Advertisement for steamer N.S. Bentley, and others, on Yaquina Route, May 3, 1889 | |
History | |
---|---|
Owner | Oregon Pacific Railroad |
Operator | Open River Navigation Co.; Harkins Transportation Co. |
Port of registry | Portland, Oregon |
Route | Willamette, Columbia, and Cowlitz rivers |
Launched | December 13, 1886 |
Identification | U.S. 130364 |
Fate | Rebuilt in 1896 and renamed Albany. |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | riverine all-purpose |
Tonnage | 432 GT; 401 NT |
Length | Over hull (exclusive of fantail): 150.7 ft (45.9 m) |
Beam | Over hull (exclusive of guards): 32 ft (9.8 m) |
Draft | 34 in (0.86 m) |
Depth | 6 ft 6 in (1.98 m) |
Installed power | twin steam engines, horizontally mounted, each with bore of 16 in (40.6 cm) and stroke of 60 in (1.52 m) |
Propulsion | stern-wheel |
N.S. Bentley, commonly referred to as simply Bentley, was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette rivers. Launched in East Portland in December 1886, Bentley ran until 1896, when it was rebuilt and renamed Albany. Bentley was owned by the Oregon Pacific Railway, and was used as part of a rail and marine link from Portland to San Francisco, running down the Willamette, then to Yaquina Bay, and then by ocean steamer south to California. In 1896, Bentley was rebuilt and renamed Albany.
N.S. Bentley was named for Norman Seymour Bentley, third vice president, treasurer, company secretary (in New York) of the Oregon Pacific Railroad. [1]
In January 1889, the Oregon Pacific Railroad advertised travel from Portland, Oregon to San Francisco, claiming its route to be 20 hours faster and 225 miles shorter than any other. [2] Passengers and freight would travel by the railroad's river division on the Willamette River to either Albany or Corvallis, Oregon. [2] The route shifted over to a railroad to Yaquina Bay, where it met an ocean-going steamer bound for San Francisco, the Willamette Valley. [2] Coming north from San Francisco the reverse order would be followed. [2]
With no rail connection in the Willamette Valley between Portland and Albany and Corvallis, the Oregon Pacific Railroad’s River Division was a critical link in the route, providing three round trips a week. [2] In January 1889 the river division consisted of three vessels, Wm. M. Hoag, under Capt. George Raabe, N.S. Bentley, under Capt. John P. Coulter, and Three Sisters, under Capt. William Penn Short. [2] All three vessels were advertised as being “elegantly equipped.” [2]
South bound from Portland, one of the three river division boats would depart every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 6:00 a.m., arriving in Salem the same day at 7:15 p.m. [2] The steamer would then leave Salem on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays at 6:00 a.m., arriving in Corvallis the same day at 3:30 p.m. [2] Northbound traffic ran on a similar schedule, only in reverse, returning to Portland on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays at 3:30 p.m. [2]
In May 1889, the Oregon Pacific Railroad, advertising the “Yaquina Route”, announced that its steamers on the Willamette River, Hoag and Bentley, would be departing southbound for Corallthree times a week from the Hulman & Co. wharf in Portland, at numbers 200 and 202 Front Street. [3]
The Oregon Pacific Railroad built two stern-wheel driven steamboats in 1886 to run on the Willamette River. The first was Three Sisters. The second was Bentley, which made its trial trip on December 13, 1886. [4] Bentley was built in East Portland. [5]
Bentley was 150.7 ft (45.9 m) long measured over the hull, exclusive of the extension of the main deck over the stern, called the fantail, on which the stern-wheel was mounted. [4] [5] Bentley had a beam of 32 ft (9.8 m) measured over the hull, and exclusive of the large protective timbers, called guards running outside of the top of the sides of the hull. [4] [5] Bentley’s depth of hold was 4.5 ft (1.4 m). [4] [5]
The overall size of Bentley was 432 gross tons, and 401 net tons, with tons in this instance being a unit of volume and not weight. [5] Bentley’s merchant vessel registry number was 130364. [5]
Bentley was driven by a stern-wheel which was turned by two twin single cylinder horizontally mounted steam engines, which had cylinder bore of 16 in (40.6 cm) and stroke of 60 in (1.52 m). [4] The boiler appears to have been wood-fired.
