Yosemite (sidewheeler)
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The steamboat ''Yosemite'' operated for almost fifty years on
San Francisco Bay San Francisco Bay is a large tidal estuary in the U.S. state of California, and gives its name to the San Francisco Bay Area. It is dominated by the big cities of San Francisco, San Jose, and Oakland. San Francisco Bay drains water from a ...
, the Sacramento River, inland coastal waters and the lower Fraser River in British Columbia, and Puget Sound.


Design

''Yosemite'' was built in 1862 at the yard of
John Gunder North John Gunder North (December 15, 1826 – September 19, 1872) was a Norwegian born ship builder in San Francisco. During his career, he built 273 hulls of all kinds with 53 bay and river steamers, including the famed paddle steamers ''Chrysopolis' ...
, in San Francisco. For a vessel built entirely of wood, ''Yosemite'' was enormous. She was 282' long after her rebuild following the 1865 boiler explosion, when 30' was added to her length.,Newell, Gordon R., ''Ships of the Inland Sea'', at 89-91, Bindford and Mort, Portland, OR (2nd Ed. 1960) 35' beam (80' over the paddle guards) and 13' depth of hold, and rated at 1525 tons. She was a side-wheel steamer built entirely of wood with a single-cylinder "walking-beam" steam engine with a 57" bore and a 122" stroke.Turner, Robert D., ''Pacific Princesses – An Illustrated History of Canadian Pacific Railway's Princess Fleet on the Pacific Northwest Coast'', at 11, 14-15, 23-24, 39-40, 92, 233, Sono Nis Press, Victoria, B.C., 1977 Another source gives slightly different dimensions: 283.2' long, 34.8' on the beam, 13.6' depth of hold, and 1,319 tons.Newell, Gordon R., ed., ''H.W. McCurdy Maritime History of the Pacific Northwest'', at 121, n.5, and 167-68, Superior Publishing, Seattle, WA 1966 Her paddle wheels were 32' in diameter and fitted with 10' long "buckets" (the maritime world for the wooden planks fitted to the wheel that acted as paddles) Turner, one of the most prominent Pacific Northwest maritime historians, described ''Yosemite'' as follows:


Service in California

''Yosemite'' was first placed in service by the California Steam Navigation Company in 1863 to run with ''Chrysopolis'' on the Sacramento River.Faber, Jim, ''Steamer's Wake – Voyaging down the old marine highways of Puget Sound, British Columbia, and the Columbia River'', at 24 and 147, Enetai Press, Seattle, WA 1985 (reprinting photographs of ''Yosemite'' departing San Francisco and docked in Sacramento) Daily service, Sundays excepted, was provided from San Francisco leaving at 4pm for Sacramento. On October 12, 1865, as she was leaving the Rio Vista landing bound down river, her boiler (supposedly a safer "low-pressure" model) exploded, killing 55 people and scalding and injuring many more. She was equipped with new boilers then, and once again in 1876, after which she could reach a speed of an hour. Railroad competition in California forced her to be laid up at
Oakland Oakland is the largest city and the county seat of Alameda County, California, United States. A major West Coast port, Oakland is the largest city in the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area, the third largest city overall in the Bay A ...
from 1879 to 1883.


Purchase by Canadian Pacific Navigation Company

In 1883, John Irving Commodore of the
Canadian Pacific Navigation Company The Canadian Pacific Navigation Company was an early steamship company that operated steamships on the coast of British Columbia and the Inside Passage of southeast Alaska. The company was founded in 1883 by John Irving (1854-1936), a prominent ...
, bought ''Yosemite'' from her then owners, the
Central Pacific Railroad The Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR) was a rail company chartered by Pacific Railroad Acts, U.S. Congress in 1862 to build a railroad eastwards from Sacramento, California, to complete the western part of the "First transcontinental railroad" in N ...
and brought her up to Vancouver to be one of the first vessels of the line.


Canadian operations

''Yosemite'' proved to be a good purchase for Commodore Irving. Despite her reputation arising from the 1865 boiler explosion, ''Yosemite'' ran in Canadian waters for many years without significant trouble. In 1883, she set a speed record of four hours and 20 minutes for the run from Vancouver to Victoria, which stood until 1901, when the transpacific liner ''Moana'' made the run in four hours and one minute. In those times, ships were subject to health quarantines, in particular for smallpox. Officials were sometimes too quick to declare a smallpox quarantine, which happened twice in July 1892 to ''Yosemite''. Twice she was barred at Vancouver from landing passengers coming from Victoria and each time she simply landed them further up Burrard Inlet. Court action was necessary to persuade the Vancouver officials to allow ''Yosemite'' to land in their city.


