Archive for August, 2018

Fun Find

Tuesday, August 21st, 2018

 

The Virginia passing under the Wabash Bridge note the stacks (From the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County.

In the Journal of In-Chambers Practice, Ira Brad Matesky has built upon the work of Cynthia Rapp who collected unpublished in-chambers opinions (ICOs) by the Justices of the Supreme Court of the US.  By 2016, the Journal of In-Chambers Practice collection had accumulated 525 opinions.  Hard to find.  Widely scattered.  The records of the Supreme Court and some of these ICOs are stored at The National Archives.  Other ICOs are housed with personal papers of individual justices at the Library of Congress and other libraries throughout the country.  

 

My interest is in footnote 2 of an introduction by Ira Brad Matesky in The Continuing Search which addresses The Wheeling Bridge Case and a rare pamphlet with an opinion authored by Justice Roberet Grier in 1849.   Footnote 2 flowing over two pages follows:

 

 

2 For a detailed treatment of the Wheeling Bridge Case, see ELIZABETH BRAND MONROE, THE WHEELING BRIDGE CASE: ITS SIGNIFICANCE IN AMERICAN LAW AND TECHNOLOGY (Northeastern University Press 1992). For an earlier treatment, see James Morton Callahan, Semi-Centennial History of West Virginia, App. A (1913), available at www.ohiocountylibrary.org/wheeling-history/5279. For some non-legal background, see Francis W. Nash, “A Glance at the Wheeling Bridge Case,” availa-

 

ble at georgetownsteamboats.com/gs/2010/02/06/a-glance-at-the-wheeling-bridge-case/. Allegations that Justice Grier acted improperly during this litigation (he was exonerated by the House Judiciary Committee) are discussed in Daniel J. Wisniewski, Heating Up a Case Gone Cold: Revisiting the Charges of Bribery and Official Misconduct Made Against Supreme Court Justice Robert Cooper Grier in 1854-55, 38 J. Sup. Ct. Hist. 1 (Spring 2013). 

 

The GeorgetownSteamboats post added color to the The Wheeling Bridge Case  not provided by the legally intense IOCs.  The str Hibernia No 2 was damaged in the collision with the bridge structure on 11 Nov 1849.   Its stacks were torn off.   It was one element of the initial legal action. The str Hibernia No 2 was owned by Capt George W Ebert, my double great grandfather.

After the bridge was blown down by wind in 1854, str Pennsylvania lowered her stacks approaching Wheeling with no bridge to lower them for.  A derisive salute.  A mob gathered on shore and pelted the packet with stones.  (Mark Twain’s younger brother aboard the str Pennsylvania was scalded and died after the boilers exploded on 21 Jun 1858.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright©2018 Francis W Nash
All Rights Reserved

No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.

 

The Saga of the Virginia

Wednesday, August 8th, 2018

A perfect story – the str Virginia and the cornfield.  Made even better by the properly cited photos and materials.  The link follows:

 

     http://www.codex99.com/photography/the-steamboat-and-the-cornfield.html

 

I look forward to more steamboat tales from Jim Hughes in the future.

 

Copyright © 2018 Francis W Nash
All Rights Reserved

No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.

 

Packets, Keelboats, Tugs, and Barges.

Sunday, August 5th, 2018

The steamer list has been updated and upgraded.  Each research trip to The National Archives uncovers more information.  The steamer list is in alphabetical order by packet name.  It can also be searched and sorted by Build Date and Build Location, Primary Owner and Build Date, etc., leading to interesting analysis.  The link is GtownSBList 180806.

 

Like most family boats, there were several owners and masters during the lifetime of most vessels. The primary ownership, displayed in the following table, represents the primary owner according to the first Certificate of Enrollment of the Custom House in Pittsburgh, PA.  Where the original owner is not a Georgetown family name, I have listed the Georgetown connection by providing the position, such as Master, Pilot, Clerk, etc.  A link to the Certificate of Enrollment, if available, is provided via the packet name.  It should also be noted that starting around the time of the Civil War, companies were established with shares distributed to the partners to limit the risk.  It should also be noted that the Poe wives and sisters were owners of Poe family boats.  For example, Martha Jane Poe, Thomas Washington Poe’s second wife, owned 2/16 of the str Clara Poe according to the Certificate of Enrollment in 1862.  That was eight years before her husband whacked her in the head with an axe when the str Nick Wall was snagged on the Mississippi in Dec 1870.  

 

The names on many of the hand-written Certificates of Enrollment  are misspelled.  Of course, the Georgetown Calhoon family is a prime example often listed with the more common spelling Calhoun.  Suurprisinglyt, the name George Washington Ebert has been the most abused.  The listings observed so far include: Geo Ebert, GW Ebert, Washington Ebert, and even George W Ebbert. 

 

All Georgetown steamers, keelboats, tugs, and barges with a capacity of more than twenty tons had to registered with the Custom House at the Port of Pittsburgh after 1835.  Before 1835, Pittsburgh was a region of the Custom House of New Orleans.  The usual Cause of Surrender of the Certificates of Enrollment was:

 

                (1)   license expired,

               (2)  change in owners,

               (3)  change in property, such as adding a new deck

 

The counts for Georgetown currently stands at:

               Steamers              105

               Keelboats             36

               Tugs                        3

               Barges                    8

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2018 Francis W Nash
All Rights Reserved

No part of this website may be reproduced without permission in writing from the author.