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Hudson River Steamboats.—An
accurate history of the growth and
development of steam navigation on the
Hudson, from the building of the "Clermont"
by Robert Fulton to the building of the
superb steamers of the Hudson River Day Line
would form a very interesting book. The
first six years produced six steamers:
Clermont, built in
1807
160 tons
Car of Neptune,
built in 1809
295 tons
Hope, built in 1811
280 tons
Perseverance, built
in 1811
280 tons
Paragon, built in
1811
331 tons
Richmond, built in
1813
370 tons
It makes one smile to read
the newspaper notices of those days. The
time was rather long, and the fare rather
high—thirty-six hours to Albany, fare seven
dollars.
From the Albany Gazette, September, 1807.
"The North River Steamboat will leave Paulus
Hook Ferry on Friday the 4th of September,
at 9 in the morning, and arrive at Albany at
9 in the afternoon on Saturday. Provisions,
good berths, and accommodation are provided.
The charge to each passenger is as follows:
Destination
Fare
Duration
Newburg
$3.00
14 hours
Poughkeepsie
$4.00
17 hours
Esopus
$5.00
20 hours
Hudson
$5.50
30 hours
Albany
$7.00
36 hours
For places apply to Wm.
Vandervoort, No. 48 Courtland street, on the
corner of Greenwich street, September 2d,
1807."
Extract from the New York Evening Post,
October 2, 1807.
Mr. Fulton's new-invented steamboat, which
is fitted up in a neat style for passengers,
and is intended to run from New York to
Albany as a packet, left here this morning
with ninety passengers, against a strong
head wind. Notwithstanding which, it is
judged that she moved through the waters at
the rate of six miles an hour.
Extract from the Albany Gazette, October
5th, 1807.
Friday, October 2d, 1807, the steamboat
(Clermont) left New York at ten o'clock
a.m., against a stormy tide, very rough
water, and a violent gale from the north.
She made a headway beyond the most sanguine
expectations, and without being rocked by
the waves.
Arrived at Albany, October 4th, at 10
o'clock p.m., being detained by being
obliged to come to anchor, owing to a gale
and having one of her paddle wheels torn
away by running foul of a sloop.
The
following was recently recopied in the
Poughkeepsie Eagle, as an old time
reminiscence:
To Poughkeepsie from New York in Seventeen
Hours.
—The first steamboat on the Hudson River
passed Poughkeepsie August 17th, 1807, and
in June, 1808, the owners of the boat caused
the following advertisement to be published
in prominent papers along the river:
Steamboat.
For The Information Of The Public.
The Steamboat will leave New York for Albany
every Saturday afternoon exactly at 6
o'clock, and will pass:
West Point, about 4 o'clock Sunday morning.
Newburgh, 7 o'clock Sunday morning.
Poughkeepsie, 11 o'clock Sunday morning.
Esopus, 2 o'clock in the afternoon.
Red Hook, 4 o'clock in the afternoon.
Catskill, 7 o'clock in the afternoon.
Hudson, 8 o'clock in the evening.
She will leave Albany for New York every
Wednesday morning exactly at 8 o'clock, and
pass:
Hudson, about 3 in the afternoon.
Esopus, 8 in the evening.
Poughkeepsie, 12 at night.
Newburgh, 4 Thursday morning.
West Point, 7 Thursday morning.
As the time at which the boat may arrive at
the different places above mentioned may
vary an hour, more or less, according to the
advantage or disadvantage of wind and tide,
those who wish to come on board will see the
necessity of being on the spot an hour
before the time. Persons wishing to come on
board from any other landing than these here
specified can calculate the time the boat
will pass and be ready on her arrival.
Innkeepers or boatmen who bring passengers
on board or take them ashore from any part
of the river will be allowed one shilling
for each person.
