Locale | Coos County, Oregon |
---|---|
Waterway | Coquille River |
Transit type | Steamboat |
The Coquille River starts in the Siskiyou National Forest and flows through the Coquille Valley on its way to the Pacific Ocean. Bandon, Oregon, sits at the mouth of the Coquille River on the Pacific Ocean. Before the era of railroads and later, automobiles, the steamboats on the Coquille River were the major mode of transportation from Bandon to Coquille and Myrtle Point in southern Coos County, Oregon, United States.
Jetty construction at the two jetties at the Coquille River entrance allowed ocean-going ships to enter the mouth of the river and dock at Bandon. Economic activity boomed in Bandon in the early 20th century. A steamship line connected Bandon with Portland and San Francisco. From 1905 to 1910, the population tripled to 1800. Bandon had five sawmills and two shipyards. [1]
As the river ran inland, it became so narrow that it was said that passengers could amuse themselves by leaning out the windows and picking flowers. William Russell Panter, a descendant of one of the first pioneer families in the area, was apparently one of the first to enter the inland steamboat business. Wm. R. Panter bought a small steamer, Maria, and put her in service above Coquille, towing a boat hauling milk from farms to the first creamery on the Coquille River, which was about two miles (3 km) up the river from Coquille. Panter later organized a run to the Timmons cannery in Bandon, towing a scow loaded with salmon caught by fishermen. [2]
By 1899, a boatyard owned by Arthur Ellingson at Prosper, Oregon, began producing steamboats, starting with the small (26 tons) propeller steamer Reta, which operated on the Coquille and later on Coos Bay. In 1901, the Ellingson yard at Coquille built the sternwheeler Echo (76 tons), she ran for ten years under Captain J.W. McCloskey. Other boats in the early years of the century on the Coquille River included Liberty, which also served in Coos Bay, and Dispatch. [3]
In 1900, S.H. McAdams, who owned a boatyard in Coquille, built the small (30 tons) sternwheeler Welcome. Also that year, Ellingson turned out the propeller steamer Favorite and the gasoline propeller Pastime. In 1901, Ellingson launched Echo and J. Warren, a 10-ton propeller steamer, both for service on the Coquille. Also in 1901, C.H. James launched the 15-ton propeller steamer Venus at Coquille. In 1903, the gasoline-powered Nellie & Cressy (12 tons) was built at Bandon. In 1903, Charles Trigg built Dispatch at Parkersburg, Oregon, for service on the Coquille River. After 1920, Dispatch was operated out of Marshfield as the John Widdi by the Coquille River Transportation Company.
In 1914, Carl Herman, who owned a boatyard at Prosper, Oregon, built the Telegraph for the Myrtle Point Transportation Company, which competed with the gasoline-powered propeller Charm on the Coquille River. [4] [3] Telegraph was (by one source) the last steamboat on the Coquille River. Her owners were able to secure a mail contract for her, but eventually the contract was re-awarded to truck route. [2]
Various small boats were built on the Coquille River over the years, at Prosper, Parkersburg, Coquille, Randolph, and at the Hermann's ranch. These included Myrtle W. (12 tons), built in 1912 at Randolph, and Antelope, Fawn, Venus, and Maple. Carl Herman built many boats of various sizes at his yard at Prosper, including in 1909 the Sunset, (12 tons) and in 1909 the Star (12 tons), built for passenger and towing services on the Coquille River.
Very large numbers of people were sometimes transported on the small riverboats. For one baseball game at Bandon, Dispatch came down from Coquille with about 400 people aboard, and Telegraph arrived with 150. At one point, Telegraph ran eight different Saturdays along the river to carry people to dances, sometimes at Prosper, sometimes at Parkersburg, Lampa and Riverton.