Bentley had a succession of well-known captains, James Leonard “Big Jim” Smith, followed by Civil War veteran John Pascal “J.P.” Coulter, and after Coulter, Sherman V. Short. [4] [6] [7]
Bentley was intended primarily for service on the Willamette River. It made its trial trip on December 13, 1886 under Capt. J.L. Smith. [4]
Two weeks after its launch, Bentley sank at Salem, Oregon with 3,800 bushels of wheat on board. [4] According to another report the sinking occurred at the Albany bridge. [8] Bentley was raised, and on January 14, 1887, in bad condition, it steamed into the Steffen shipyard at Portland for repairs. [8] Bentley was raised and returned to service with the Oregon Pacific Railroad. [4]
Bentley sank in January 1887, at the Albany bridge. [9] The boat brought down, in poor condition, to the Steffen yard in Portland for repair. [9] On January 28, a newspaper reported that Bentley would be ready for active service again on February 1. [9] A newspaper reported Bentley was to come back into active service on February 1, 1887. [10]
In March 1888 Bentley hit a snag on the Willamette River near Salem and sank in four feet of water. [11] The steamer was reported to be likely a total loss as a result. [11] The monetary loss was estimated to be $10,000. [12]
The firm of Pacquet & Smith was engaged to raise Bentley, which had sunk down river from Lincoln. [13] In early May 1888, Pacquet & Smith brought upriver two large scows and one small one, together with a crew of men, to raise Bentley, effect temporary repairs, and take the boat downriver to Oregon City, where permanent repairs were to be effected in the dry dock. [13]
Bentley was back in operation on the Willamette as of June 30, 1888, running under Captain Sherman V. Short, who had previously been mate on the boat. [14] On December 10, 1889, Bentley made the run from Albany to Corvallis in one hour and forty minutes. [15] As of March, 1892, Bentley was running on two trips weekly between Albany and Portland, with J.P. Coulter as captain of Bentley, and Lee Beach as purser. [16]
Bentley was rebuilt in 1896 for the Oregon, California and Eastern Railway and renamed Albany. [17] [18] In mid-February 1896 Albany made its first trip on the river. [18]
Yaquina Bay, like Coos Bay, is a shallow coastal bay on the Oregon Coast in the Pacific Northwest of North America. The principal town on Yaquina Bay is Newport, Oregon. The Yaquina River flows into the bay. Until modern roads reached Newport in the late 1920s, the principal transportation method to and from Newport was by ship or boat.
Gazelle was an early sidewheeler on the Willamette River in what is now the U.S. state of Oregon. She did not operate long, suffering a catastrophic boiler explosion on April 8, 1854, less than a month after her trial voyage. This was the worst such explosion ever to occur in the Pacific Northwest states. The wrecked Gazelle was rebuilt and operated for a few years, first briefly as the unpowered barge Sarah Hoyt and then, with boilers installed, as the steamer Señorita. A victim of the explosion was D.P. Fuller, age 28, who is buried in Lone Fir Cemetery in Portland, Oregon.
T.M. Richardson was a steamboat built in 1888 at Oneatta, Oregon, which served on Yaquina Bay and on the Yaquina River from 1888 to 1908. This vessel was commonly known as the Richardson or the T.M.
Montesano was a steamboat that was operated from 1882 to about 1903 in the coastal regions of Oregon and southwest Washington, including Astoria, Willapa Bay, Grays Harbor, the Chehalis River, Yaquina Bay and Coos Bay. The Montesano of 1882, built in Astoria, should not be confused with another, larger sternwheeler, also named Montesano, built-in Cosmopolis, Washington, in 1889.
Three Sisters was a sternwheel-driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette River from 1886 to 1896. The steamer was built as an extreme shallow-draft vessel, to permit it to reach points on the upper Willamette river such as Corvallis, Harrisburg and Eugene, Oregon during summer months when water levels in the river were generally low. The vessel was also known for having been washed up on a county road in Oregon during a flood in 1890.
Unio was a small sternwheel-driven steamboat which operated on the Willamette and Yamhill rivers from 1861 to 1869. This vessel is primarily remembered for its having been named Unio when built in 1861, in the first year of the American Civil War, and then having the name completed, to Union, by a new, staunchly pro-Union owner, James D. Miller. Union appears to have sunk in 1869, been salvaged, and then dismantled, with the machinery going to a new steamer then being built for service on the Umpqua River.
