The first river steamboat in Oregon was the
Columbia, built by General Adair,
Captain Dan Frost and others, at Upper
Astoria in 1850. She was a side-wheel boat,
ninety feet in length, of about seventy-five
tons burthen, capable of accommodating not
to exceed twenty passengers, though I have
known of her carrying on one trip over one
hundred. Though small, her cost exceeded
$25,000. Mechanics engaged in her
construction were paid at the rate of
sixteen dollars per day, and other laborers
five to eight dollars, gold. She made her
first trip in June, 1850, under the command
of Capt. Fros; McDermott, engineer. It
generally took about twenty-four hours to
make the trip. She tied up nights and in
foggy weather. Fare was twenty-five dollars
each way. She was an independent little
craft, and not remarkably accommodating,
utterly ignoring Lower Astoria. All freight
and passengers must come on board at the
upper town. She ran for a year or two, when
her machinery was taken out and put into the
Fashion. Her hull afterwards floated out to
sea.
The Lot Whitcomb, also a
side-wheeler, was the next. She was built at
Milwaukie, then one of the most lively and
promising towns in Oregon, by Lot Whitcomb,
Col. Jennings, S. S. White and others and
launched on Christmas Day, 1850. That was a
great day in Oregon. Hundreds from all parts
of the Territory came to witness the launch.
The festivities were kept up for three days
and nights. There was music instrumental-at
least, I heard several fiddles -and vocal,
dancing and feasting. The whole city was
full of good cheer; every house was open and
all was free of charge-no one would receive
pay. Sleeping accommodations were rather
scarce, but there was plenty to keep one
awake.
The Lot Whitcomb had a fine model, a
powerful engine, and was staunch and fast.
Her keel was 12x14 inches, 160 feet long, a
solid, stick of Oregon fir. Her burden was
600 tons, had a 17-inch cylinder, 7-feet
stroke and cost about $80,000. She proved a
safe and comfortable boat. Fare upon her was
reduced to $15 between Portland and Astoria.
She ran upon Oregon waters until the latter
part of 1853, when she was taken to San
Francisco and ran for some years on the
Sacramento. Captain John C. Ainsworth took
command. This was his first steamboating in
Oregon. Jacob Kamm was her engineer. Captain
Ainsworth was from Iowa, where he had been
engaged in steamboating on the Mississippi
between St. Louis and Galena about five
years. He was a young man about twenty-eight
years of age when he commenced in Oregon,
and had nothing to begin with but the
ordinary capital of an Oregon pioneer-a
sound head, a brave heart, willing hands,
energy and fidelity to trust. I have known
him through his whole career in Oregon. The
fortune and position he has acquired are not
the result of accident or chance, but have
beta secured by industry, integrity,
ability, hard labor and prudence. Such
fortune and such position come to all who
work as hard, as long and well as Captain
Ainsworth.
Jacob Kamm, the engineer, was the right man
in the right place on such a boat, under
such a captain. He proved himself skillful
and prudent; no accident ever occurred
through his want of skill and care during
the long period in which he ran as engineer
on Oregon steamboats. The fortune he has
acquired has been built up by hard labor,
increased and preserved by skill and
prudence.
The Pacific Mail Steamship Company, a New
York corporation which had the mail contract
between Panama and Oregon, brought out a
large iron steamer called the Willamette.
She was built for the company at Wilmington,
Delaware, and brought around Cape Horn under
sail as a three masted schooner, arriving in
the fall of 1851. She was soon fitted up and
commenced running, under Captain Durbrow,
between Portland and Astoria in connection
with the company's sea steamer. She was an
elegant boat in all her appointments, had
fine accommodation for passengers, and great
freight capacity. In fact, she was
altogether too large for the trade, and in
August, 1852, her owners took her to
California and ran her on the Sacramento.
One good thing she did, she put fare down to
$10. Fare on this route went down slowly;
first $26, then $15, then $10, then $8, and
then $3; it is now $2. It is only within a
few years that the passenger trade on the
lower Columbia has been of any considerable
value, or would support a single weekly
steamboat. It has now become of more
importance.
Time will only permit me to touch upon the
important events which make eras in the
commerce of Oregon.
Navigation upon the Willamette above the
falls at Oregon City by steamboats was
opened by the Hoosier, built at
Oregon City below the falls and taken up
early 1851. She ran between Cauemah and
Dayton on the Yamhill.