Coal mines in the area, served by the riverine craft, were at Lampa Creek, Panter's Ranch, Riverton, and Coquille. Coal was loaded onto ships bound for San Francisco. Early schools in the area were located at Bandon, Prosper, Randolph, Parkersburg, Lampa Creek, Riverton, Coquille, Arago, Myrtle Point, and Beaver Slough. The Pearcy Hanly ranch, across from Lampa Creek, shipped milk to Bandon on the river steamers for many years. There were a number of sawmills, salmon canneries, and other concerns along the river, including a woolen mill and a match factory at Bandon, all of which seem to have been served by the river boats. [2]
In 1914, Telegraph (96 tons), the largest sternwheeler ever to serve on the Coquille, was built for the Myrtle Point Transportation Co., and launched at Prosper. She was 103' long, 16.2' on the beam, and with 3.2' depth of hold. Her engines had 9" cylinders with 42" stroke, developing 250 horsepower (190 kW). She was built to outcompete the gasoline-powered Charm, which in turn had been placed on the river to beat the old Myrtle, a considerably less powerful boat than Telegraph. Competition was keen on the Coquille, as a few months after entering service, Telegraph somehow managed to run Charm up on the beach near a narrow spot in the river above Bandon.
The Ellingson yard built Relief in 1916, a 44-ton passenger and freight boat, which turned out to be the last new sternwheeler built on the Coquille River. [4]
In 1924, the gasoline launch Charm was taken off the Coquille River route, and sold to Shaver Transportation Company, who re-equipped her with a 90 horsepower (67 kW) diesel engine and put her in service as a log boom boat. [4]
The Myrtle Point Transportation Company owned the last riverboats on the Coquille. Stockholders of the company were Russell Panter, Walter Panter, William A. Panter, Paris Ward, and the Huffard brothers. Paris Ward owned a ranch near Bandon, and as the demand for riverine transport ended, the Panter family's boats were abandoned at the shore of his ranch, where by 1971 what remained of their hulls had filled up with sand. [2]
Links to photos of the steamboat graveyard at the Ward ranch, all taken on June 26, 1941, showing Myrtle, Telegraph, and Dora beached along the Coquille River near Bandon. Note that while the Salem Public Library Images do not identify these steamers, Marshall does in his book and provides a photograph of the same place, at a slightly different time: [5] Myrtle was apparently abandoned further inshore than Telegraph. This may explain why it appears that only two boats are abandoned on shore in photos taken from the water. Panter also identifies the three abandoned sternwheelers by name. [2]
Vessel type codes are: Prop = propeller-driven; stern = sternwheel-driven; side = side-wheel driven; pddl = paddle-driven, sternwheel or sidewheel.
Disposition codes used in this list are:
Vessels should not be assumed to have served continuously in the service area shown during the periods shown on this chart; transfer between service areas was common.
Name | Registry # | Type | Year Built | Where Built | Builders | Owners | Gross Tons | Length | End year | Disposition | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ft | m | ||||||||||
Antelope [2] | 106440 | prop | 1886 | Marshfield | Reed, O. | 33 | 64 | 19.5 | |||
Ceres | 125617 | prop | 1877 | Coquille River | Reed, Edward | 20 | 51 | 15.5 | 1887 | O | |
Charm [4] [7] [V 1] | 211489 | prop | 1913 | Prosper | Herman Bros. | 42 | 75 | 22.9 | 1928 | T-Col | |
Coos | 125397 | side | 1874 | Empire City | 58 | 58 | 17.7 | ||||
Coquille [2] [4] [V 2] | 205472 | prop | 1908 | Coquille | Lowe, Frank | 63 | 77 | 23.5 | T-Col | ||
Dispatch (1890) [V 3] | 157278 | stern | 1890 | Bandon | 158 | 91 | 27.7 | 1904 | A | ||
Dispatch (1903) [7] [V 4] | 200081 | stern | 1903 | Parkersburg | Trigg, Charles | 250 | 111 | 33.8 | 1922 | R | |
