Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

Earlier in the forum, I noted comments on the steamboat graveyard across from Dawson City.  I have attached several photos that I took in 1995.  The steamboats had long since collapsed, were unsafe to walk upon and completely enclosed by the underbrush.  Hope you like 'em. LJP

 

 

MSW  Engine Room.jpg

MSW 2 Pilothouses.jpg

MSW Boiler.jpg

MSW Engine.jpg

MSW Sternwheeler Profile.jpg

Posted

Check the University of Oregon's historical society for a catalog of plans and articles which cover steamboats among other things. You'll have to do a little Googling.

Bill, in Idaho

Completed Mamoli Halifax and Billings Viking ship in 2015

Next  Model Shipways Syren

Posted

LJP, I have some of the nearly exact same photos somewhere in my print collection, taken in 1998. Fun to see yours.

Posted

reklein, thanks for the info. I found the historical society but you are correct that it will take some googling to find the catalog. I will find it...

 

Eric, I am jealous that you were there for the '98 Centennial. When I was there in '95 the steamboat Keno in Dawson was closed for renovations for the Centennial. And the Klondike and Nenana were closed for the day by the time the tour got there and we had to leave before they opened the next morning.  Walking around them is not like wandering around in them.

Posted

Ironically, I didn't fully appreciate the experience because I was 18 and knew almost nothing about steamboats despite being a history buff. I though the wrecks were cool, took a few pictures, poked around, and moved on. Of course, 38 year old me wishes I'd spent a day documenting every aspect of their construction. Teenagers are dumb, what can you do?

Posted

I may have mentioned this before but in Penticton BC there is a fully intact sternwheeler,the Sicamous. It has a steel hull and is a lake boat but the classic lines engines,rigging and cabin are all there and intact. She is hauled 

out and is quite the attraction being fully preserved.  

Bill, in Idaho

Completed Mamoli Halifax and Billings Viking ship in 2015

Next  Model Shipways Syren

Posted

Hi Eric, older people can also be dumb. I speak from experience.  I should have also spent more time there and taken more pictures. And I never knew about the Evelyn on Shipyard Island until years after.  But I appreciate what I have done and learn from it.  So next time...

 

Hi Bill, Thanks about the Sicamous info.  Very impressive. There are YouTube videos about Sicamous that are great.  And I would like to visit Moyie in Kaslo at the same time.  In the next few years I want to head back to Vancouver and these two stops are definitely an add-on.

 

Thanks LJP

Posted

LJP, while you're up in B.C. try to get to Osoyoos toe see the Osoyoos desert model railway. Its a really nice commercial model rr mostly MArklin but quite large. Cost is about 5$ canadian. Also while in Penticton go ride the Kettle valley RR nearby in Summerland, which still has an operating steam locomotive. Lots of attractions and uncrowded. Also don't forget to try the wine from the Okanogan area. Wonderful stuff.

Bill, in Idaho

Completed Mamoli Halifax and Billings Viking ship in 2015

Next  Model Shipways Syren

  • 2 weeks later...
  • 2 months later...
Posted

Taken on our recent trip to South Australia, these are the sad remains of the paddle steamer 'Wagga Wagga' near the bank of the Murrumbidgee River at Narrandera in New South Wales.

 

Not much is known about the early history of this steamer.  She was a typical Murray/Darling cargo steamer, built about 1884 and used for towing barges of timber, wool and produce, mainly on the Murrumbidgee River.  She was finally abandoned when she sprung a leak and sank at Narrandera in November 1918.

 

1035158354_103467-PSWaggaWagga.thumb.JPG.f39b2af6485732861b2ee2dd2f4374d2.JPG

 

This is one of the few photos of the 'Wagga Wagga' when she was in service.

wagga04.jpg.610a34763e79596423f6e66c34ce575f.jpg

 

John

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Well, she's entering her 97th year.  She's the last of the Puget Sound steamers, and still has her original engine.  She was built by Matt Anderson in his backyard for West Pass Transportation Company.  She did the Seattle-Vashon Island-Tacoma run for eighteen years, before being taken down to run on the Columbia for a year.  From then until around 1980 she worked as a charter vessel, then becoming a museum ship.