Prices Of Passage—from New York
To West Point $2 30
To Newburgh 3 00
To Poughkeepsie 3 50
To Esopus 4 00
To Red Hook 4 50
To Hudson 5 00
To Albany 7 00
From Albany
To Hudson $2 00
To Red Hook 3 00
To Esopus 3 50
To Poughkeepsie 4 00
To Newburgh and West Point 4 50
To New York 7 00
All other passengers are to pay at the rate
of one dollar for every twenty miles, and a
half dollar for every meal they may eat.
Children from 1 to 5 years of age to pay
one-third price and to sleep with persons
under whose care they are.
Young persons from 5 to 15 years of age to
pay half price, provided they sleep two in a
berth, and the whole price for each one who
requests to occupy a whole berth.
Servants who pay two-thirds price are
entitled to a berth; they pay half price if
they do not have a berth.
Every person paying full price is allowed
sixty pounds of baggage; if less than full
price forty pounds. They are to pay at the
rate of three cents per pound for surplus
baggage. Storekeepers who wish to carry
light and valuable merchandise can be
accommodated on paying three cents a pound.
Day Line Steamers.—As the cradle of
successful steam navigation was rocked on
the Hudson, it is fitting that the Day Line
Steamers should excel all others in beauty,
grace and speed. There is no comparison
between these river palaces and the
steamboats on the Rhine or any river in
Europe, as to equipment, comfort and
rapidity. To make another reference to the
great tourist route of Europe, the distance
from Cologne to Coblenz is 60 miles, the
same as from New York to Newburgh. It takes
the Rhine steamers from seven to eight hours
(as will be seen in Baedeker's Guide to that
river) going up the stream, and from four
and a half to five hours returning with the
current. The Hudson by Daylight steamers en
route to Albany make the run from New York
to Newburgh in three hours; to Poughkeepsie
in four hours, making stops at Yonkers, West
Point and Newburgh. Probably no train on the
best equipped railroad in our country
reaches its stations with greater regularity
than these steamers make their various
landing. It astonishes a Mississippi or
Missouri traveler to see the captain
standing like a train-conductor, with watch
in hand, to let off the gang-plank and pull
the bell, at the very moment of the
advertised schedule.
One
of the most humorous incidents of the
writer's journeying up and down the Hudson,
was the "John-Gilpin-experience" of a
western man who got off at West Point a few
years ago. It was at that time the first
landing of the steamer after leaving New
York.
As he was accustomed to the Mississippi
style of waiting at the various towns he
thought he would go up and take a look at
the "hill." The boat was off and "so was
he"; with wife and children shaking their
hands and handkerchiefs in an excited manner
from the gang-plank. Some one at the stern
of the steamer shouted to him to cross the
river and take the train to Poughkeepsie.
Every one was on the lookout for him at the
Poughkeepsie landing, and, just as the
steamer was leaving the dock, he came
dashing down Main street from the railroad
station, but too late. Then not only wife
and children but the entire boat saluted him
and the crowded deck blossomed with
handkerchiefs. Some one shouted "catch us at
Rhinebeck." After leaving Rhinebeck the
train appeared, and on passing the steamer,
a lone handkerchief waved from the rear of
the platform. At Hudson an excited but
slightly disorganized gentleman appeared to
the great delight of his family, and every
one else, for the passengers had all taken a
lively interest in the chase. "Well," he
says, "I declare, the way this boat lands,
and gets off again, beats anything I ever
see, and I have lived on the Mississippi
nigh on to a quarter of a century."
The "Hendrick Hudson." In these centennial
days of discovery and invention, a
description of the steamers will be of
interest, furnished by the Hudson River Day
Line. The "Hendrick Hudson" was built at
Newburgh by the Marvel Company, under
contract with the W. & A. Fletcher Company
of New York, who built her engines, and
under designs from Frank E. Kirby. Her
principal dimensions are: length, 400 feet;
breadth over all, 82 feet; depth of hold, 14
feet 5 inches, and a draft of 7 feet 6
inches. Her propelling machinery is what is
known as the 3-cylinder compound direct
acting engine, and her power (6,500-horse)
is applied through side wheels with
feathering buckets, and steam is supplied
from eight boilers.
