The only known photograph of Active | |
History | |
---|---|
United States | |
Name | Active |
Builder | J. A. Westervelt (New York, NY) |
Launched | 5 September 1849 |
Christened | Gold Hunter |
Completed | November 1849 |
Acquired | (by U.S. Coast Survey): 1852 |
Commissioned | 1852 |
Decommissioned | 1861 |
Fate | Wrecked south of Cape Mendocino June 5, 1870 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Survey ship |
Tons burthen | 600 |
Length | 172 ft 5 in (52.55 m) |
Beam | 24 ft 5 in (7.44 m) |
Draft | 10 ft 3 in (3.12 m) |
Propulsion | 2 × side-lever engines; sidewheels |
Speed | 12 knots |
Crew | 68 (in 1860) |
Active was a survey ship that served in the United States Coast Survey, a predecessor of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, from 1852 to 1861. Active served on the U.S. West Coast. She conducted the Coast Survey's first reconnaissance from San Francisco, California, to San Diego, California, in 1852. Active sometimes stepped outside her normal Coast Survey duties to support U.S. military operations, serving as a troop transport and dispatch boat during various wars with Native Americans and during the San Juan Islands "Pig War" with the United Kingdom in 1859. She also rushed Union troops to Los Angeles, California, in 1861 during the early stages of the American Civil War.
She was sold by the government in 1862 and sailed along the West Coast for a number of private companies until June 5, 1870. In a dense fog she hit a rock near the shore in Humboldt County, California and had to beach to prevent sinking in deep water. Her passengers and crew were saved, but the ship was lost.
The ship was built at the Westervelt & MacKay shipyard in New York and launched in September 1849. [1] She was a coal-fired sidewheel steamer, but also rigged as a two-masted sailing ship to take advantage of favorable winds. Like several other shipping entrepreneurs, Westervelt & MacKay sought to take advantage of the commercial opportunities afforded by the California gold rush by building a ship for service in the Bay Area. [2] She was christened Gold Hunter. The ship sailed for San Francisco via Cape Horn in December 1849. [3] After multiple stops, she arrived in San Francisco on April 29, 1850 with 150 passengers aboard. [4] She immediately began freight and passenger service between San Francisco and Sacramento for the firm of Simmons, Hutchinson & Co. [5]
Evidently, her owners were not satisfied with running Gold Hunter on the Sacramento River. On May 22, 1850, the company announced it would shift the ship to the San Francisco - Portland route at the end of the month. [6] The next day, it announced that the ship would instead run from San Francisco to Mazatlan, Mexico beginning June 10, 1850. [7] Neither plan happened.
Gold Hunter was headed down the Sacramento River at about 9 P.M. on June 11, 1850 when her pilot saw a light ahead. He thought the light was on an anchored ship, but in fact it was the steamer McKim headed up the river for Sacramento. McKim turned to starboard to avoid a collision, crossing Gold Hunter's bow. Gold Hunter hit her amidships, holing McKim below her waterline. Flooding was immediate and McKim's captain headed for shore to beach the ship. Rising waters extinguished the boiler fires before she reached the shore and McKim settled to the bottom in about twelve feet of water. There were no injuries. Gold Hunter was not seriously damaged in the collision. She took McKim's 75 passengers and their baggage to San Francisco and then back to Sacramento. [8] Since McKim was also operated by Simmons, Hutchinson & Co., Gold Hunter took her place in the company's schedule and remained on the Sacramento River.
