Klickitat approaching Port Townsend dock in 2004. | |
History | |
---|---|
Name |
|
Owner |
|
Operator |
|
Port of registry | Seattle, USA |
Builder | Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corporation, San Francisco, California |
Completed |
|
In service | 1927 |
Out of service | November 20, 2007 |
Identification |
|
Fate | Scrapped in 2009, Ensenada, Mexico |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | Steel Electric-class auto/passenger ferry |
Length | 256 ft (78 m) |
Beam | 73 ft 10 in (22.5 m) |
Draft | 12 ft 9 in (3.9 m) |
Deck clearance | 13 ft 4 in (4.1 m) |
Installed power | Total 2,400 hp (1,800 kW) from 2 x diesel-electric engines |
Speed | 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
Capacity |
|
The MV Klickitat was a Steel Electric-class ferry operated by Washington State Ferries.
Originally built as the MV Stockton in San Francisco for Southern Pacific Railroad, she started out serving Southern Pacific Railways on their Golden Gate Ferries line on San Francisco Bay. She was purchased by the Puget Sound Navigation Company in 1940, moved to Puget Sound, and renamed the MV Klickitat. PSN operated her until Washington State Ferries acquired and took over operations in 1951. [2]
In 1978 Klickitat was used for exterior shots in the Emergency! TV movie "Most Deadly Passage", a story about this ferry catching fire while at sea due to gasoline, instead of diesel, being put into one of the ship's fuel tanks. It was being used on the Seattle-Bremerton route in the episode.
She was serving on the Keystone-Port Townsend crossing in November 2007 when the entire Steel Electric class was withdrawn from service due to hull corrosion issues.
In August 2009 the Klickitat and the other three Steel Electric ferries were sold to Eco Planet Recycling, Inc. of Chula Vista, California. All four ferries were scrapped in Ensenada, Mexico in the fall of 2009. [2] One of the original 1927 wheelhouses (removed in the 1981 rebuild) of the Klickitat was salvaged and converted into a small house currently located just outside Arlington, Washington.
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SS San Mateo was a steamship ferry operating on the west coast of the United States. Launched in 1922, she served until 1940 in San Francisco Bay, operated by the Southern Pacific Golden Gate Ferries. In 1941 she was acquired by the Puget Sound Navigation Company, and then operated on Puget Sound until its retirement in 1969. At the time of her retirement she was the last operating vehicular steam ferry in the United States. After attempts to restore her for display in a Seattle waterfront park, she was acquired by a Canadian businessman and towed in 1992 to the Fraser River in British Columbia. The vessel became part of a small collection of derelict ferries. There she was partially scrapped; portions of her hulk are still visible in the river, and readily apparent on satellite photos, as of 2021. A photo at the dock in July 2021 shows her hulk partially or fully aground, and leaning toward the former BC Ferries Sidney-class ferry MV Queen of Sidney.