Posts Tagged ‘keystone state’

Unidentified Steamer

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

In the PLCHC Photo Collection of Inland Riverboats, I found a photo of a boat steaming by Georgetown Landing.  The steamer’s name was listed unidentified.  Part of the name is visible when the photo is enlarged ==> ” ????ATE “.   Other clues are provided by the descriptive characteristics of the boat: sternwheel, texas, simple stacks, and a minimalist  designed pilot house.

 

Ohio River at Georgetown  from the south bank (From the Collection of The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County)

Ohio River at Georgetown from the south bank (From the Collection of The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County)

With Way’s Packet Directory in hand, I started my investigation.  Seventeen boats names ended with word “STATE” and one “GATE”.  The number of candidates was reduced to six with the elimination of side wheelers and the absence of a texas.  I began a search for photos of the six candidates.  At the UW La Crosse – Historic Steamboat Photographs, a photo of the str Keystone State fit the clues and matched the unidentified photo.  Level of confidence — 95%.

 

My level of confidence increases considerably knowing that the captain of the  Keystone State was Thomas Stevenson CalhoonThomas S Calhoon lived his entire life in Georgetown, PA.  In fact, five’ll getcha ten, the photo was taken from the backyard of his property overlooking Georgetown Landing.

 

I will send my comments to the PLCHC wiki.

Luxury Packets

Wednesday, March 24th, 2010

Five luxurious packets were expressly designed and built for the Pittsburgh and Cincinnati Packet Line:

    (1)  Katie Stockdale
    (2)  Keystone State
    (3)  Iron Queen
    (4)  Virginia
    (5)  Queen City
 

The names of the officers of the packets have been gleaned from various sources.  By no means is the list deemed complete or ordered by date of service.  Names to fill in the gaps of information will be greatly appreciated.   

Str Katie Stockdale (From the Collection of the UW La Crosse Murphy Library Special Collections)

Str Katie Stockdale (From the Collection of the UW La Crosse Murphy Library Special Collections)

 

Katie Stockdale          

Built 1877.
Dismantled 1888-9.  Engines, whistle, and roof bell installed on the Keystone State.

Captain Clerk Pilot Mate Engineer
Thomas S Calhoon
AJ McConnell
Thomas S Sandford
 
 
 
Nat Eathart
J Harry Ollum
 
 
 
Mart F  Noll
 
 
 
 
Chas M Buchanan
 
 
 
 
Clark Barringer
 
 
 
 
Chas W Knox
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

 

Keystone State           

Built 1890.
Sold 1926.

Captain Clerk Pilot Mate Engineer
Thomas S Calhoon
Charles W Knox
Thomas S Sandford
Ben Baker
George Knox
Charles W Knox
William Kimble
J Harry Ollum
Richard Pharris
Charles McDaniel
 
Augustus Martindill
William Anderson
Thos Martin
Grant Paige
 
Karl Crawford
Dayton Randolph
Eugene Morris
 
 
J Presley Ellison
Chas Prall
 
 
 
AL Voeghtley
Ed McLaughlin
 
 
 
Daniel Lacey
 
 
 
 
Henry Best
 
 
 
 
Logan Noll
 
 
 
 
George Donally
 
 
 
 
William Barringer
 
 
 

 

 

Iron Queen    

Built 1892.
Burned 1895.

Captain Clerk Pilot Mate Engineer
John M Philips
Robert H Kerr
Dayton Randolph
Ort Shriver
William Bell
Thomas S Calhoon
George McCollough
James Rowley
Hod Knowles
James Ellison
 
Clayton Agnew
Ed McLaughlin
 
 
 
AL Voeghtley
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

Virginia          

 Built 1895-6.
Sold 1926.

Captain Clerk Pilot Mate Engineer
Thomas S Calhoon
Robert H Kerr
Thomas S Sandford
John Sweeney
George Johnston
Thomas S Sandford
William Kimble
J Harry Ollum
Hod Knowles
 
Alfred Pennywit
Daniel Lacey
James Martin
 
 
 
George McCollough
William Anderson
 
 
 
Clayton Agnew
Dwight Hollister
 
 
 
Wm C Lepper
 
 
 
 
Clyde Packard
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

Queen City     

 Built 1897.
Sold before 1929.

Captain Clerk Pilot Mate Engineer
Thomas S Sandford
James Gardener
J Harry Ollum
 
George Knox
Robert R Agnew
Daniel Lacey
Philip Anshutz
 
Charles Paige
Arthur B Brown
Unk Chapman
Anthony Meldahl
 
CA Watson
J Presley Ellison
C Boyd Taylor
 
 
William Watson
John Sweeney
William R Barringer
 
 
 
 
AB Browne
 
 
 
 
Charles Howard
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

More Mark Twain on Steamboats

Friday, February 26th, 2010

“I think the most enjoyable of all races is a steamboat race… two red-hot steamboats raging along, neck and neck, straining every nerve… that is to say, every rivet in the boilers – quaking and straining and groaning stem to stern, spouting white steam from the pipes, pouring black smote from the chimneys, raining down sparks, parting the river into a long streak of hissing foam – this is a sport that makes a body’s liver curl with enjoyment. A horse race is pretty colorless and tame in comparison.”

Capt Thomas S Calhoon

Friday, July 31st, 2009

Thomas Stevenson Calhoon was arguably the most famous Georgetown packet owner and captain.  His career was the longest.  He had probably as much experience on the Missouri as Capt Marsh Grant with whom he worked on the Ida Stockdale.  My biographical data for Thomas S Calhoon has just been added a page under Biographical Data and Tales.

 

Christmas Eve Dinner Invitation (Anna L Nash And John F Nash Collection)

Christmas Eve Dinner Invitation (Anna L Nash And John F Nash Collection)

This dinner invitation from the officers of the Katie Stockdale to the Jacob Poe family is an interesting piece of steamboat memorabilia.  The Katie Stockdale was built in 1877. Thomas S Calhoon celebrated his fiftieth birthday inn 1884.   Jacob died in 1891.  So the Christmas Eve surprise oyster dinner for Thomas S Calhoon took place between 1877 and 1890.  I am also surprised the Katie Stockdale was docked at Georgetown Landing so late in the year.

Oysters were an expensive delicacy, and …. they were eaten the year round. An ‘oyster express/ a light wagon loaded with live oysters imbedded in straw and kept moistened with salt water, made through trips from Baltimore to Pittsburgh. The horses were changed frequently, but the driver drove all night without stopping.  At Pittsburgh,  the oysters were transferred to swift boats and shipped to Cincinnati, where they were placed in tanks of salt water and corn meal and kept alive for months.” [1]

 

 

 

References.


[1]  Stanton C Crawford and Mary C Brown, Pittsburgh as Viewed from Down River, (Western Pennsylvania Historical Magazine, Vol 47, No 4, Oct 1964), p 306.