Paddleducks

Paddler Information => Preserved Paddle Ships => Topic started by: Bill Hudson on November 16, 2006, 10:16:34 AM

Title: Alexander Hamilton
Post by: Bill Hudson on November 16, 2006, 10:16:34 AM
Found this on another group I am a member of. Thoughht it might be interesting here.

http://www.practicalmachinist.com/ubb/ultimatebb.php/topic/11/2832.html


Bill
Title: Re: Alexander Hamilton
Post by: rjenkins on November 17, 2006, 02:32:50 AM
Bill, thanks for posting this link.  I hadn't seen photos of the Hamilton's machinery before, such a shame that she wasn't saved.  South Street Seaport in NY had her for a while but they let her go for use as a restaurant.  She was then left to rot in an exposed location in Earle, NJ and sank at her pier in a storm in 1978.  I believe it was the same storm that finished off the other then-surviving Day Line steamer, the screw steamer Peter Stuyvesant, which was serving as a restaurant in Boston.  There was talk some years ago of salvaging the engine from the Hamilton, not sure what became of that.  As far as I know the wreck is still there.

The Hudson Valley may soon echo with a steam whistle once again, as there is a project underway to restore the 1902 Detroit River steamer Columbia and move her to New York.  Although she's a propeller steamer, the Columbia is very similar in design to some of the old Hudson River steamers.  She was designed by Frank E. Kirby, who also produced some notable Hudson River sidewheelers including the Hendrick Hudson and Washington Irving.

Here's a link to the Columbia Project website: http://www.sscolumbia.org/home.html