NANCY GISCLAIR

  • General
    • Vessel Name : NANCY GISCLAIR 0
    • Operator : GISCLAIR TOWING CO., INC. 0
    • Ships Type (ICST) : 432 0
    • Vessel Type : 35 0
    • Construction : A 0
  • Engine
    • Horsepower rating : 800 0
  • Location
    • City : NEW ORLEANS 0
    • STATE : LA 0
  • Capacity
    • Net Tonnage : 102 0
  • Size
    • Register length : 60 257
    • Regular Breadth : 22 257
    • Overall Length : 60 257
    • Overall Breadt : 22 257
    • Load draft : 8.5 257
    • Light Draft : 8.5 257
    • Height : 26 257
  • Other
    • Year : 1972 0
    • EQUIP1 : NONE 0
    • Coast Guard Number : 545561 0

GISCLAIR TOWING CO., INC.

  • Area of Operation : MOBILE, AL TO HOUSTON, TX 0
  • Principal Commodity : GENERAL TOWING 0

News

Tug Crew Tows Fire-stricken and Abandoned Trawler to Portland, Maine

Tug Crew Tows Fire-stricken and Abandoned Trawler to Portland, Maine

A tugboat crew was recently called upon to tow in a fire-stricken trawler that had been abandoned in the Gulf of Maine.The 81-foot fishing vessel Three Girls had been adrift since August 11 when an onboard fire forced its crew to evacuate about 105 nautical miles east of Portsmouth, N.H. The U.S.

San Francisco Bay Ferry Awarded $11 Million Grant for Electric Vessel

San Francisco Bay Ferry Awarded $11 Million Grant for Electric Vessel

San Francisco Bay Ferry has been awarded a $11 million grant from the U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Transit Administration (FTA) to support the agency’s plans to procure the nation’s first high-speed battery electric ferries.The award—announced by the FTA on Monday as one of 18 new ferry grants totaling nearly $300 million—advances Phase 1 of SF Bay Ferry’s Rapid Electric

Renovations Commence at NOAA's Research Vessel Pier in Charleston

Renovations Commence at NOAA's Research Vessel Pier in Charleston

NOAA held a groundbreaking ceremony to signal the start of renovations at its pier facility in North Charleston, S.C.The project, expected to wrap up in 2026, includes the demolition of the site's existing pier and construction of a new one for NOAA's ships homeported in Charleston, the Ronald H. Brown and Nancy Foster.