small room off the port corridor, just forward of a women’s washroom. Finding that the smoke was coming from a locked linen closet, Church notified bellboy Earnest O’Neil of the fire. O’Neil ran to the stewardChief Steward

A Chief Steward is the senior unlicensed crew member working in the Steward's Department of a ship....
’s office on D-deck to retrieve the keys to the closet. Once the closet was opened, the fire exploded into the hallway; it spread quickly, fuelled by the oil-polished wood panelling on the walls.

Church, O’Neil, another bellboy and another passenger attempted to fight the blaze with fire extinguisherFire extinguisher

A fire extinguisher is an active fire protection device to extinguish or control a fire, often in emergency situations....
s, but were forced to retreat almost immediately by the spreading flames. To his dismay, O’Neil found the ship’s fire hoses to be out of order. Church rushed to his stateroom on D-deck, and he, his wife and children quietly fled the ship.

O’Neil ran to the officers’ quarters and notified Captain Taylor. First Mate Gerry Wood then sounded the ship’s whistle to raise the alarm. It was 2:38 a.m., only eight minutes after the fire began, and already, half of the ship’s decks were on fire.

Moments before the whistle sounded, the pier’s night watchman noticed the flames coming from the ship and called the Toronto Fire Department. A pumper truck, a hose wagon, a high-pressure truck, an aerial truck, a rescueRescue

Rescue refers to operations that usually involve the saving of life, or prevention of injury....
 squad, the deputy chief and a fireboatFireboat Summary

A fireboat is a specialized watercraft, often resembling a tugboat, with pumps and nozzles designed for fighting shoreline a...
 were dispatched to the scene. AmbulanceAmbulance

An ambulance is a vehicle designated for the transport of sick or injured people. ...
s and policePolice

Police forces are government organizations charged with the responsibility of maintaining law and order , and protecting the ...
 were also dispatched. The first fire truckFire apparatus

A fire apparatus, fire engine or fire truck usually refers to a vehicle designed to fight fires....
 arrived at the pier at 2:41 a.m.

By this time, the entire ship was consumed in flames. Crew members had failed to make a sweep of the upper four decks to wake passengers; those who did wake up were awakened by screaming and running in the corridors. Most of the ship’s stairwells were on fire, and few passengers were able to reach E-deck to escape down the gangplanks. Some passengers climbed down ropes to the pier. Others jumped into the water below, where they were picked up by fireboats. Crew members literally had to smash portholes to drag passengers out of their cabins.

The scene was later described as one of great panic, with people jumping from the upper decks engulfed in flames, some falling to their deaths onto the pier below. Others were trampled to death in the mad rush of terrified passengers in the corridors. Still others suffocated or were burned alive, unable to exit their cabins. The screams of the dying were said to overpower even the sounds of whistles and sirenSiren (noisemaker)

A siren is a loud noise maker. The original version would yield sounds under water, suggesting a link with the sirens of Gre...
s.

The first rescue ladderLadder

A ladder is a vertical set of steps....
 was extended to B-deck. It was immediately rushed by passengers, causing the ladder to snap in two. The women were sent tumbling into the harbour, where they were rescued by a waiting fireboat. Other ladders extended to C-deck held firm throughout the rescue.

After about 20 minutes, the metal hull was white hot, and the decks began to buckle and collapse onto each other. After an hour of fighting the blaze, the Noronic was so full of water from fire hoses that it listed severely toward the pier, causing firefighters to retreat. The ship then righted itself, and firefighterFirefighter Summary

A firefighter, fireman, or firewoman, is a person who is trained and equipped to put out fires, rescue people, p...
s returned to their original positions. By the end, more than 1.7 million gallons (6.4 million litres) of water had been poured on the ship from 37 hoses.

The fire was extinguished by 5:00 a.m., and the wreckage was allowed to cool for two hours before the recovery of bodies began. Searchers found a gruesome scene inside the burned-out hull. Firefighters reported finding charred, embracing skeletonSkeleton

In biology, the skeleton or skeletal system is the biological system providing physical support in living organisms....
s in the corridors. Some deceased passengers were found still in their beds. Many skeletons were almost completely incinerated. GlassGlass

Glass is a uniform amorphous solid material, usually produced when the viscous molten material cools very rapidly to below i...
 had melted from every window, and even steel fittings had warped and twisted from the heat.

Every stairwell had been completely destroyed, save for one near the bow.

The Aftermath

The death toll from the Noronic disaster was never precisely determined. It ranges anywhere from 118 to 139 deaths. Most died from either suffocationAsphyxia

Asphyxia is a condition of severely deficient supply of oxygen to the body that arises from being unable to breathe normally...
 or burnsBurn (injury)

In medicine, a burn is a type of injury to the skin caused by heat, electricity, chemicals, or radiation. ...
. Some died from being trampled or from leaping off the upper decks onto the pier. Only one person drowned. To the anger of many, all of those killed were passengers.

A Federal inquiry was formed by Canada’s House of CommonsCanadian House of Commons

The House of Commons is a component of the Parliament of Canada, along with the Sovereign and the Senate....
 to investigate the accident. The fire was determined to have started in the linen closet on C-deck, but the cause was never discovered. It was deemed likely that a cigaretteCigarette

A cigarette is a tobacco product manufactured out of cured and finely cut tobacco leaves, which are rolled or stuffed into a...
 was carelessly dropped by a member of the laundryLaundry Summary

Laundry can be:* items of clothing and other textiles that require washing,...
 staff.

The high death toll was blamed largely on the ineptitude and cowardice of the crew. Too few crew members were on duty at the time of the fire, and none attempted to wake the passengers. Also, many crew members fled the ship at the first alarm, and no member of the crew ever called the fire department. Passengers had never been informed of evacuation routes or procedures.

The design and construction of the 36-year-old ship were also found to be at fault. The interiors had been lined with oiled wood instead of fireproof material. Exits were only located on one deck instead of all five. None of the ship’s fire hoses were in working order.

Captain Taylor was hailed as a hero in the weeks after the fire. He was among the last of the crew to leave the Noronic. During the fire, he broke windows, pulling trapped passengers from their rooms. He was even said to have carried an unconscious woman from a smoke-filled passageway and lowered her by rope to rescuers on the pier below. Despite Taylor’s courage, his licenceLicense

To grant license or licence is to give permission....
 was suspended for a year.

The ship, which settled to the bottom in shallow water, was partially taken apart at the scene. The upper decks were cut away, and the hull was re-floated on November 29, 1949. It was towed to Hamilton, OntarioHamilton, Ontario

Hamilton is a city located in Canada, in the province of Ontario....
, where it was scrapped.

Company officials suspected arsonFacts About Arson

Arson is the crime of setting a fire with intent to cause damage....
. Comparisons were later made to the fire aboard the CSL passenger ship Quebec, on which the fire was proven to have been deliberately set in a linen closet on August 14, 1950. CSL shortly after phased passenger ships from its fleet.

Damage suits for the Noronic were settled for just over $2 million.

External links



See also

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    SS Yarmouth Castle was a steamship whose loss in a disastrous fire in 1965 prompted new laws regarding safety at sea....
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