![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgtVqgqj21w5SNYAQ3lLN6iVaL_CfsclOvnD7gLk2J81SXfGvIWN0rLQ3VHe5MU0F3_5MNdHSMBGW7WTJ3eXaTczX6cfQ1_-VP5BHZKRyipGiQKMd4OeT-huGinRuKONo_5AblpGageAjA/s400/lois+mcclure.jpg)
One attraction of going to Vergennes is to go aboard the Lois McClure. The Lois McClure is an accurate reproduction of the kind of canal boats George Neddo built. She combines the size and shape of an 1860's canal boat (88 feet by 13 feet) with a schooner sailing rig that was used to cross open water.
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The canal boat has been used as a traveling museum, recently touring a number of ports in Canada (Fitting, I might add, since the Neddos were really the Nadeaus, who had moved from Canada after George Neddo's father was charged with treason as a member of Papineau's Army in the 1830's. But that's a story for another time, eh?).
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