McKim was refloated, and Gold Hunter began running between San Francisco and Acapulco in September, 1850. [9] She made one round-trip per month stopping in Monterey, Santa Barbara, San Pedro, San Diego, San Blas, Mazatlan, and Acapulco. [10] This venture does not appear to have been successful, as Simmons, Hutchinson & Co. sold the ship to Portland interests in January 1851. [11] She ran between San Francisco and Portland completing two round-trips per month. [12] This new routing was also short-lived. In March 1851, the ship changed hands again to run between San Francisco and Tehuantepec, Mexico. [13] She sailed for the Tehuantepec Railroad Company which sought to establish a transcontinental link via steamers in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans connected by a railroad across the isthmus of Tehuantepec. This American business was controversial in Mexico in the wake of the Mexican-American War. Gold Hunter sailed from San Francisco on March 22, 1851 and arrived at Ventosa Bay on April 6, 1851. She landed her 65 passengers and they began their overland travel to the Atlantic coast by mule. They were ordered back to Ventosa Bay by Mexican authorities and Gold Hunter was not allowed to land cargo for the railroad, ostensibly because Tehuantepec was not a port of entry. [14]
At some point in 1851, likely shortly after it became clear that she was not going to be allowed to support the Tehuantepec Railroad, the ship was acquired by Cornelius Vanderbilt's Independent Line. [15] His vision was to create a transcontinental link not across Mexico, but across Nicaragua. Gold Hunter sailed between San Francisco and San Juan del Sur, the western terminus of Vanderbilt's route between the Atlantic and Pacific. This venture, too, was controversial within the host country and ultimately failed.
As commerce on the west coast grew in the wake of the California gold rush, the United States needed basic aids to navigation, starting with charts. The Coast Survey dispatched the steamer USRC Jefferson from Philadelphia in March 1861 to meet this need. Unfortunately, the ship was wrecked in a storm off the east coast of Patagonia in May, 1851. [16] Rather than send another ship from the east coast to replace Jefferson, the Coast Survey purchased Gold Hunter in February 1852 and renamed her Active. [17] Lieutenant James Alden, Jr., was her first commanding officer in Coast Survey service. He remained her captain for most of the ship's time with the government. Active's primary mission was to produce nautical charts of the West Coast of America. Her initial tasks in 1852 were to survey Cape Flattery and the south shore of the Strait of Juan De Fuca, and to resurvey the mouth of the Columbia River. [18] In 1854 Active surveyed the new port of Seattle, which had been settled by the Denny party only three years before. [19] In 1855 she surveyed San Francisco Bay. [20] In 1856 she surveyed San Diego Bay, [21] San Clemente Island, and the Monterey Peninsula. [22] In 1857 the ship carried the U.S. survey corps which established the boundary between Washington Territory and the British possessions which later became Canada. [23] In 1858 she surveyed Grays Harbor and Shoalwater Bay in Washington Territory. [24] A new chart of San Pedro Harbor was produced in 1859 [25] and Active surveyed Humboldt Bay. [26]
As one of the few government ships stationed on the west coast, Active was frequently called upon to provide aid to mariners in distress. In 1853, for example, she was dispatched to the wrecks of Lewis, [27] and Carrier Pigeon, [28] and on false alarms to rescue John Stuart, [29] and to a supposed wreck on the Farallon Islands. [30] In 1854 she was sent to find the overdue Sea Bird and ended up towing the disabled ship to port. [31] In November 1858, she rescued 147 people from the Farallon Islands where their ship, Lucas, had gone aground in a thick fog. [32]
The ship was also used to support U.S. military operations against Native American tribes in conflicts in the Pacific Northwest. In December 1855 she sailed to Oregon to support Major General John E. Wool in what became known as the Rogue River Wars. [33] She carried arms and ammunition from San Francisco to the U.S. forces in Oregon. [34] In February 1856 Active carried two companies of infantry to Seattle to support white settlers in the conflict that became known as the Puget Sound War. [35] For most of the first quarter of 1856 Active patrolled Puget Sound, moving men and material for the Army and keeping watch on Native American movements. She returned to San Francisco in April, 1856 with General Wool and his staff aboard. [36]
The Northwest Boundary Survey, which Active supported in 1857, was successful in establishing the land border between the United States and the British Columbia. The survey did not, however, finalize the status of the San Juan Islands. Both the British and American militaries maintained bases on San Juan Island, which both nations claimed. Tensions grew into a skirmish later known as the "Pig War". In 1859 Active was pressed into military service again during the tensions, delivering men and supplies to the American Camp on San Juan Island. [37]
