State of Pennsylvania (steamboat)
{{Short description|1923 steamboat built in Wilmington, Delaware}}
{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image |Ship image=Steamer 'State of Pennsylvania', Riverview Beach, N. J. Tichnor Card.jpg |Ship caption= Postcard c. 1935 }} {{Infobox ship career |Hide header= |Ship country=United States |Ship flag={{USN flag|1923}} |Ship name=State of Pennsylvania |Ship namesake=U.S. state of Pennsylvania |Ship owner=Wilson Line |Ship operator= }} {{Infobox|child=yes | label1 = Designer | data1 = George G. Sharp }}{{Infobox ship career |Hide header=yes |Ship builder=Pusey and Jones |Ship original cost= |Ship laid down= |Ship launched= |Ship hull number= |Ship completed=1923 |Ship maiden voyage= |Ship homeport=Wilmington, Delaware |Ship identification= |Ship fate=*Sank 1970
}} {{Infobox ship characteristics |Header caption= |Ship class= |Ship type=Streamlined steamboat |Ship tonnage= |Ship displacement= |Ship length=*{{convert|219|ft|abbr=on}}
|Ship beam={{convert|48.9|ft|abbr=on}} |Ship height= |Ship draft={{convert|10.5|ft|abbr=on}} |Ship decks=4 |Ship power={{convert|2900|hp|abbr=on}} triple expansion steam engine |Ship propulsion= |Ship speed={{convert|18|mph|km/h kn|abbr=on}} |Ship range= |Ship boats= |Ship capacity=*3,500 passengers
}} {{Infobox NRHP | embed = yes | name = State of Pennsylvania (steamboat) | nrhp_type = | location = Christina River, Wilmington, Delaware | coordinates = {{coord|39|43|53|N|75|33|39|W|display=inline,title}} | locmapin = Delaware | map_width = 300 | added = 20 April 1979 {{cite web |url=http://nrhp.focus.nps.gov |title=NPS Focus |work=National Register of Historic Places |publisher=National Park Service |accessdate=17 June 2011 }} }} |
State of Pennsylvania was a steamboat that was built in Wilmington, Delaware in 1923, along with her identical sister ship State of Delaware. The steamboat operated on the Delaware River between her homeport of Wilmington and the cities of Chester and Philadelphia in Pennsylvania, as well as Riverview Park in Pennsville, New Jersey. Regular service on these routes was stopped in 1960. The boat foundered near her dock on the Christina River in 1970. In 1979, she was listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In 1988, the upper decks were destroyed by a deliberately set fire, and in 2005 the hull was removed and scrapped as a hazard to navigation, all without the ship being raised.{{cite press release |url=http://carper.senate.gov/press/record.cfm?id=245408 |title=Sen. Carper Continues Effort to Develop Riverfront with Announcements on Friday, September 9, 2005 |publisher=United States Senate |date=September 8, 2005 |accessdate=2011-06-17}}
Design
State of Pennsylvania and State of Delaware were "the most powerful...the widest and tallest single screw propeller riverboats on the East Coast."Elliot and Athon, § 8, p. 1 The two vessels were {{convert|219|ft}} long with an overall length of {{convert|226|ft}}, with four decks. Approximately 80% of each ship was constructed of steel to help fireproof them. They drew {{convert|10.5|ft}}.
State of Pennsylvania was later extended by {{convert|10|ft}} to an overall length of {{convert|236|ft}} with the addition of a "raked bow" in 1944. Both ships were equipped with a {{convert|2900|hp|adj=on}} triple expansion steam engine, which gave them an operating speed of {{convert|18|mph|km/h kn|abbr=off}}. State of Pennsylvania was the first riverboat to have a "coordinated whistle-light assembly" installed; the mechanism caused two lights on either side of the whistle to flash in sync with the signaling of the whistle.Elliot and Athon, § 7, pp. 1–2
The hull was occupied by the engine room, fuel oil tanks, crew's mess, and crew quarters. The purser's office, boatswain's lockers, a soda fountain, lounges and rest rooms were located on the first or Main deck. The second or Saloon deck included the ballroom and bandstand and an open observation area. The third and fourth decks were terraced observation decks, with two raised steps allowing passengers in the middle of the deck to see over passengers nearer the railings. The top deck also included the pilot house, officer's quarters, life rafts and six life boats.Elliot and Athon, § 7, p. 1
History
The ship and her identical sister were designed by George G. Sharp in a "streamlined" style.
{{cite web
|url=http://www.georgesharp.com/SHARP_History.htm
|title=History of George G. Sharp, Inc.
|publisher=George G. Sharp, Inc.
|accessdate=2011-06-17
}} They were built on the Christina River by the Pusey & Jones Corporation in 1923. State of Pennsylvania was commissioned by Joseph S. Wilson, owner of the Wilson Line and son of Captain Horace Wilson, who were the only father and son to both serve as mayors of Wilmington.
The ship "entertained and transported" an estimated 20 to 25 million passengers from 1923 to 1960. Movie screens and projectors were added to the top deck in the 1930s. State of Pennsylvania and State of Delaware were the first steamboats to screen movies, as well as to broadcast radio live. The Art Deco ballroom and bandstand decorated by Philadelphia's John Wanamaker were popular and featured the "Pennsylvania Polka" as the ship's unofficial theme song.
On 27 June 1938, during the 300th anniversary celebration of the arrival of the first Swedish and Finnish settlers in America, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and Swedish Crown Prince (later King) Gustaf Adolf and the Crown Princess witnessed the special arrival in Wilmington of State of Pennsylvania and its guests.
The ship operated mostly on summer excursion routes on the Delaware River and Delaware Bay, but during World War II transported shipyard workers in Baltimore and in 1948 re-inaugurated the Wilson Line's route to New York. During the 1950s she sailed out of Philadelphia on educational trips as a "Little Red Floating School House." City Investing Corporation bought the Wilson Line in the 1950s and terminated the Philadelphia-Chester-Wilmington-Riverview Park excursion routes in September 1960, thus ending State of Pennsylvania{{'}}s career.
File:Wilson Line Wilm DEL.jpeg|Postcard depicting Wilson Line boats on the Christina River. The State of Pennsylvania or her identical sister ship State of Delaware on the right
See also
{{Portal|National Register of Historic Places|Transport}}
References
{{Reflist}}
Sources
- {{cite web |last=Elliott |first=Richard |last2=Athan |first2=Jean |title=National Register of Historic Places Inventory—Nomination Form / State of Pennsylvania (steamboat) |date=October 1978 |publisher=National Park Service |format=pdf |url={{NRHP url|id=79000637}} |accessdate=June 17, 2011 |ref=Elliot-Athon}}
External links
- {{cite book |last=Elliott |first=Richard V. |title=Last of the steamboats: the saga of the Wilson Line |publisher=Tidewater Publishers |year=1970 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tuskAQAAIAAJ}}
- [http://www.oldchesterpa.com/wilson_line.htm Photos] at Old Chester PA, The Wilson Line
{{National Register of Historic Places in Delaware}}
Category:Ships built by Pusey and Jones
Category:Ships on the National Register of Historic Places in Delaware
Category:Steamboats of the United States
Category:National Register of Historic Places in Wilmington, Delaware