"Passersby
gawked at the derelict, rusting monster, wondering how glorious its past had been,
how majestic it may once have looked, and why the heck it was here." The
Windsor Star Newspaper Wednesday, August 2, 1995 The
520 foot,, seven-story former Second World War troop ship was originally built
as the Marine Star (C4-S-B5). It was a Liberty ship, built in 1945 in Chester,
Pa. by the Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company. As
a U.S. troop carrier, she made just one trip across the Atlantic before the war
ended. She
was eventually bought by a Detroit industrialist who spent $8 million in 1955
to convert the USS Marine Star into a cruise-ferry ship. Now named Aquarama, she
took passengers between Detroit and Cleveland in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
The
Aquarama had nine decks containing four restaurants, four bars, movie theatres,
recreation areas and room for 160 cars and 2,600 passengers. Unfortunately,
Aquarama was remembered as much for its mishaps as for its Great Lakes grandeur.
Newspaper
stories nicknamed it the Crusherama and described it as the most ill-tempered
ship on the lakes after it rammed the sea wall of what is now Windsor's Dieppe
Gardens. It also crashed into the Detroit News dock on the Detroit side and bumped
into a U.S. Navy cruiser near Cleveland. And in 1957, its gigantic wake was blamed
for nearly drowning a two-year-old girl at an Amherstburg beach and swamping two
small fishing boats. Aquarama
has been idle since 1962 and was removed from registry as "Out of Documentation"
in 1978. She reverted back to her present name Marine Star in 1995. After
a 30-hour journey from Windsor, Marine Star arrived in Buffalo on August 3, 1995.
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