Eureka (ferryboat)

Last updated

Eureka
Eureka-1.jpg
Eureka docked at Hyde Street Pier, 2012
History
US flag 48 stars.svgUnited States
Name
  • Ukiah (1890–1922)
  • Eureka (1922–present)
Builder San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad, Tiburon, California
In service1890–1958
Refit1920–22
Status Museum ship
General characteristics [1]
Type Steamboat
Tonnage2,420  GT
Length299 ft 6 in (91.29 m) LOA
Beam78 ft (24 m)
Draft6 ft 6 in (1.98 m)
Propulsion1 × 1,500 hp (1,119 kW) walking beam engine
Capacity
  • Original:
  • 500 passengers
  • 16 railroad cars
  • From 1922:
  • 2,300 passengers
  • 120 automobiles
Crew16
Eureka (double-ended ferry)
Eureka (steam ferryboat, San Francisco).JPG
View from port stern
Relief map of California.png
Red pog.svg
Location San Francisco, California
Coordinates 37°48′35″N122°25′18″W / 37.80972°N 122.42167°W / 37.80972; -122.42167
Built1890
NRHP reference No. 73000229 [2]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPApril 24, 1973
Designated NHLFebruary 4, 1985 [3]

Eureka is a side-wheel paddle steamboat, built in 1890, which is now preserved at the San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park in San Francisco, California. Originally named Ukiah to commemorate the railway's recent extension into the City of Ukiah, the boat was built by the San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad Company at their Tiburon yard. Eureka has been designated a National Historic Landmark and was listed in the National Register of Historic Places on April 24, 1973. [2]

Contents

She is the largest existing wooden ship in the world.

Construction and design

Ukiah, a wooden-hulled, double-ended ferryboat, was built in 1890 by the San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad Company at their Tiburon shipyard. She had a length at the waterline of 277 feet (84 m) (291 feet (89 m) overall), beam of 47 feet 7 inches (14.50 m)78 feet (24 m) over guardsand hold depth of 15 feet (4.6 m). [4] Her original gross tonnage was 2,564 and net tonnage, 2,018 tons. [4] The ship had a crew of sixteen, whose quarters were in the hold.

According to the National Register of Historic Places, Ukiah was originally built with a main deck for railroad cars and a second deck for passengers above. Numerous contemporaneous newspaper reports, however, state that both the passenger accommodations and railroad cars were located on the main deck. [5] A broad stairway led from this deck to the promenade deck above, where the fore and aft pilot houses, along with staterooms for the officers, were located. Rising from the promenade deck were also several smaller decks for sightseers, accessible only by ladder. [5]

Two standard-gauge railway tracks, on which the railroad cars were transported, were installed the length of the main deck through the center of the ship. Passenger accommodations were located on either side, fore and aft of the paddleboxes, with one side of the ship reserved for female passengers and the other for males. The female side included a moveable partition around the paddlebox that allowed passengers to move between cabins in privacy; this partition could be folded up to make room for railroad cars when required. The passenger decorations on each side differed, with the men's featuring grained panelling, and the women's, "parti colors, with gilt moldings and beadings". [5] Floors on the ladies' side featured velvet carpets, while oilcloths sufficed for the men. At each end of the passenger quarters were vestibules, fitted with doors to prevent drafts. Seats throughout were built of semi-circular strips of cedar and black walnut, separated by black walnut arms. The main deck also featured a bar located near the enginetoilets and a restaurant. Joinery work throughout the vessel was by Robert Bragg. [5]

Ukiah was powered by a single-cylinder 1,700 horsepower (1,300 kW) vertical beam steam engine with a bore of 65 inches (170 cm) and stroke of 12 feet (3.7 m), built by the Fulton Iron Works of San Francisco. The NRHP states that the ship was originally fitted with four direct flue return tube boilers; again, however, contemporaneous newspaper reports differ, stating that steam was originally supplied by two steel boilers; these had a length of 25 feet (7.6 m) and shell of 12 feet (3.7 m), and operated at a pressure of 60  psi (410  kPa ). Ukiah's paddlewheels were 27 feet (8.2 m) in diameter, and each fitted with 24 buckets having a width of 12 feet (3.7 m). [5] [6]

The ship was launched in San Francisco Bay on Saturday, May 17, 1890, at 10:40 pm, witnessed by a crowd of about 800 people, many of whom had arrived by a special train from San Rafael. [6]

Service history

Early service

The ship originally carried people between San Francisco and Tiburon during the day and hauled railroad freight cars at night. On April 16, 1907, she sank at the foot of East Street, San Francisco due to errors in handling the off loading of railroad cars. [7] She was later raised. In 1907, Ukiah was re-routed to the Sausalito San Francisco Ferry Building route by its new owners, Northwestern Pacific Railroad.