Steel has been used in her construction to
such an extent that her hull, her bulk-heads
(7 in all), her engine and boiler
enclosures, her kitchen and ventilators, her
stanchions, girders, and deck beams, and in
fact the whole essential frame work of the
boat is like a great steel building. Where
wood is used it is hard wood, and in finish
probably has no equal in marine work.
Her scheme of decoration, ventilation and
sanitation is as artistic and scientific as
modern methods can produce, and at the same
time her general lay out for practical and
comfortable operation is the evolution of
the long number of years in which the Day
Line has been conducting the passenger
business.
A detailed account of this steamer would be
a long story, but some of the salient
features are as follows: She carries the
largest passenger license ever issued,
namely: for 5,000 people; on her trial trip
she made the fastest record through the
water of any inland passenger ship in this
country, namely: 23.1 miles per hour. Her
shafts are under the main deck. Her mural
paintings represent prominent features of
the Hudson, which may not be well seen from
the steamer. Her equipment far exceeds the
requirements of the Government Inspection
Laws.
The "New York." The hull of the "New York"
was built at Wilmington, Del., by the Harlan
& Hollingsworth Co., in 1887, and is, with
the exception of the deck-frame, made of
iron throughout. During the winter of 1897
she was lengthened 30 feet, and now measures
341 feet in length, breadth over all 74
feet, with a tonnage of 1975 gross tons. The
engine was built by the W. & A. Fletcher Co.
of New York. It is a standard American beam
engine, with a cylinder 75 inches in
diameter and 12 feet stroke of piston, and
develops 3,850 horse power. Steam steering
gear is used. One of the most admirable
features of this queen of river steamers is
her "feathering" wheels, the use of which
not only adds materially to her speed but
does away with the jar or tremor common to
boats having the ordinary paddle-wheels. The
exterior of the "New York" is, as usual, of
pine, painted white and relieved with tints
and gold. The interior is finished in
hard-wood cabinet work, ash being used
forward of the shaft on the main deck, and
mahogany aft and in the dining-room. Ash is
also used in the grand saloons on the
promenade deck. One feature of these saloons
especially worthy of note, is the number and
size of the windows, which are so numerous
as to almost form one continuous window.
Seated in one of these elegant saloons as in
a floating palace of glass, the tourist who
prefers to remain inside enjoys equally with
those outside the unrivalled scenery through
which the steamer is passing. The private
parlors on the "New York" are provided with
bay windows and are very luxuriantly
furnished. In the saloons are paintings by
Albert Bierstadt, J. F. Cropsey, Walter
Satterlee and David Johnson. The dining-room
on the "New York" is located on the main
deck, aft; a feature that will commend
itself to tourists, since while enjoying
their meals they will not be deprived from
viewing the noble scenery through which the
steamer is passing. While the carrying
capacity of the "New York" is 4,500
passengers, license for 2,500 only is
applied for, thus guaranteeing ample room
for all and the absence from crowding which
is so essential to comfort.
The "Albany" was built by the Harlan &
Hollingsworth Co., of Wilmington, Del., in
1880. During the winter of 1892, she was
lengthened thirty feet and furnished with
modern feathering wheels in place of the old
style radial ones. Her hull is of iron, 325
feet long, breadth of beam over all 75 feet,
and her tonnage is 1,415 gross tons. Her
engine was built by the W. & A. Fletcher
Co., of New York, and develops 3,200 horse
power. The stroke is 12 feet, and the
diameter of the cylinder is 73 inches. On
her trial trip she ran from New York to
Poughkeepsie, a distance of 75 miles, in
three hours and seven minutes. Steam
steering gear is used on the "Albany," thus
insuring ease and precision in handling her.
