RootsWeb.com Mailing Lists
Total: 1/1
    1. [IASCOTT] 1910 - The Great River
    2. Chapter 14 CHAPTER XIV THE GREAT RIVER THE GLORY AND MAJESTY OF THE FATHER OF WATERS - DESCRIPTION OF THE KEELBOAT - AN EARLY TRIP FROM CAIRO TO GALENA - A LIST OF THE EARLY STEAM CRAFT THAT BREASTED THE CURRENTS OF THE UPPER RIVER - BRINGING DOWN THE LOGS - THE FERRIES WHICH HAVE BROUGHT PEOPLE INTO SCOTT COUNTY - THE LONG-AWAITED HANNEPIN CANAL (Pictures included with this chapter are:  The Ferry "Davenport - Davenport Waterworks and Settling Basin - A Short Line Packet - John Wilson's Ferry Showing The Old Fort Across The River) In April, 1823, Daniel Smith Harris, a lad of fifteen, left Cincinnati on the keel-boat Colonel Bumford for the LeFevre lead mines, now Galena, where he arrived June 20th, following, after a laborious voyage down the Ohio and up the Mississippi.  It came about in the evolution of things required for specific purposes that the keel-boat was constructed.  This boat was built to go up stream as well as down.  It was a well modeled craft, sixty to eighty feet long and fifteen to  eighteen feet wide, sharp at both ends and often with fine lines, clipper built for passengers or traffic.  It had usually about four feet depth of hold.  Its cargo box, as it was called, was about four feet higher, sometimes covered with a light curved deck, sometimes open, with a "gallows frame" running the length of the hold, over which tarpaulins were drawn and fastened to the sides of the boat for the protection of the freight and passengers in stormy weather.  At either end of the craft was a deck eight or ten feet in length, the forward or forecastle deck having a windlass or capstan for pulling the boat off bars or warping through swift water or over rapids.  Along each side of the cargo box ran a narrow walk about eighteen inches in width, with cleats nailed to the deck twenty-eight or thirty inches apart to prevent the crew from slipping when poling up stream.  About the time the keel-boat Colonel Bumford was passing St. Louis the steamer Virginia departed for the upper river with a load of supplies for the United States military post at Fort Snelling.  She arrived at Fort Snelling May 10, 1823, the first boat propelled by steam to breast the water of the upper Mississippi.  She was received by a salute of cannon from the fort and carried fear and consternation to the Indians, who watched the smoke rolling from her chimneys and the exhaust steam from her escape pipe with a noise that simply terrified them.  The Virginia was scarcely longer than the largest keel-boat, being about one hundred and twenty feet long and twenty-two feet beam.  She had no upper cabin, the accomodations for the passengers being in the hold in the stern of the boat, with the cargo box covering so common to the keel-boat of which she herself was but an evolution. Debbie Clough G-erischer G-erischer Family Web Site http://gerischer.rootsweb.com/ Assistant CC, Iowa Gen Web, Scott County http://www.celticcousins.net/scott/ List Manager for: IASCOTT-L * G-erischer-L * D-encker-L Fitzpatirck-L * V-lerebome-L * Huntington-L * Otis-L * Algar-L EIGS-L * Pickens-L * McNab-L * Patris-L - Rankin-L

    06/13/2002 01:36:35