At the outbreak of the American Civil War, California's sympathies were largely with the Union, but Confederate interests were also present. Active was one of very few government vessels on the west coast, and in view of the emergency was transferred to U.S. Navy control in July 1861. [38] One of her first jobs for the Navy was to reinforce Union control of Southern California by transporting Companies D and K of the U.S. Army's 4th Infantry to San Pedro in August 1861. [39] On September 19, 1861 Active sailed from San Francisco for San Pedro with another company of infantry aboard. [40]
Active was purchased from the government for $30,000 by the San Francisco-based shipping and trading firm McRuer & Merrill in June 1862. [41] While McRuer & Merrill had originally intended to use the ship to trade with China, the Pacific Mail Steamship Company's Golden Gate caught fire and sank on July 27, 1862 with $1.4 million of gold and silver coin aboard. [42] A salvage party chartered Active and sailed her to the wreck site off Manzanillo, Mexico on August 10, 1862. [43] The salvage attempt was unsuccessful and she arrived back to San Francisco on October 29, 1862. [44]
In December 1862, newspapers published reports that Active and two other steamers had been acquired by Mexico for coastal patrol. [45] France's intervention in Mexico lent credibility to the rumors, but McRuer & Merrill quickly denied them. [46]
The Fraser Canyon gold rush created immediate demand for shipping between San Francisco and British Columbia. The forty-niners who had rushed to California now rushed to the new gold fields to the north. Active was purchased by the California Steam Navigation Company to meet this demand. Beginning in October 1865, she was sailing between San Francisco, Portland, and Victoria. [47] This route was contested between the California Steam Navigation Company and the California, Oregon, and Mexico Steamship Company. Ben Holladay, a tough steamboat pioneer, ran this dominant company. The two companies appeared to have an understanding that prevented a rate war. This changed in 1865 when Jarvis Patton established the Anchor Line, and put his ship Montana on the San Francisco - Victoria line. He cut prices to gain customers, but with only one ship on the route, the pricing equilibrium between the two main competitors more or less remained. In 1866, however, Patton built Idaho , and a full-scale rate war broke out. Profitability went out of the northern route. This caused the California Steam Navigation Company to sell its entire ocean-going fleet, including Active, to the California, Oregon, and Mexico Steamship Company in 1867. [48] The Anchor Line was folded in shortly thereafter. [49]
In March 1869 the California, Oregon, and Mexico Steamship Company was reincorporated under the laws of California as the North Pacific Transportation Company. Active continued to sail under the new company's name. [50] Her trade was brisk: she arrived in San Francisco on July 2, 1869 with 336 passengers aboard. [51] In an echo of her time as a survey ship, she carried a scientific party of the United States Coast Survey to the Chilkat River in the Summer of 1869 to observe a total eclipse of the sun. [52] On this trip Active also carried William H. Seward to Sitka, for his first and only visit to Alaska, which he had been instrumental in acquiring for the United States. [53]
On June 4, 1870. Active left San Francisco on her normal route to Victoria. By the morning of June 5, she found herself in dense fog somewhere off Humboldt County. She was east of her intended course and found herself among the rocks just offshore. She turned to port to head out to sea and struck a submerged rock. Initial examination of the hold did not show any damage, so the ship continued to head away from land. Flooding from a leak forward was discovered shortly thereafter and the ship began to settle by the bow. The ship's pumps were not able to keep up with the flooding, so Captain Lyons beached Active. The passengers, their baggage, the mail, and supplies for the stranded people were safely brought ashore about 22 miles south of Cape Mendocino. [54]
The captain dispatched the purser to Eureka, 80 miles away, to seek help. On foot and horseback, he reached the town at 3 P.M. on June, 6. Word of the wreck came just in time to reach the North Pacific Transportation Company's Pacific , which sailed immediately to the survivors. They were embarked on Pacific and brought to Crescent City. Pacific then returned to the scene of the wreck to attempt to salvage some of the $100,000 worth of cargo aboard Active. She had little success; waves were breaking over the stranded ship as high as her smokestack. [54]
The Pacific Mail Steamship Company was founded April 18, 1848, as a joint stock company under the laws of the State of New York by a group of New York City merchants. Incorporators included William H. Aspinwall, Edwin Bartlett, Henry Chauncey, Mr. Alsop, G.G. Howland and S.S. Howland.
