The steamship
Col. James M. Schoonmaker began life on 1 July 1911 at the
Great Lakes Engineering Works in
Ecorse, Michigan. At the time of her launch she took the title of
Queen of the Lakes which is given to the biggest ship on the
Great Lakes. She became the flagship of the Shenango Furnace Company. She broke many cargo records for iron ore, grain and coal in her first year. She was powered by a triple expansion steam engine which was replaced by a steam turbine in 1955. She sailed as part of the Shenango fleet until 1969 when she was sold to the
Interlake Steamship Company who chartered
Col James M. Schoonmaker to the
Republic Steel Corporation. After a three-year charter to that company Interlake decided to sell her to the
Cleveland Cliffs Iron Company, who renamed the ship
Willis B. Boyer after the company's president. They operated the laker for 7 years in the iron trade until she was laid up in 1980 due to a downturn in the steel industry. After sitting unwanted for 7 years, the city of
Toledo decided to purchase her for use as a museum. She sat as the centerpiece of the International Park in that city for several decades before being rechristened back to her original name
Col. James M. Schoonmaker and being moved one last time to the site of the
National Museum of the Great Lakes on the banks of the
Maumee River in Toledo. ==Description==