April 30, 2018 – Marine Link
Interlake Steamship adds new barge to fleet
April 30, 2018 – Crain’s Cleveland Business
On board the Paul R. Tregurtha: The Great Ship of the Great Lakes
September 14, 2017 – WTVG 13abc Monroe, MI (WTVG) – 13abc’s Lissa Guyton and videographer Todd Gaertner had a rare opportunity to go along for the ride as the ship unloaded coal in the Detroit area and Monroe.
There’s No Life Like It
September 1, 2017 – Lakeland Boating Writer Craig Ritchie takes a ride on our Lee A. Tregurtha.
Life aboard Dorothy Ann-Pathfinder means hard work, happy stomachs, great friends: Working Cleveland
August 28, 2017 – The Plain Dealer MARBLEHEAD, Ohio – A rumbling conveyor belt carried crushed stone to the holds of the 700-foot Pathfinder barge, its V-shaped stern nocked like an arrow with the bow of the 124-foot tug Dorothy Ann as they rode as conjoined twins in Lake Erie’s calm early morning waters at the Marblehead dock.
What the Cuyahoga River Means to Cleveland
August 1, 2017 – Cleveland Magazine With a load of limestone coming out of Marblehead, Capt. Jeremy Mock, master of the 711-foot Dorothy Ann-Pathfinder, scans the horizon. It’s 20 minutes past five o’clock in the morning on an early summer day. From his 72-foot eye-sight on the bridge, Mock already can see the red sliver of first light coming across the lake.
Interlake Steamship Moves First ‘Mustang’ Pellets
June 5, 2017 – Marine Link The 1,004-foot M/V James R. Barker has sailed from the Twin Ports with a new specialized cargo: 60,000 tons of Mustang superflux pellets – the first shipment of its kind since the new pellet production began at Cliffs Natural Resources Inc.’s United Taconite mine last month.
Follow the Dorothy Ann-Pathfinder up the Cuyahoga River with a load of ore (videos)
April 17, 2017 – cleveland.com CLEVELAND, Ohio — One of the grandest sights in Cleveland is catching a glimpse of a giant ore boat snaking its way up the Cuyahoga River.
See 20 monster boats of the Great Lakes in gorgeous photos
April 17, 2017 – Cleveland.com They’re called boatnerds, people who relish the commercial ships that navigate the Great Lakes, delivering iron ore, coal and other aggregates from one port, or one lake, to another