 

The engine is older than the ship.  The engine is triple expansion and was built in 1904 by Heffernan Engine Works of Seattle.  It was originally installed in a vessel known as the Tyrus, which, when bought by WPTCo., was renamed Virginia IV.

 

We still go out; made over 70 trips last year.

 

I guess, from here, what do you want to know?  I can tell you in detail how to bring the plant up, but just be warned that I am not a very exciting writer.

 

The photos are the 1922 maiden voyage, 1935, a week ago (with my cell phone as I didn't have any other camera), and me fighting with the vacuum pump.

 

 

Maiden_Voyage_11_June_1922.jpg

1935.jpg

WP_20181202_16_23_14_Pro.jpg

me_n_vacuum_pump.jpg

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

Good stuff, that's really fascinating. Cool how these boats were simultaneously unique and yet developed some of the same approaches as other regions (like relying on stern wheels in tight or debris-prone areas). I love that last centerwheel one, reminds me of a similar design that operated as a ferry on the Missouri River at St. Joseph, MO in the 1850s.

Posted

Hi Mark,

Really neat local sternwheelers! Hard to choose which is the "best". The 50 foot waterline model looks exactly like a Marine Iron Works of Chicago sternwheeler.  If you have not acquired a copy of a 1986 reprint of their catalog you may wish to do so. I am certain you will find it both interesting and helpful.  I wish you the best of luck making plans and then scratch building. It may not be a fast process but it will be incredibly gratifying.

Larry

  • 2 weeks later...
Posted

For both our Australian and American members - P.S. 'Captain Sturt'.

 

The 'Captain Sturt' was one of the very few stern wheelers to ever ply the Murray River.  She was designed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and built in 1915 by Charles Barnes Company of Cincinnati and then disassembled and shipped out to Australia in pieces where she was rebuilt at on the banks of the Murray at Mannum, South Australia.   Stern wheelers were generally considered unsuitable for Australia's narrow, winding rivers, however the 'Captain Sturt' was intended for construction work on the new river lock system and not for general trading.  She was owned and operated by the River Murray Commission and proved ideal for her work on lock construction along the river.  She was abandoned at Goolwa near the mouth of the river after the lock system was completed in 1935 and was used as a houseboat for a while before being allowed to quietly rot away on the river bank.

 

A photo held by the State Library of South Australia showing the 'Captain Sturt' in her prime.

396967707_B-74578(1).jpg.f5bb548df487ecac4a5528bbc90b5ece.jpg

 

The sad remains of the 'Captain Sturt' incorporated into a marina at Goolwa.  photo taken in November of this year.

947914005_105518-CaptainSturtWreck.thumb.JPG.e99f7f4d1bbf3bd75a2a0bb8eb3c57c1.JPG

 

John

Posted

Hi John, a very sad end to such an interesting vessel and its history.

 

Cheers...... Fernando🍻

 

Current Builds - Colonial Brig Perseverance 1807 by Fernando E - Modellers Shipyard - 1:48 scale

 

Previous Builds - 

S Lucia by Fernando E - Panart - Scale 1:30

Sloop Norfolk 1798 by Fernando E - Modellers Shipyard - Scale 1:36 

 

  • 1 month later...
Posted

Here's an identification question. In looking up images to illustrate a design question for my Arabia, I ran across this image of the Ben Campbell. There are two unusual tubular structures that I can't figure out.

 

First, the edge of the boiler (2nd) deck seems to consist of a fat, possibly tubular feature that runs all the way around. Is that just an odd decorative edging to the deck, or something else? There are also some extra-large deck supports that seem unusual, too, especially the foremost one.

 

Second, and even odder, is the dark tubular structure projecting forward from the boiler deck to roughly parallel the curve of the bow, appearing to extend around the front of the jackstaff. I cannot figure out what it is.

1024px-SteamboatBenCampbellb.jpg

Actually, you know what, I think I just figured out point 2. Curious if it's more obvious to others or if there are other ideas before I spring my answer.

Posted

I think Druxey nailed the first.  Asto the second, if it is the same thing you are talking about, they may simply be large scuppers  similar in design to a house downpipe?

