Unless a letter writing campaign can prevent this, it looks as though Delta Queen may become another hotel like her sister in Sacramento:
The Save the Delta Queen Campaign
335 W. Fifth Street #401 • Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 • Tel: (513) 381-3571 • Email: vjw@olypen.com
www.save-the-delta-queen.org NEWS For immediate release
Date: January 6, 2009
Contact: Vicki Webster (513) 381-3571
Donald E. Clare, Jr. (859) 586-6431
Allen Casey, President, River City Resort (423) 266-0804
Joseph McCarthy, Ambassadors International, Inc. (949) 300-1785; (949) 759-5951
Chattanooga Resort Owner on the Brink of Destroying the Delta Queen CINCINNATI – The Save the Delta Queen Campaign has just learned from a reliable source that Allen Casey, President of the River City Resort in Chattanooga, is attempting to lease the Delta Queen from Ambassadors International, tie her up, and turn her into a hotel.
Of necessity, the process would entail gutting the interior of the National Historic Landmark to enlarge the staterooms, as well as kitchen and sanitation facilities and install elevators and other amenities.
Vicki Webster, leader of the grassroots Save the Delta Queen Campaign, said, “Mr. Casey must be stopped. If he is allowed to go through with his plan it will be an act of pure evil. And Chattanooga will be forever known as the city that killed the Queen. I urge everyone who cares about this riverboat and about our country’s heritage to contact Mr. Casey, the city of Chattanooga, and Ambassadors International and implore them to halt their negotiations immediately.â€
The Delta Queen is the last traditional steamboat carrying overnight passengers on America’s inland waterways. For that reason, she has been designated a National Historic Landmark. In 1966, she was inadvertently caught in the technical provisions of the Safety of Life at Sea Act—a law that was intended to cover ocean-going ships, not riverboats. Recognizing the difference between boats that operate on rivers, within yards of the shore, and ships that sail the high seas, Congress established an exemption for the Delta Queen in 1968. Since then, the exemption has been renewed nine times, in virtually every case by near-unanimous votes in both the House and the Senate. The current exemption expired in November.
Just last Monday, Kentucky preservationist Donald E. Clare, Jr. nominated the Delta Queen for inclusion on the National Trust for Preservation’s 2009 list of America’s 11 Most Endangered Historic Places. The nomination is being enthusiastically seconded by preservationists throughout the country, and the Trust has responded favorably. In 1970, when the Queen was placed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Trust issued this statement:
The Delta Queen is the last survivor of a once thriving fleet of steam paddleboats plying the inland waters of the United States, and deserves to, indeed, must survive as a living reminder of an important era of American history. . . . The loss of the Delta Queen as an operating vessel carrying overnight passengers on the Mississippi and its tributaries would be an irreplaceable one and would remove the last remaining link with the steam-boating tradition of nineteenth and early twentieth century America.