Brother Jonathan was a paddle steamer that struck an uncharted rock near Point St. George, off the coast of Crescent City, California, on July 30, 1865. The ship was carrying 244 passengers and crew, with a large shipment of gold. Only 19 people survived, making it the deadliest shipwreck up to that time on the Pacific Coast of the United States. Based on the passenger and crew list, 225 people are believed to have died. Its location was not discovered until 1993 and a portion of the gold was recovered in 1996. The ship was also instrumental in setting off the 1862 smallpox epidemic in the Pacific Northwest, which killed thousands of Indigenous people in the region.
The history of California can be divided into the Native American period, the European exploration period (1542–1769), the Spanish colonial period (1769–1821), the Mexican period (1821–1848), and United States statehood. California was one of the most culturally and linguistically diverse areas in pre-Columbian North America. After contact with Spanish explorers, many of the Native Americans died from foreign diseases. Finally, in the 19th century there was a genocide by United States government and private citizens, which is known as the California genocide.
SS Pacific was a wooden sidewheel steamer built in 1850 most notable for its sinking in 1875 as a result of a collision southwest of Cape Flattery, Washington. Pacific had an estimated 275 passengers and crew aboard when she sank. Only two survived. Among the casualties were several notable figures, including the vessel's captain at the time of the disaster, Jefferson Davis Howell (1846–1875), the brother-in-law of former Confederate President Jefferson Davis. The sinking of Pacific killed more people than any other marine disaster on the West Coast at the time.
SS Northerner was the first paddle steamer lost in operations by the Pacific Mail Steamship Company.
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The SS City of Chester was a steamship built in 1875 that sank after a collision in a dense fog with SS Oceanic at the Golden Gate in San Francisco Bay on August 22, 1888. She was owned by the Oregon Railroad Co. and leased by the Pacific Coast Steamship Company.
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Captain Sutter, sometimes mistakenly called the Sutter, or the John A. Sutter, was a stern-wheel steamboat, built in Philadelphia, brought around Cape Horn, to California, the first to run from San Francisco to Stockton, from late November 1849.
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Idaho was a wooden steamship built for Pacific Coast passenger and freight service. She was launched in 1866 and wrecked in 1889. She was one of the first ocean-going steamships to provide regular service to the northwest coast of North America.
Orizaba was one of the first ocean-going steamships in commercial service on the west coast of North America and one of the last side-wheelers in regular use. Her colorful career spanned the business intrigues of Cornelius Vanderbilt, civil unrest in Mexico and Nicaragua, and the Fraser River gold rush. The ship was particularly important to Southern California ports, where she called for roughly the last 20 years of her service.
Ajax was a wooden, propeller-driven steamship built in 1864. She provided logistical support to the Union Army on the Atlantic coast during the American Civil War. After the war she was sent to San Francisco where she provided freight and passenger services between that city and other ports on the Pacific coast. She provided the first scheduled steamship service between the United States and Hawaii.
Senator was a wooden, side-wheel steamship built in New York in 1848. She was one of the first steamships on the California coast and arguably one of the most commercially successful, arriving in San Francisco at the height of the California gold rush. She was the first ocean-going steamer to sail up the Sacramento River to reach the new gold fields. After more purpose-built river steamers became available, Senator began a 26-year long career sailing between San Francisco and Southern California ports. Age and improving technology finally made the ship unsuitable for passenger service by 1882. Her machinery was removed and she was converted into a coal hulk. She ended her days in New Zealand, where she was broken up sometime around 1912.
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Orus was a wooden side-wheel steamship built in 1842. After a short commercial career connecting ports in New Jersey to lower Manhattan, she was employed in some of the earliest attempts to develop transcontinental shipping routes across Panama and later, across Nicaragua. She was wrecked in 1850 attempting to ascend the San Juan River in Nicaragua.
Director was a wooden, side-wheel steamship built in 1850 specifically for the river and lake portions of Cornelius Vanderbilt's trans-Nicaragua shipping route. She was the first steam vessel to sail on Lake Nicaragua. She was not only significantly profitable for Vanderbilt, but having proved the transcontinental route viable, changed both Central American and United States history. Her success produced investments in newer, more capable ships and she was retired sometime between 1854 and 1856.
California steam navigation.