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It’s Wayback Wednesday: Marina mystery

Welcome to Wayback Wednesday sponsored by Cavalcade Color Lab! Every week, we’ll be sharing a vintage photo and asking our readers to chime in with anything you can recall about the photo, other related memories, or even a funny caption. Have some vintage photos of your own? Send them to [email protected] and we may share them with our readers!

Scroll down to see last week’s photo.

This week, the OPP are on scene at the former Blackburn’s Marina. Can you peg the date and guess why the police boat was there?

Wayback Wednesday is sponsored by Cavalcade Color Lab

Last week we shared this photo with you:

Dave Johns added these details to this feel-good photo: “This view of Main St. in the west end of town was where the archway structure once greeted everyone. Sadly a truck hit it and it was torn down and removed and never replaced. There was a great fish & chip restaurant on the right and now Shirtliff’s tire garage is on the left.”

Thanks, Dave!

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4 Comments

  1. Stan Dronseika says:

    I can’t remember the year, but the people on the dock are Paul, our mechanic at the time, Gord Broadbend, manager and my right hand, a young lad by the name of Morris. The tall cop is VanHoof I think — and I wish there were more like him, and although I knew the other officer, I don’t think I ever knew his name.

  2. Elizabeth Rice - Doppler Publisher says:

    What a wonderfully heart-warming story. Thanks for sharing it Stan.

  3. Stan Dronseika says:

    Yes…. they were bringing back a “J” Craft, but it was later than ’75. At that time there was a lad in town by the name of Jamie who loved that boat. He stole that boat from us on five occasions as I remember. It’s hard to tell if this photo was taken the first time, or on one of the other five times that Jamie “borrowed” it. I remember him quite fondly because of his craftiness at making off with it no matter how securely we thought we had protected it. Not only that but Jamie never harmed the boat. When he finished with it for the night, he would carefully tie it up at some dock where it would be found in the morning. It got to the point that when we came to the marina in the morning, we all rushed to where we had tied the “J” Craft the night before, to see if it was still there.

    Where ever you are, and if you read this post Jamie, I wish you good roads and God Bless. You were truly a gentleman bandit.

  4. Roger Staig says:

    The year is 1975. The Police brought in the speed boat behind it for either speeding or the engine failed and they towed it.