Early in 1851 Abernethy & Co's barque, the
Success, from New York, arrived at
Oregon City with a general cargo of
merchandise and three steamboats; two of
them were small iron propellers, and the
third, the Multnomah, was a
side-wheel boat built of wood. The Eagle
was very little larger than an ordinary
ship's yawl-boat. She was owned and run
between Portland and Oregon City by Captains
William Wells and Richard Williams. When
Wells was captain, Williams was mate,
fireman and all hands; when Captain Dick
took the wheel, Wells became the crew. She
carried freight for $15 per ton, passengers
$5 each. Pretty good pay for a twelve mile
route. She made more money according to her
size than any boat in Oregon. Out of her
earnings the owners built the iron steamboat
Belle, and made themselves principal
owners in the Senorita-two, for that
day, first-class steamboats. The
Washington was somewhat larger, owned by
Alexander S. Murray, who commanded her. Ile
took the boat up above the falls in June,
1851, run her there until the fall or winter
of 1851-2, when he brought her down and run
her between Portland and Oregon City until
the spring of 1853, when she was again taken
above the falls, where she ran until July of
the same year, when her owners there, Allan
McKinley & Co., brought her below and sent
her under steam around to the Umpqua river.
She arrived there in safety, crossing the
bars of both rivers, and ended her days
there in the service of her owners. She was
known after her sea voyage as the "Bully
Washington." The only money ever made
out of her was made by her first owner,
Capt. Murray. He was a sharp Scotchman, came
from Australia here and returned there when
he left Oregon. He is said to be the father
of internal navigation in Australia. He made
money, and when I last heard of him was
engaged in the navigation of Murray's river,
which empties into the ocean at Adelaide.
The next and most famous of the steamers
that were brought out after the Success was
the Multnomah . She came in sections,
and was set up at Canemah by two or three
army or navy officers of the United States,
who had brought her out, Doctors Gray and
Maxwell and Captain Binicle; was built of
oak staves two inches in thickness and of
the width and length of ordinary boat plank,
bound with hoops made of bar iron, keyed up
on the gunwales; was 100 feet in length,
with good machinery, and like her principal
owner, Dr. Gray, fastidiously nice in all
her appointments. She had no timbers except
her deck beams and the frame upon which her
engine and machinery rested; was as staunch
as iron and oak could make her, It was as
difficult to knock her to pieces from the
outside as it is for a boy to kick in a well
hooped barrel. She commenced running above
the falls shortly after the Washington,
and run there-her highest point being
Corvallis, then Marysville-until May, 1852,
when she was brought below on ways in a
cradle, and thereafter run on the lower
Willamette and Columbia, part of the time
making three trips a week to Oregon City and
three trips to the Cascades. She brought
down many of the emigrants of 1852. She fell
into the hands of Abernethy & Co., and in
the winter and spring of 1853, ran between
Portland and Oregon City in connection with
the Lot Whitcomb: On the failure of
Abernethy & Co.; she fell into the hands of
their creditors and had different captains
every few trips for a year or two. She was
then purchased by Captain Richard Hoyt, and
run on the lower Columbia route until his
death in the winter or spring of 1861-2. She
finally came into the hands of the Oregon
Steam Navigation Company, and after much
more useful service laid her bones in the
hone-yard below Portland.
About the same time, 1851, a small wooden
boat, a propeller, called the Black Hawk,
ran between Portland and Oregon City. She
made money very rapidly for her owners.
The other boats built for or run above the
falls of the Willamette were the Portland,
built opposite Portland, in 1853, by A. S.
Murray, John Torrance and James Clinton. She
was afterwards taken above the falls where
she ran for some time. On the 17th of March,
1857, she was carried over the falls in high
water, leaving hardly a vestige of the boat,
and drowning her captain, Arthur Jamison,
and one deck hand.
There was the Canemah, side-wheels,
built in 1851, by A. F. Hedges, afterwards
killed by the Indians in Colonel Kelly's
fight on the Touchet in 1856; Manson Beers
and Hamilton Campbell. She ran between
Canemah and Corvallis. The heaviest load she
ever carried was 35 tons. Passage on her was
$5 to Salem. She made little or no money for
her owners though she had a mail contract.
The Oregon, built and owned by Ben
Simpson & Co., in 1852, was a side-wheel
boat of good size, but proved very poor
property.
