She is a self-unloading vessel, with a 250feet boom, mounting a conveyor belt, that could be swung to port or starboard. The ship is 680feet long and 78feet wide, with a carrying capacity of 34,000 tons (at midsummer draft), limestone, grain, coal or iron ore.
The bulk carrier is 207.3order=flipNaNorder=flip long overall and 203order=flipNaNorder=flip between perpendiculars with a beam of 23.9order=flipNaNorder=flip. At the time of construction, the vessel was measured at and . The ship is powered by two GM diesel engines rated at 3600hp driving one shaft and bow and stern thrusters. The ship has a maximum speed of 13kn. She is a self-unloading vessel, with a 250feet boom, mounting a conveyor belt, that could be swung 105° to port or starboard. The ship has 22 hatches for 6 holds.
The ship was built under the terms of the Merchant Marine Act of 1970, the first of nine vessels built by the Buffalo-based American Steamship Company, taking advantage of the Act's loan guarantees. She cost $13.7 million USD. The ship was constructed by Bay Shipbuilding at their yard in Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin with the yard number 710. The ship was launched on March 10, 1973 and completed on September 1 later that year as Charles E. Wilson. The official owner of the ship is the Franklin Steamship Company, a subsidiary of the American Steamship Company, with the exception of a short period in 1978 where the American Steam Ship Company took over. The vessel is registered in Wilmington, Delaware.
Operated by the American Steamship Company on the Great Lakes, Charles E. Wilson served uneventfully until 2000. In January 2000 the third ship to be named John J. Boland was sold and Charles E. Wilson was renamed John J. Boland. On January 2, 2018 John J. Boland was among the ships that became trapped in ice on Lake Erie. The ship was freed by United States Coast Guard vessels on January 4.[1] The ship is currently in service.