Dora' [V 5] | 208076 | stern | 1910 | Randolph | Herman Bros. | Panter, W.R. | 47 | 64 | 19.5 | 1927 | A |
Echo | 136887 | stern | 1901 | Coquille | Ellingson | 76 | 66 | 20.1 | 1911 | A | |
Elareto [2] | |||||||||||
Favorite [7] [V 6] | 121136 | prop | 1900 | Coquille | Ellingson, A. | 63 | 72 | 21.9 | 1917 | ||
Fawn | 1909 | O | |||||||||
J. Warren [V 7] | 77511 | prop | 1901 | Coquille | 10 | 35 | 10.7 | ||||
John Wildi [V 8] | 20081 | stern | 1922 | Parkersburg | 173 | 112 | 34.1 | 1927 | A | ||
Klihyam [2] [V 9] | 205787 | prop | 1908 | Bandon | 125 | 89 | 27.1 | ||||
Liberty [7] | stern | 1903 | Bandon | Herman Bros. | 174 | 91 | 27.7 | 1918 | |||
Limit [8] | prop | 1909 | O | ||||||||
Little Annie [V 10] | 40202 | stern | 1877 | Coquille | Rackliff, Wm. E. | 86 | 70 | 21.3 | 1890 | W | |
Maple [2] [8] | 209300 | prop | 1911 | Randolph | 33 | 62 | 18.9 | ||||
May [2] | 1910 | ||||||||||
Mary [V 11] | 90469 | prop | 1874 | Coquille River | 25 | ||||||
Mud Hen | stern | 1878 | Coquille River | 32 | 9.8 | 1892 | |||||
Myrtle (1908) | 205908 | prop | 1908 | Prosper | 78 | 73 | 22.3 | ||||
Myrtle (1909) [4] [V 12] | 206743 | stern | 1909 | Myrtle Point | Nelson, Nels | Myrtle Point Trans. Co. | 36 | 57 | 17.4 | 1922 | R |
Myrtle (1922) [V 13] | 222091 | stern | 1922 | Prosper | 36 | 60 | 18.3 | 1940 | A | ||
Myrtle W. (1909) | 206743 | stern | 1909 | Myrtle Point | Nelson, Nels | Myrtle Point Trans. Co. | 36 | 57 | 17.4 | ||
Nellie and Cressy [8] [V 14] | prop | 1903 | Bandon | 12 | 33 | 10.1 | |||||
Norma [2] | 1911 | ||||||||||
Pastime [8] | stern | 1900 | Coquille | 11 | 45 | 13.7 | 1901 | ||||
Port of Bandon [2] | 1938 | ||||||||||
Randolph [2] [8] | 208074 | prop | 1910 | Randolph | 42 | 60 | 18.3 | ||||
Rainbow | 209654 | stern | 1912 | Marshfield | Lowe, Frank | Coos River Trans. Co. | 75 | 64 | 19.5 | 1923 | A |
Relief (1916) | 214253 | stern | 1916 | Coquille | Ellingson | 44 | 64 | 19.5 | 1927 | ||
Reta | 111226 | prop | 1899 | Prosper | Ellingson | 26 | 53 | 16.2 | |||
Star | 206127 | prop | 1909 | Prosper | Herman, Carl | 12 | 40 | 12.2 | |||
Sunset | 206414 | prop | 1909 | Prosper | Herman, Carl | Fredrick Elmore Drane Line | 12 | 40 | 12.2 | 1929 | A |
Telegraph [V 15] | 212094 | stern | 1914 | Prosper | Herman, Carl | Myrtle Point Trans. Co. | 96 | 103 | 31.4 | 1940 | A |
Venus | 161884 | prop | 1901 | Coquille | 15 | 39 | 11.9 | ||||
Welcome | 81707 | stern | 1900 | Coquille | Adams, S.H. | 30 | 56 | 17.1 | 1907 | W | |
Wilhelmina [8] | 205444 | prop | 1908 | North Bend | 95 | 80 | 24.4 | ||||
Wolverine [9] | prop | 1908 | O.R Willard, E.D Stuller | 1909 | O |
The Coquille River is a stream, about 36 miles (58 km) long, in southwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a mountainous area of 1,059 square miles (2,740 km2) of the Southern Oregon Coast Range into the Pacific Ocean. Its watershed is between that of the Coos River to the north and the Rogue River to the south.
The Shaver Transportation Company is an inland water freight transportation company based in Portland, Oregon, United States. The company was founded in 1880 and played a major role in the development of freight transport in the Portland area and along the Columbia.
The history of steamboats on the Oregon Coast begins in the late 19th century. Before the development of modern road and rail networks, transportation on the coast of Oregon was largely water-borne. This article focuses on inland steamboats and similar craft operating in, from south to north on the coast: Rogue River, Coquille River, Coos Bay, Umpqua River, Siuslaw Bay, Yaquina Bay, Siletz River, and Tillamook Bay. The boats were all very small, nothing like the big sternwheelers and propeller boats that ran on the Columbia River or Puget Sound. There were many of them, however, and they came to be known as the "mosquito fleet."