The wood-work on the main deck and in the
upper saloons is all hard wood; mahogany,
ash and maple tastefully carved. Wide, easy
staircases lead to the main saloon and upper
decks. Rich Axminster carpets cover the
floors, and mahogany tables and furniture of
antique design and elegant finish make up
the appointments of a handsomely furnished
drawing room.
The Old Reaches.—Early navigators divided
the Hudson into fourteen "reaches" or
distances from point to point as seen by one
sailing up or down the river. In the slow
days of uncertain sailing vessels these
divisions meant more than in our time of
"propelling steam," but they are still of
practical and historic interest.
The Great Chip Rock Reach extends from above
Weehawken about eighteen miles to the
boundary line of New York and New
Jersey—(near Piermont). The Palisades were
known by the old Dutch settlers as the
"Great Chip," and so styled in the Bergen
Deed of Purchase, viz, the great chip above
Weehawken. The Tappan Reach (on the east
side of which dwelt the Manhattans, and on
the west side the Saulrickans and the
Tappans), extends about seven miles to
Teller's Point. The third reach to a narrow
point called Haverstroo; then comes the
Seylmaker's Reach, then Crescent Reach; next
Hoge's Reach, and then Vorsen Reach, which
extends to Klinkersberg, or Storm King, the
northern portal of the Highlands. This is
succeeded by Fisher's Reach where, on the
east side once dwelt a race of savages
called Pachami. "This reach," in the
language of De Laet, "extends to another
narrow pass, where, on the west, is a point
of land which juts out, covered with sand,
opposite a bend in the river, on which
another nation of savages—the Waoranecks—have
their abode at a place called Esopus. Next,
another reach, called Claverack; then
Backerack; next Playsier Reach, and Vaste
Reach, as far as Hinnenhock; then Hunter's
Reach, as far as Kinderhook; and Fisher's
Hook, near Shad Island, over which, on the
east side, dwell the Mahicans." If these
reaches seem valueless at present there are
Five Divisions of the Hudson—which possess
interest for all, as they present an
analysis easy to be remembered—divisions
marked by something more substantial than
sentiment or fancy, expressing five distinct
characteristics:—
The Palisades, an unbroken wall of rock for
fifteen miles—Grandeur.
The Tappan Zee, surrounded by the sloping
hills of Nyack, Tarrytown, and Sleepy
Hollow—Repose.
The Highlands, where the Hudson for twenty
miles plays "hide and seek" with "hills
rock-ribbed and ancient as the
sun"—Sublimity.
The Hillsides for miles above and below
Poughkeepsie—The Picturesque.
The Catskills, on the west, throned in
queenly dignity—Beauty.
From the Hurricane Deck of the Hudson River
Day Line Steamers can be seen, on leaving or
approaching the Metropolis, one of the most
interesting panoramas in the world—the river
life of Manhattan, the massive structures of
Broadway, the great Transatlantic docks,
Recreation Piers, and an ever-changing
kaleidoscope of interest. The view is
especially grand on the down trip between
the hours of five and six in the afternoon,
as the western sun brings the city in strong
relief against the sky. If tourists wish to
fully enjoy this beautiful view they should
remain on the Hurricane Deck until the boat
is well into her Desbrosses Street slip.
The Brooklyn Annex.—The Brooklyn tourist is
especially happy in this delightful preface
and addenda to the Hudson River trip. The
effect of morning and evening light in
bringing out or in subduing the sky-line of
Manhattan is nowhere seen to greater
advantage. In the morning the buildings from
the East River side stand out bold and
clear, when lo! almost instantaneously, on
turning the Battery, they are lessened and
subdued. On the return trip in the evening,
the effect is reversed—a study worth the
while of the traveler as he passes to and
fro on the commodious "Annex" between
Desbrosses Street Pier and Brooklyn. Surely
no other city in the world rises so
beautiful from harbor line or water front as
"Greater New York," with lofty outlines of
the boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn
reminding one of Scott's tribute to
Edinburgh:
"Piled deep and massy, close and high,
Mine own romantic town!"