Purchase by Canadian Pacific Railway

In 1901, the
Canadian Pacific Railway The Canadian Pacific Railway (french: Chemin de fer Canadien Pacifique) , also known simply as CPR or Canadian Pacific and formerly as CP Rail (1968–1996), is a Canadian Class I railway incorporated in 1881. The railway is owned by Canadi ...
purchased all the steamship operations and vessels of the Canadian Pacific Navigation Company, including ''Yosemite,'' which with other older steamers of the line was placed in reserve to fill in for newer ships taken out for service, and to cover times of high traffic such as in the summer months. By this time, ''Yosemite'' was almost 40 years old.


Sale to Puget Sound excursion lines

In 1906, the Canadian Pacific Railway sold ''Yosemite'' to the Puget Sound Excursion Company. This company had been organized by Capt. Thomas Grant to run cruises and excursions out of Seattle in connection with the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition. Once in Seattle, ''Yosemite'' was rebuilt somewhat by John B. Mitchell. The main deck and social hall were extended all the way forward to be flush with the bow, and a large dancing pavilion was installed. By the spring of 1907, ''Yosemite'' was in operation under command of Captain Grant, carrying up to 1,000 passengers at a time from Seattle to Bremerton and around Bainbridge Island. Music was provided by Wagner's Band and food service by Lord and Meeks, a well-known Seattle catering firm. The surviving photographs of ''Yosemite'' seem to always show an astounding number of people on her decks. This was in spite of the then recent loss of the in New York, also a wooden sidewheeler, in which over 1,000 people had been killed in a fire, and the resulting threat by the Puget Sound steamboat inspectors to strictly enforce the limits on passengers that could be embarked on excursions and cruises. Among other trips, in 1908, ''Yosemite'' carried almost the entire student body of the University of Washington out into Puget Sound to greet the
Great White Fleet The Great White Fleet was the popular nickname for the group of United States Navy battleships which completed a journey around the globe from December 16, 1907 to February 22, 1909 by order of President Theodore Roosevelt. Its mission was t ...
. In this particular trip, the vessel was obviously grossly overloaded, as the weight of the passengers caused her to heel so sharply over to port that the water came up to the bottom of the port side paddle wheel guard.Newell, Gordon R., and Williamson, Joe, ''Pacific Steamboats'', at 3 and 20-21, Bonanza Books, New York NY 1958 Boxing matches were held on her lower deck. Perhaps somewhat incongruously with hosting boxing matches, ''Yosemite'' on July 20, 1907 or 1908, advertised a "Grand Temperance Excursion" tickets $1.00 each "under the auspices of the International Order of Good Templars": Another typical charter excursion was carrying the Georgetown Volunteer Fire Department, who were all employees of the Rainier Brewery. In one atypical incident, in August, 1907, ''Yosemite'' rammed into a dock in Seattle, knocking over a horse and wagon, apparently becoming the only paddlewheeler to collide with a harnessed horse.


Wrecked

''Yosemite'' was wrecked on July 9, 1909 at Port Orchard Narrows, in broad daylight. The circumstances of the wreck were never entirely cleared up. As she approached Bremerton through the narrows at about 6:20 p.m., with Capt. Mike Edwards in command, she suddenly veered sharply towards the shore at about . Striking ground, her back was broken and she was a total loss. The captain said he expected the current to strike her differently than it did. Although there were over 1,000 people on board, no one was killed or drowned, with the passengers and crew being taken on board the steamer ''Transport'', the first on the scene, with '' Inland Flyer'' and ''Norwood'' standing by.Faber, at 180-81 ''Yosemite'' had recently been sold to real estate promoter C. D. Hillman. He later was sent to prison, and this gave rise to talk and accusations that she had been wrecked recklessly or even deliberately for insurance. This doesn't seem to square with the facts, as it would have required the collusion not only of her master, but also the pilot and two quartermasters who struggled to hold the ship on course, and strong tidal currents had wrecked and continue to wreck vessels.


External links


Photograph of ''Yosemite'' in California service


Rawls, James J., ed. and Orsi, Richard J., ed., ''A Golden State: Mining and Economic Development in Gold Rush California (California History Sesquicentennial Series, 2)'', at 257, University of California Press 1999
(showing ''Yosemite'' departing San Francisco with another apparently similar sidewheeler still at the dock) (accessed 2/24/2008)


Historic images from on-line collection of the University of Washington


''Yosemite'' late in her career following 1907 reconstruction


Historic images from the British Columbia Provincial Archives

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Websites

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Notes

{{coord unknown, Washington Victorian-era merchant ships of Canada Merchant ships of the United States Paddle steamers of British Columbia Steamboats of Washington (state) Sidewheel steamboats of Washington (state) Steamboats of California Shipwrecks of the Washington coast Ships of CP Ships California Steam Navigation Company