The Coos Bay Mosquito Fleet comprised numerous small steamboats and motor vessels which operated in the late 19th and early 20th centuries on Coos Bay, a large and mostly shallow harbor on the southwest coast of the U.S. state of Oregon, to the north of the Coquille River valley. Coos Bay is the major harbor on the west coast of the United States between San Francisco and the mouth of the Columbia River.
The river sternwheeler Ramona operated from 1892 to 1908 on the Willamette River in Oregon, on the Stikine River running from Wrangell, Alaska into British Columbia, and the Fraser River, in British Columbia. This vessel should not be confused with the coastal steamship Ramona which also ran in Alaskan waters.
Washington was an early steamboat operated in the states of California and Oregon. Washington was built in California and was initially operated on the Sacramento River. In 1851, the steamer was purchased and brought on a ship to the Oregon Territory, where it was operated on the Willamette River until the summer of 1853. Washington was sold again, and then transferred to the Oregon coast, where it operated on the Umpqua River, on the Coquille River and on Coos Bay. Washington was able to operate for shorter distances over the open ocean along the Oregon coast. The steamer was wrecked by a boiler explosion in December 1857, near Scottsburg, O.T., on the Umpqua river.
Welcome was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the south Oregon coast from 1900 to 1907.
Dora was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the southern coast of Oregon from 1912 to 1923. This vessel should not be confused with a number of other craft of the same name operating at the same time in other parts of North America.
Myrtle was a steamboat built in 1909 for service on the Coquille River and its tributaries, in Oregon. The ability of this small vessel to reach remote locations on the river system was cited many years later as evidence in support of the important legal concept of navigability.
Coquille was a steamboat built in 1908 for service on the Coquille River and its tributaries. Coquille served as a passenger vessel from 1908 to 1916, when the boat was transferred to the lower Columbia River. Coquille was reconstructed into a log boom towing boat, and served in this capacity from 1916 to 1935 or later.
Echo was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the Southern Oregon Coast from 1901 to 1910.
Liberty was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River and then on Coos Bay from 1903 to 1918. Liberty was notable for having its ownership entangled in various legal claims in the early 1910s, including some involving a colorful North Bend, Oregon business promoter Lorenzo Dow "Major" Kinney (1855-1920).
Antelope was a steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River and on Coos Bay on the southern Oregon coast from 1886 to about 1908. Antelope was a versatile boat, which served in various roles, including passenger transport, barge towing, and as a fisheries tender.
Dispatch was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the southern Oregon coast from 1903 to 1920. The name of this vessel is sometimes seen spelled Despatch. This sternwheeler should not be confused with an earlier and somewhat smaller sternwheeler, also named Dispatch, that was built at Bandon, Oregon, in 1890, for which the 1903 Dispatch was a replacement.
Telegraph was a sternwheel steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River on the southern Oregon coast from 1914 to 1927. Telegraph is perhaps best known for having been in involved in collisions with rival steamboats, apparently as a result of fierce competition for business on the Coquille River.
Favorite was a small steamboat that was operated on the Coquille River, Coos Bay and on the Siuslaw River, in the southern Oregon coast region from 1900 to 1918.
Wolverine was a launch powered by a gasoline engine that operated on the Coquille River on the southern coast of Oregon, United States, from 1908 to the 1920s. Later the boat operated on Coos Bay, and, in the mid-1930s, was transferred to Eureka, California. Wolverine is principally known for its early service as a high-speed passenger vessel.
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.
Little Annie was a sternwheel-driven steamboat that operated on the Coquille River on the Southern Oregon Coast from 1876 to 1890. This steamer should not be confused with a number of other vessels with the same name operating at about the same time in various parts of the United States.
The Callendar Navigation Company, sometimes seen as the Callendar Transportation Company, started in business in the early 1900s. Callendar was formed in the early 1900s, and was based in Astoria, Oregon. Callender was to become one of six large towing companies of the Columbia and Willamette rivers in the early decades of the 1900s, the others being Shaver Transportation, Smith Transportation, Hosford, Knappton Towing Co., and Willamette and Columbia River Towing Co. In 1922, Callendar Navigation merged with Knappton Towboat Co., which existed, with a name change in 1990, and which became part of Foss Marine in 1993.