The Shoalwater, built by the owners
of the Canemah, in 1852-3, as a
low-water boat, commanded by Captain Lem
White, the pioneer captain upon the upper
Columbia, proved to be a failures. She
changed her name several times, was the
Phoenix, Franklin, and Minnie Holmes.
Her had hick followed her under every alias.
In the spring of 1854, she collapsed a flue
near Rock Island while stopping at a
landing. None were killed, but several were
more or less seriously injured and all badly
scared. H. N. V. Holmes, a prominent
resident of Polk county, was badly injured,
but jumped overboard and swam across the
river to the eastern shore before he knew
that he was hurt.
Next was the Willamette, also built
by the owners of the Canemah, in
1853. She was a large and expensive boat of
the Mississippi style; run above the falls
until July, 1854, when she was taken below,
and in the fall of the same year was sold
and taken to California. She proved a
failure everywhere and came near breaking
her owners. The current seemed to be against
her whether she ran up or down stream.
In the summer of 1853 a company of
California capitalists bought the land and
built a basin and warehouse on the west side
of the Willamette at the falls, near where
the canal and locks now are. Their first
boat was burned on the stocks October 6,
1853. The second was the ill-fated
Gazelle, a large and beautiful
side-wheel steamer. She made her first trip
on the 18th of March, 1854. On the 5th of
April, 1854, when lying at Canemah, her
boiler exploded, causing great loss of
lives. Over twenty persons were killed
outright, and as many wounded, three or four
of whom died shortly afterwards. The Rev. J.
P. Miller, a Presbyterian minister, of
Albany, in this State, the father of Mrs.
Judge Wilson, now a widow and postmaster at
The Dalles (postmistress is not known under
the post-office laws); Mrs. Kelly, wife of
Col. Kelly, late U. S. Senator from this
State, now resident of Portland, and Mrs.
Grover, the wife of Gen. Cuvier Grover. Many
other valuable citizens of Oregon were among
the killed. The wreck was bought by Captains
R. Hoyt, William Wells and A. S. Murray,
taken down over the falls on the 11th day of
August, 1855, and converted into the
Senorita, of which I have before spoken.
The warehouse company afterwards built the
Oregon, which was sunk and proved a
total loss. The property passed into other
hands; the buildings were afterwards burned,
and all was swept away in the flood of
December, 1861.
The first stern-wheeler upon the upper
Willamette was the Enterprise, built
in the fall of 1855, by Archibald Jamison (a
brother of the one lost on the Portland
when she went over the falls, in March,
1854), Captain A. S. Murray, Armory
Holbrook, John Torrance and others. She was
115 feet in length, fifteen feet in width,
and had neat cabin appointments. She run on
the upper river under Captain Jamison-the
first really successful boat on that part of
the river-and after some years' service was
sold to Captain Tom Wright, son of
Commodore, better known as " Bully " Wright,
of San Francisco, who took her to Frazier
river on the breaking out of the mines
there, where she finished her course; as I
now recollect, she was blown up.
In 1856 Captains Cochrane, Gibson, Cassidy
and others built the James Clinton,
afterwards called the Surprise. She
was in her day the largest and best
stern-wheeler upon the Willamette.
The Success, built at a later period
by Captain Baughman, belied her name, and
had a short and unprofitable career.
There were other steamboats during this time
and afterwards upon that portion of the
river which time forbids me to name. What I
have already stated is sufficient to give a
general idea of the growth of navigation up
to the time when corporations commenced
their operation. These boats that I have
named, and others built and owned by private
individuals, held the field until 1862-3,
when the People's Transportation Company, a
corporation under the general incorporation
law of Oregon, entered upon its career. They
built the canal, basin and warehouse on the
east side of the river, and carried on a
profitable trade between Portland and the
various points up the river, finally selling
out to Ben Holladay, who, with his railroad
and river steamboats, then held command of
the trade of the entire Willamette Valley.
An account of the internal commerce of
Oregon would be incomplete without a history
of the origin and growth of the Oregon Steam
Navigation Company. I shall speak of it
historically only, how it originated and
what it has accomplished Whether its
influence has been good 'or bad, whether, on
the whole, it has been or is likely to be
detrimental to the true interests of our
people, are questions that are not to be
discussed here. Time will only permit me to
give a brief sketch of the prominent points
in its history. It is an Oregon institution,
established by Oregon men who made their
start in Oregon. Its beginnings were small,
but it has grown to great importance under
the control of the men who originated it.