View of the seating area on Eureka's upper deck. The magazine shop is visible to the right behind the glass. The restaurant was on this level at the far end of the deck Eurekacabin.jpg
View of the seating area on Eureka's upper deck. The magazine shop is visible to the right behind the glass. The restaurant was on this level at the far end of the deck

As automobiles became more common, motorists wanted to "drive across the bay". Since there were no bridges on San Francisco Bay at the time, Ukiah was able to meet this demand via a refitted lower deck designed to handle vehicles. The deck above (also enclosed) was expanded for passengers.

World War I and subsequent rebuild

During World War I, Ukiah carried munition-filled rail cars for the war effort. Overloading of the ship caused hull strains so severe that the government paid for complete rebuilding of the ship. Shipwrights at the Southern Pacific yard labored for two years—eventually replacing all of its structure above the waterline. This kind of reconstruction was called "jacking up the whistle and sliding a new boat underneath."[ clarification needed ] The refurbished ferry was christened Eureka in honor of the Northern California city, which also happened to be the new northern termination of the Northwestern Pacific Railroad.

As a passenger ferry, she could carry 2,300 passengers and 120 automobiles. At that time, she was the biggest and the fastest double-ended passenger ferry boat in the world—299 feet 6 inches (91.29 m) long, with an extreme width of 78 feet (24 m) and gross tonnage of 2,420 tons.[ clarification needed ]

1920s through retirement

Between 1922 and 1941 Eureka was on the Sausalito commuter run. As the largest of the Northwestern boats, Eureka made the heaviest commuter trips - the 7:30 from Sausalito and the 5:15 from San Francisco. Each trip averaged 2,200 passengers. During this period the upper deck included seating areas, a magazine stand, and a restaurant that served full meals.

Eureka was primarily a passenger boat, carrying very few cars. After 1929, though, she sometimes made an extra run from the Hyde Street Pier in San Francisco, carrying autos on Sundays.

Completion of the Golden Gate Bridge between San Francisco and Marin in 1937 doomed ferry service. Northwestern Pacific first cut service, then abandoned ferries altogether in 1941.

During the war years, Eureka joined a number of bay ferries in the work of transporting troops from Camp Stoneman in Pittsburg, California, up the Sacramento River, to the port of embarkation piers in San Francisco.[ clarification needed ]

By the 1950s Eureka served by linking Southern Pacific's cross-country trains, which terminated at Oakland, with San Francisco until 1957, when she snapped an engine crank pin. That service was discontinued the following year. In 1958, Eureka joined the fleet of historic ships now at the National Historical Park.

In the late 1990s she was used as a main filming location for the TV-show Nash Bridges .

In October 1999, Eureka entered San Francisco Drydock for a $1 million restoration project focusing on the vessel's superstructure—the above-water portions of the vessel. A significant portion of that restoration was the replacement of the boat's "kingposts"—four large wooden structures that support the paddlewheels and upper decks.

Design

Although a number of large ferryboats survive in the US, Eureka is the only one with a wooden hull. She is one of the most impressive remaining examples of traditional American wooden shipbuilding.

In drydock, ca. 1998 Eureka (1890 ferryboat) in drydock, ca. 1998.jpg
In drydock, ca. 1998

Beneath her upperworks, the round-bottomed hull is 42 feet (13 m) wide and 277 feet (84 m) long. The house rests on a platform extending 18 feet (5.5 m) from the hull on either side.

Her walking beam engine was originally powered by coal-fired boilers that were converted to oil in 1905. The engine was built in 1890 by the Fulton Iron Works in San Francisco. Eureka is one of only two surviving vessels equipped with a walking beam engine, alongside the Ticonderoga, and the only one still afloat.

With the increased length of 5 feet (1.5 m),[ clarification needed ]Eureka became the largest wooden passenger ferry ever built. She was certified to carry 3,500 people.

See also

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References

Notes
  1. "Eureka". San Francisco Maritime National Historical Park . National Park Service . Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  2. 1 2 "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places . National Park Service. March 15, 2006.
  3. "Eureka (ferryboat)". National Historic Landmarks Program. National Park Service. Retrieved June 17, 2008.
  4. 1 2 Merchant Vessels of the United States. Washington: Bureau of Navigation. 1893. p.  358.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Trial Trip of the Ukiah". The Morning Call. San Francisco, CA. December 28, 1890. p. 7 via Newspaperarchive.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  6. 1 2 "The Ukiah". The Morning Call. San Francisco, CA. May 19, 1890. p. 5 via Newspapers.com. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  7. "American Marine Engineer May, 1907". Unknown/Googlebooks. 1906. Retrieved July 2, 2024.
Bibliography