Wenonah was abandoned in 1886, in favor of newer vessels.[3]
In 2002 a modern excursion vessel, the Wenonah II, was constructed to give passengers the look and feel of a traditional Muskoka Steamship.[4] She was named in honour of the original Wenonah, although her appearance more closely matches vessels like her berthmate, the heritage vessel RMS Segwun, built a few decades later.
^Steamboats on the Lakes. James Lorimer & Company Ltd. 2005. ISBN978-1-55028-885-8. The railway, reaching Gravenhurst in 1875, provided a route for getting lumber to the southern markets and for bringing passengers into the Muskoka Lakes. By 1885, when the Wenonah was abandoned, the thin soil of Muskoka had forced many of the settlers off the land.
^"Muskoka Steamships". Muskoka Steamships. Archived from the original on 2018-02-22. Retrieved 2018-09-07. Wenonah II, a modern interpretation of a traditional steamship, is named in honour of Wenonah, the first steamship to sail Lake Muskoka.