Multnomah (sternwheeler)
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Sternwheeler Multnomah at Three Tree Point, WA, circa 1909.jpg |Ship caption=Multnomah at dock at Three Tree Point, circa 1910 }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship name=Multnomah |Ship owner= |Ship operator= |Ship registry={{flag|United States}} |Ship route= |Ship ordered= |Ship builder= |Ship original cost= |Ship yard number= |Ship way number= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched=August 1885 |Ship completed= |Ship christened= |Ship acquired= |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship in service=1885-1911 |Ship out of service= |Ship identification= |Ship fate=Sunk following collision, 1911 |Ship notes= }} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Hide header= |Header caption= |Ship type=Sternwheel passenger/freight/towboat |Ship tonnage= |Ship displacement= |Ship length={{convert|143|ft|m|1|abbr=on}} |Ship beam= |Ship height= |Ship draught= |Ship draft= |Ship depth= |Ship decks= |Ship deck clearance= |Ship ramps= |Ship ice class= |Ship sail plan= |Ship power= |Ship propulsion= |Ship speed= |Ship capacity= |Ship crew= |Ship notes= }} |
The sternwheeler Multnomah was built at East Portland, Oregon in 1885 and operated on the Willamette and Columbia Rivers until 1889 in the United States. She was later transferred to Puget Sound and became one of the better known steamboats operating there.
Construction and Early Operations
She was built for the run from Portland to Oregon City and was considered one of the top boats on the Willamette River at the time.Newell, Gordon R., Ships of the Inland Sea, at 120-21, 131, 148, 165, Binford and Mort, Portland, OR (2nd Ed. 1960) Multnomah was launched in August 1885.{{Cite news |title=The Story of a Fish |newspaper=Hampshire/Portsmouth Telegraph |location=Portsmouth |date=22 August 1885 |issue=5436 }} One of her early captains was James D. Miller (1830–1914).Newell, Gordon R., ed., H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest, at 57, 88, 101, 197, 214, 233, 249, 358, Superior Publishing, Seattle, WA 1966 {{ISBN|0-87564-220-9}}
Transfer to Puget Sound
Image:Union Pacific dock, Seattle WA June 6 1891.JPG.]]
In 1889, Multnomah was transferred to Puget Sound, where under the ownership of the S. Willey Navigation Company she made regular runs from Olympia to points on Puget Sound. In 1900, Captain H.H. McDonald (1857–1924), who had already been operating the sternwheelers Elwood and Skagit Queen on the lower Sound, bought Multnomah and Capital City (ex-Dalton) from S. Willey Navigation, and put them in competition with the Greyhound, which had been taken off the Seattle-Tacoma run. There was a rate war between the two concerns, and eventually Greyhound’s owners, acting as the Olympia-Tacoma Navigation Company, bought Multnomah and Capital City from Captain McDonald. Captain George W. Barlow, a son of an Oregon pioneer family, commanded all three vessels at various times; he retired in 1910.
In 1900, Multnomah and City of Aberdeen hauled beer from the Olympia Brewery to various points on Puget Sound. Once acquired by the Olympia-Tacoma Navigation Company, Greyhound ran with Multnomah on the Seattle-Tacoma-Olympia route, making at various smaller landings in the South Sound, including Three Tree Point and Johnson’s Landing on Anderson Island.Galentine, Elizabeth, Anderson Island, at 50, Arcadia Publishing 2007 {{ISBN|0-7385-4854-5}}
Other captains for the Olympia-Tacoma Navigation Company included George L. Hill, who was in command on November 10, 1904 when Multnomah collided with the French full-rigged ship Amiral Cecile in Commencement Bay. In foggy conditions, the steamboat passed under the bowsprit of the ship, and the ship’s anchor flukes caught in the steamer’s upper works, tearing them up. Litigation went on for eight years over this, amid apparently credible charges that witnesses had been paid off.
Image:Sternwheelers Simpson and Multnomah at Olympia 1911.jpg
In 1907, Multnomah was converted from wood to oil-fired boilers. Almost all the boats built after 1905 were oil-fired, and they had improved locomotive-style boilers which lessened the chances of explosion. The Olympia-Tacoma Navigation Company kept both Multnomah and Greyhound on the Tacoma-Olympia run until 1911, when they were replaced with the new express propeller steamer Nisqually. Even then, bus lines (called then the “auto stage”) were starting to compete with the steamboats. At some point she was assigned work as a towboat.Weinstein, Robert A., Tall Ships on Puget Sound – The Marine Photographs of Wilhelm Hester, at page 85, University of Washington Press, Seattle, WA 1978 {{ISBN|0-295-95619-4}} (showing photo of Multnomah acting as tug for schooner Endeavor)
Collision and sinking
Image:Multnomah (sternwheeler) from Point Defiance Park,1898.PNG, as seen from Point Defiance Park, summer, 1898]]
Multnomah met her end on October 28, 1911, when in a dense fog in Elliott Bay, she was rammed by the steamer Iroquois, sinking in 240 feet of water.
Notes
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External links
{{Commons category|Multnomah (ship, 1885)}}
=Historic photographs from on-line collections of University of Washington=
- [http://content.lib.washington.edu/cgi-bin/viewer.exe?CISOROOT=/vanolinda&CISOPTR=130&CISORESTMP=&CISOVIEWTMP=&CISOMODE=thumb Multnomah at Chautauqua Dock, Vashon Island]
- [http://content.lib.washington.edu/cgi-bin/viewer.exe?CISOROOT=/vanolinda&CISOPTR=371&CISOMODE=thumb Multnomah, apparently on Puget Sound]
=Website=
- [http://dcsfilms.com/Site_4/Multnomah_wreck.html history of sternwheeler Multnomah, with photos and reports of early dives to her wreck]
{{Mosquito Fleet}}
{{Steamboats Pacific Northwest}}
{{Puget Sound sternwheelers}}
Category:History of Washington (state)
Category:Paddle steamers of Oregon
Category:Steamboats of the Columbia River
Category:Maritime incidents in 1911
Category:Steamboats of Washington (state)