TWO
ways (on ground and by water) the DUKW explores Boston; DUKW is derived from General Motors terminology: D (designed in 1942), U (utility), K (all-wheel drive), W (dual real axles)
21,000
number of DUKWs built by General Motors during WWII
28
number of DUKW replicas in the fleet conducting the part-terrestrial part-aquatic tour of Boston
36
number of passengers who can ride in each vehicle
EIGHTY
percentage of energy for the Boston Duck garage generated from solar panels
1994
year the Duck Tour was launched in Boston
FORTY
percentage of all over-beach supplies in Normandy delivered by DUKWs, a.k.a. “Ducks,” in WWII
57
conDUCKtors
ZERO
cost for a WWII veteran to ride the Duck Tour
TWENTY ONE
mechanics on staff keeping DUKWs running
100
percentage of the Duck Tour fleet running on biodiesel
600,000
number of passengers carried by the Duck Tour fleet each year
Contributing editor Julia Shipley’s stories celebrate New Englanders’ enduring connection to place. Her long-form lyric essay, “Adam’s Mark,” was selected as one of the Boston Globes Best New England Books of 2014.