Canal Boneyard Field Series | Restoration Obscura
Exploring ruins is always compelling, regardless of scale or setting. As part of my ongoing fieldwork with Restoration Obscura, one of the core goals is to document and identify lost and erased structures embedded within modern landscapes and built environments, treating them as an archive rather than as anomalies.
Some of the most compelling sites I encounter are tied to water. Rivers, canals, reservoirs, and floodplains conceal and preserve material history differently than land does. As water levels drop in winter and ice begins to bind along the shoreline, structural forms that remain invisible most of the year can briefly surface.
In this case, the ruin is not vertical. It lies low in the water, revealed seasonally when river levels fall and winter locks the surface into ice, in a quiet reach where industrial traffic once moved steadily through the interior waterways of the region. What appears first are outlines, long rectangular hull forms pressed just beneath the river’s surface. Then details come into focus. Parallel longitudinal timbers. Upright iron fasteners. Frames spaced with the regularity of working boat construction rather than shoreline infrastructure.
At a distance, the exposed framing reads like rib cages laid side by side, the structural skeletons of working boats gradually opening as water, ice, and time strip them down to their load-bearing elements.
As shoreline growth recedes and water levels drop, forming ice lightens the surface and the dark timbers stand out in contrast, briefly revealing the hull geometry. What remains reads as exposed hull structure: bottom planking long gone, deck timbers collapsed or missing, framing members still holding their spacing as the vessels settle flat into the riverbed.
These remains are wooden canal barges, often referred to as scows, built in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries for use on New York’s canal system. Their flat bottoms and rectangular hulls were engineered for shallow, controlled waterways, where boats moved slowly under tow, carrying bulk cargo such as stone, timber, grain, and coal. Construction was heavy and utilitarian. Thick longitudinal timbers formed the hull. Cross members supported decking that has long since disappeared. Iron drift pins and spikes held the structure together, many of them still standing where the surrounding wood has failed.
When rail transport and the modernized barge canal system rendered these vessels obsolete, they were not preserved or dismantled. They were simply no longer useful. Many were towed into shallow slackwater and abandoned, where they settled into the riverbed. Seasonal ice fixed them in place, while floods and decay gradually rearranged what remained.
What survives now is a boneyard. Not a single wreck, but a cluster of working boats left behind when the system that relied on them moved on.
© 2026 John Bulmer Photography, John Bulmer Media, Nor'easter Films, and Restoration Obscura
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