Finding Aid: C. Patrick Labadie Collection [TBRC-6: SAIL] Collection name: C. Patrick Labadie Collection Collection number: TBRC -1 through 18 [TBRC-6 = SAIL] Dates: Late 18 th Century to early 20 th Century. Quantity: 385 linear feet + 6 (5 draw) map cabinets. Provenance note: Collection gathered & researched since early adulthood. Donated by C. Patrick & June Labadie in 2003 to NOAA; housed and managed by the Alpena County Library. Biographical & Historical Information: The son and grandson of shipyard workers, Charles Patrick Labadie was reared in Detroit and attended the University of Detroit. He began his career with the Dossin Great Lakes Museum, became director of the Saugatuck Marine Museum, then earned a master’s license for tugs and worked for Gaelic Tugboat Company in Detroit. He directed Duluth’s Canal Park Museum (now Lake Superior Maritime Visitors Center) from its founding in 1973 until 2001. In 2003, he was appointed historian for the NOAA’s Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary in Alpena, Michigan. Scope & Content: This is an extensive 19 th Century Great Lakes maritime history collection. The vessel database is accessible through library’s website. See the library’s card catalog to search the book collection. The major components of the collection are: vessels, cargo, biographical, canals, owners, ports, technology / shipbuilding = broken down by vessels types (i.e. sail, tugs, propellers), and machinery. Files include photographs, newspaper accounts, publications, vessel plans, maps & charts, and research notes. Access: Open to research. Preferred Citation: C. Patrick Labadie Collection, Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary, Alpena, MI.
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Collection name: C. Patrick Labadie Collection · PDF fileCollection name: C. Patrick Labadie Collection ... “History of Small Working Sailboats Among Native Americans of Manitoulin
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Finding Aid: C. Patrick Labadie Collection [TBRC-6: SAIL]
Collection name: C. Patrick Labadie Collection
Collection number: TBRC -1 through 18 [TBRC-6 = SAIL]
Dates: Late 18th Century to early 20th Century.
Quantity: 385 linear feet + 6 (5 draw) map cabinets.
Provenance note: Collection gathered & researched since early
adulthood. Donated by C. Patrick & June Labadie in 2003 to NOAA;
housed and managed by the Alpena County Library.
Biographical & Historical Information: The son and grandson of
shipyard workers, Charles Patrick Labadie was reared in Detroit and
attended the University of Detroit. He began his career with the Dossin
Great Lakes Museum, became director of the Saugatuck Marine
Museum, then earned a master’s license for tugs and worked for Gaelic
Tugboat Company in Detroit. He directed Duluth’s Canal Park Museum
(now Lake Superior Maritime Visitors Center) from its founding in 1973
until 2001. In 2003, he was appointed historian for the NOAA’s Thunder
Bay National Marine Sanctuary in Alpena, Michigan.
Scope & Content: This is an extensive 19th Century Great Lakes
maritime history collection. The vessel database is accessible through
library’s website. See the library’s card catalog to search the book
collection. The major components of the collection are: vessels, cargo,
1. Pike’s Bay, Wisconsin; Scow – Reports & Technical Drawings 2. Pike’s Bay, Wisconsin; Scow – Photographs & Negatives 3. Point Abino, Lake Erie 4. Port Stanley, Ontario 5. QUEEN CITY 6. ROCKAWAY; Scow – “The Wreck of the ROCKAWAY: The Archaeology of a Great Lakes Scow
Schooner,” pp 1 – 77 7. ROCKAWAY; Scow – “The Wreck of the ROCKAWAY…,” pp 78 – 151 8. ROCKAWAY; Scow – “The Wreck of the ROCKAWAY…,” pp 152 – 228
Box 7: Archaeological Studies, S – T
Folders
1. ST. JAMES; Schooner 2. ST. LOUIS, 1877 3. SCOTT, MARY M.; 4. SIMPSON, LUCIA A.; 3-mast Schooner 5. TECUMSETH, H.M.S. 6. Trout Point, Grand Island, Munising; Scow
Box 8: General, Advertisements – Newspaper Clippings
1. Barkhausen, Henry N.; “Focusing on the Centerboard” 2. Cecil, Owen S.; “History of Small Working Sailboats Among Native Americans of Manitoulin
Island, Ontario,” pp 1 – 42 3. Cecil, Owen S.; “History of Small Working Sailboats Among Native Americans of Manitoulin
Island, Ontario,” appendices 4. Chapelle, Howard I.; “American Small Sailing Craft; Their Design, Development, and
Construction,” pp 12-18, 29-36, 70-80, 332-340 5. Martin, Jay C.; “The Grand Haven Rig: An Adaptation of the Great Lakes Schooner Rig in the
Transitional Period Between the Supremacy of Sail and Steam” 6. Martin, Jay C.; “The Grand Haven Rig: A Great Lakes Phenomenon” and “Wire Rigging: A
Technical Innovation Reaches the Great Lakes” 7. Smith, Oscar B.; “The Schooner LA PETITE: Journal of Captain Oscar B. Smith” 8. Snider, C.H.J.; “Schooner Days Index from January 31, 1931 to December 24, 1948” and
“Schooners Days” Toronto Evening Telegram Box 11: Manuscripts / Publications
Folders
1. Wilson, Loudon G.; “Loudon G. Wilson Collection GLMS-71,” Institute for Great Lakes Research, Bowling Green State University
2. Wilson, Loudon G.; “History of the Two Mast Rig; Brigantines and Schooners” 3. Wilson, Loudon G., “Directory of Great Lakes Commercial Sail, 1800-1920”
Finding Aid: C. Patrick Labadie Collection [TBRC-6: SAIL]
Box 12: Mackinaw Boats
Folders
1. Correspondences, Miscellaneous 2. Newspaper Clippings 3. Photographs – Identified Vessels, A - E Anderson Fisheries-Marquette,
Michigan
BUTCHER BOY
CHILD, B.F.
DOLPHIN
EDITH
4. Photographs – Identified Vessels, F – W FISHER BOY