The People's Transportation Company operated steamboats on the Willamette River and its tributaries, the Yamhill and Tualatin rivers, in the State of Oregon from 1862 to 1871. For a brief time this company operated steamers on the Columbia River, and for about two months in 1864, the company operated a small steamer on the Clackamas River.
Shoo Fly was a sternwheel-driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the 1870s. Originally built as primarily as a freight boat, the vessel was used in other roles, including towing and clearing of snags. Shoo Fly inspired the name of another sternwheeler on the Willamette River, Don't Bother Me.
Enterprise was a sternwheel steamboat that operated on the Willamette River from 1863 to 1875. This vessel should not be confused with several other steamers named Enterprise which operated in the Pacific Northwest at about the some time.
Alert was a sternwheeler steamboat which operated on the Willamette River, in Oregon, United States, from 1865 to 1875. Originally built for and owned by the Willamette Steam Navigation Co., it was soon acquired by the People's Transportation Company, a steamboat line which held a near-monopoly on Willamette River transportation. This vessel was rebuilt in 1871, and ran until 1875, when it was dismantled.
Alice was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the 1870s and 1880s. Alice was the largest vessel built above Willamette Falls and was considered in its day to be the "Queen of the River". This steamer was rebuilt after near-destruction in a fire at Oregon City, Oregon in May 1873. In 1876, it was withdrawn from the upper Willamette River and transferred to the Columbia River, where it was worked as a towboat moving ocean-going ships to and from Portland and Astoria, Oregon, near the mouth of the Columbia River.
Wenat was a stern-wheel steamboat that, under the name Swan, was built and operated, briefly, on the Tualatin River, in the state of Oregon. In 1858, Swan was sold, moved to the lower Willamette River, renamed Cowlitz, and placed on a route between Portland, Oregon the Cowlitz River.
Dayton was a steamboat which operated on the Willamette and Columbia rivers from 1868 to 1881. Dayton operated on the Willamette from 1868 to 1876, mostly upriver from Willamette Falls, including a route on the Yamhill River to Dayton, Oregon, after which the steamer was named. From 1876 to 1881, Dayton was employed on a run from Portland to Monticello, W.T., which was located on the site of what is now Longview, Washington.
Senator was a stern-wheel-driven steamboat which operated on the Willamette River in the state of Oregon from 1863 to 1875. Senator is chiefly remembered for its having been destroyed in a fatal boiler explosion in 1875 while making a landing at the Portland, Oregon waterfront in 1875.
Albany was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette River from 1868 to 1875. This vessel should not be confused with the later sternwheeler Albany, which ran, also on the Willamette River, from 1896 to 1906, when it was rebuilt and renamed Georgie Burton.
Occident was a steamer that operated on the Willamette River and occasionally its tributary, the Santiam River from 1875 to about 1890. Occident was designed primarily for freight work, and did not have passenger accommodations. This Occident should not be confused with the smaller steam launch Occident, apparently propeller-driven, which operated out of Astoria, Oregon in the 1890s.
Active was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the upper Willamette River from 1865 to 1872. During its short operational life, Active was owned by several different steamboat companies. It was dismantled in 1872 at Canemah, Oregon.
George Anson Pease (1830-1919) was a well-known steamboat captain in the Pacific Northwest region on the United States, who was active from the earliest days of steamboat navigation on the Willamette River in the 1850s. He worked in various roles until the early 1900s, commanding numerous vessels during that time. During a flood in 1861, while in command of the sternwheeler Onward, Pease rescued 40 people from a flood in the area of Salem, Oregon.
Fanny Patton was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette River, in Oregon, starting in August 1865. This steamer operated from 1865 to 1880 for various owners, and was a considered a profitable vessel. The steamer was named for the daughter of businessman Edwin N Cook, Frances Mary "Fannie" Cooke (1837–1886). Edwin N. Cook was one of the principals of the People's Transportation Company.
Orient was a light-draft sternwheel-driven steamboat built in 1875 for the Willamette River Transportation Company, a concern owned by pioneer businessman Ben Holladay. Shortly after its completion, it was acquired by the Oregon Steam Navigation Company. Orient was a near-twin vessel of a steamer built at the same time, the Occident.