 

cheers

 

Pat

If at first you do not suceed, try, and then try again!
Current build: HMCSS Victoria (Scratch)

Next build: HMAS Vampire (3D printed resin, scratch 1:350)

Built:          Battle Station (Scratch) and HM Bark Endeavour 1768 (kit 1:64)

Posted

I don't think either is any kind of bumper, specifically because they don't extend around the wheel housing. The only things steamboats interacted with at that height were other steamboats, when tied up together, and they usually had vertical bumpers meant to separate the two where that was a concern. In addition, superstructures almost always inclined inward slightly, making it even less likely they'd need a bumper to fend anything off. The dark tube doesn't appear to have any supports except at the front of the boiler deck and at the jackstaff, which isn't enough to protect against any kind of impact. As for scuppers, I can't think of any reason they'd run scuppers parallel to the boiler deck and out over the bow rather than just draining laterally as most decks did.

 

One hint as to my explanation for #2 (the dark object); I think the photo's perspective is playing a serious optical illusion on the viewer.

Posted

I am thinking that that long tubular object is a grasshopper pole stowed. On the right hand side you can make out some links/shackles. The lifting poles have rigging connected to the grasshopper pole. And on the bow jackstaff you can see what looks like a cross tree for the ends of the grasshopper poles to rest on. Not sure if grasshopper pole is the right name but they were used to push off of sand bars and such.  As for the bigger supports they could have helped in transfering the lifting load when pushing up off a river bar.

I would vote stepped back decks as it was a working boat not a big river showboat.(other thread )

 

 

Zipper hydroplane(Miss Mabel ) finished

John Cudahy  Scratch build 1/4" scale Steam Tug

1914 Steam Tug Scratch build from HAMMS plans

1820 Pinky  "Eagle" Scratch build from; American Ships Their Plans and History

Posted

That's the idea I came up with, too. It took me a while to un-see what initially seemed like a tubular ring around the bow, but I'm now convinced it's just a grasshopper spar stowed sideways as you say. The perspective is perfect for the initial optical illusion. Also, great eye for the cross-trees on the jackstaff that appear to be for supporting the spars. I hadn't noticed that, and such a thing isn't present on some other boats I've seen. It's a great detail and I may add it to the Arabia.

  • 2 years later...
Posted

Does anyone have a copy of Alan Bates - Western River Engineroom Cyclopeodium they would offer for sale?

As you probably know, this is the companion piece to his Western Rivers Steamboat Cyclopeodium (I have a copy).

 

Beginning to sketch up the Illinois River steam sternwheel ferry named for my 4th great grandfather Zachariah Biddle, as the Z. Biddle (1878-1892)

I have good data from the NARA in DC and more coming (I hope from NARA, Kansas, City) but so far no description or photos.

 

In addition to this book if anyone has info on the ferry, please contact me via personal email as well as posting here.

She was short and narrow - roughly (60 ft x 16ft x 2ft) plus whatever the size of the stern paddlewheel assembly might have been.

There are probably thousands of great images of steamboats, and several ferries for the Mississippi, Missouri and the Ohio, but very few for the Illinois River.

 

Thanks

Posted

Randy:

I think the Howard Steamboat Museum still has brand new copies for sale.  I got my copy there.

https://www.howardsteamboatmuseum.org/

Kurt

Kurt Van Dahm

Director

NAUTICAL RESEARCH GUILD

www.thenrg.org

SAY NO TO PIRACY. SUPPORT ORIGINAL IDEAS AND MANUFACTURERS

CLUBS

Nautical Research & Model Ship Society of Chicago

Midwest Model Shipwrights

North Shore Deadeyes

The Society of Model Shipwrights

Butch O'Hare - IPMS

Posted

I checked my copy of Way's packet directory, which does list this vessel but doesn't have much to say about it beyond what you already know. It mentions a documented inspection in 1881 at Valley City, IL, no idea if that's a lead toward finding some documentation? The last record it mentions is 1886. Cool project, good luck!

Posted

Thanks. Yes I have Ways. My Dad, his and my great grandfather were all born in Valley City. 

 

Im new to using MSW and steamboats but to an old post of yours about a tubular structure along the edge of the second deck... wondering if it might be tightly rolled up weather cloths?

Posted

Randy, that's a creative suggestion.  I think the reason I don't agree is that the "tube" perfectly meets every vertical support as if it runs through it. Any kind of long rolled up cloth would, one would think, have to go around or over those supports.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...