One of the magazine’s most popular features is a river-history column called the Old Boat Column that runs each week, generally on the third to last page. The Old Boat Column is of particular interest to non-specialist readers with a general interest in the history of the inland waterways. The column was written for decades by James V. Swift (1916–2002) who worked for The Waterways Journal in various capacities for 60 years. After Swift, River Hall of Fame recipient and boat architect Alan L. Bates wrote the column for many years until his death on New Year's Day, 2012 and then by Keith Norrington, director/curator of the Howard Steamboat Museum in Jeffersonville, Indiana, from 2012 to 2022. Since then the column has been written by Capt. David Smith. The publication’s wide-ranging news articles provide a window into the people and technology behind a robust major sector of industrial transport in the United States. Topics covered include
towboat launches and christenings, inland
shipyards, lock and dam construction,
marine salvage,
admiralty law, the
Army Corps of Engineers,
dredging news, inland ports and terminals,
barge and
towboat construction and launches, new technology relating to towboats, and regulations of the
U.S. Coast Guard,
Environmental Protection Agency, and other
federal agencies that affect inland waterways commerce, as well as news about major
commodities that travel the waterways, such as grain, coal, steel and fertilizer. The Waterways Journal also closely cover the actions of organizations that support waterways interests, including the Waterways Council Inc. (WCI), the
American Waterways Operators (AWO), National Waterways Conference, Inland Rivers Ports and Terminals, and the Gulf Intracoastal Canal Association (GICA).
Editorials in the journal often address federal, state and local
regulation as they relate to the rivers and waterways and those who used them for transport. The Herman T. Pott National Inland Waterways Library, housed at the
University of Missouri at St. Louis, is developing a keyword-searchable archive of past Waterways Journal issues. ==Other publications==