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Far West (steamship)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

History
United States
NameFar West
Launched1870
FateWrecked, October 1883
General characteristics
TypeStern-wheel paddle steamer
Length190 ft (58 m)
Beam33 ft (10 m)
Draft30 in (760 mm) (fully laden)
Decks3
Propulsion
  • 2 × Herbertson Engine Works steam engines
  • 3 × boilers
  • Stern paddlewheel
Capacity200 tons of freight & 30 passengers

Far West was a shallow draft sternwheel steamboat (or riverboat) plying the upper Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers in the Dakota and Montana Territories, in the years from 1870 to 1883. By being involved in historic events in the Indian Wars of the western frontier, the Far West became an iconic symbol of the shallow draft steamboat plying the upper Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers in the era before railroads dominated transport in these areas.

The Far West was light, strong and speedy.[1] She was initially owned by the Coulson Packet Line who contracted with the Army in the 1870s to provide steamboats to support Army expeditions on the Yellowstone River in the Montana Territory. The Far West was used in this capacity, along with its sister riverboat the Josephine. The Far West was often piloted by the famous river boat captain and pilot, Grant Marsh. The Far West was known as a fast boat because she had powerful engines, a hull with limited water resistance, and a low profile that reduced wind resistance. She set a number of speed records for both upstream and downstream travel on the Missouri and the Yellowstone.

A number of authors write that by virtue of her shallow draft and her ability to "grasshopper" over sand bars (using spars and steam capstans on the front of the boat to lift the boat and swing it forward a few feet at a time) she was famous for being able to get through shallow channels and low water conditions on the Yellowstone and Missouri Rivers that turned back other steamboats.

This model of the Far West in the Smithsonian Institution shows the long spars at the bow of the boat used for sparring ("grasshoppering") off a sandbar.

However, the length and position of the grasshoppering spars at the bow of the boat suggest that if the spars are to be used as a lever to lift/move the boat, it would be to back the boat off the sandbar, rather than attempt to propel it forward over the bar. If the spar were to be used to lever the boat forward, then it would have to be angled with its top toward the stern of the boat and lines attached to the top of it pulling that end of the spar forward. Since the fulcrum of the spar is at the bow of the boat, that means that line would have to be pulling from somewhere well forward of the boat (such as a tree or an anchor). Anchors used at the time are described as not having much holding power in sandbars and the likelihood of a suitable tree being close enough to be of use seems low. Pilot George Byron Merrick described his experience "sparring off" sandbars in 1854-1863, and Captain Basil Hall described using a spar to get off a sandbar in 1828. They describe canting the spar with its top forward, rather than toward the stern. Merrick describes placing a block (pulley) at the stern of the boat to haul on the line to the spar. This would indicate that in most cases, grasshoppering was used to back the boat off the bar, rather than go forward over it. That would also avoid the risk of moving the boat forward but then getting the center of the boat stuck on the bar.[2][3]

Far West gained a place in military and steamboat history during the Great Sioux War of 1876. The Far West was under contract to support a military column of infantry and cavalry units under General Alfred Terry, Colonel John Gibbon and Lt. Colonel George Armstrong Custer. The column was advancing up the Yellowstone, seeking a large Sioux and Cheyenne encampment which was moving along the river drainages to the south. The Far West brought supplies to the column, and it was used by Terry as a headquarters and also to ferry and move troops on the river. On June 21, the Far West was moored on the Yellowstone at the mouth of Rosebud Creek and was the site of the fateful meeting of officers after which Custer and the 7th Cavalry was dispatched south up the Rosebud seeking the Indian encampment. On June 25, 1876, the 7th Cavalry under Custer suffered a disastrous defeat at the Battle of the Little Bighorn . Five of the companies of the 7th were annihilated along with Custer, and the remaining companies suffering significant numbers of dead and wounded. Far West made her way from the Yellowstone up the Bighorn River to the mouth of the Little Bighorn where she was loaded with the wounded from the battle. Traveling night and day, she returned downriver to Bismarck, Dakota Territory, making the 710 mi (1,140 km) run in the record time of 54 hours and bringing the first news of the military defeat which came to be popularly known as the "Custer Massacre".

After 1876 Far West was sold by the Coulson Packet Line. She continued to work on the Yellowstone and the Missouri Rivers for other owners until 1883 when she struck a snag and sank, near St. Charles, Missouri.

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Steamboats On The Red
  • Development of Transportation 1931 ERPI - Encyclopaedia Britannica Films
  • The Civil War 1954 Encyclopaedia Britannica Films; War Between the States

Transcription

[banjo & guitar play; steam whistle blows] [steam whistle blows] (woman) Steamboat around the bend, It's the steamboat on the Red. Whistle on ahead, Got a steamboat on the Red, Red River. Steamboat on the Red, Red River, Steamboat on the Red, Red River. (woman) Production funding is provided by: the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, with money from the vote of the people of Minnesota on Nov. 4, 2008; the North Dakota Humanities Council, a nonprofit, independent state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities; The Winnipeg Foundation; and the members of Prairie Public. [fiddle, bass, & guitar play] (male narrator) Looking at the Red River, as it twists and turns its way north across the prairie to Lake Winnipeg, it's hard to imagine that from 1859 to 1909 it carried millions of tons of goods and thousands of passengers on massive paddle-wheel steamboats. Just the idea of these big 120- 130-foot-long steamboats, big building-sized vessels plying the little tiny stream that we have here--it just amazes people! It's an interesting river; it's like a lot of prairie rivers, it's meandering and shallow and very, very turbid. The Red River water is often just sort of slightly liquefied mud. (narrator) So what would drive hardheaded 19th-century businessmen to try to make this winding, twisty, shallow river into a superhighway? [cash register rings] Money! Until 1858, the Hudson's Bay Company received and sent all of their fur trade goods and their furs, back and forth across the North Atlantic from England by sailing vessels. It was a long, expensive, and dangerous road. Storms were a constant threat in the North Atlantic, icebergs in Hudson Bay; Hudson Bay is only free of ice for a few months out of the year-- a small window of opportunity to their materials in and out. But the Hudson's Bay Company had been watching these Metis people up at the forks for decades had been trading with St. Paul traders, and they said well, we can try that. (narrator) With an eye on the bottom line, Hudson's Bay Company governor, Sir George Simpson brought a test shipment from England using the Minnesota route. The shipment came into New York and traveled by railroad and steamboat to St. Paul, where it was loaded onto Red River oxcarts. The oxcarts then made the trek across open prairie to Fort Garry. Instead of a year, it took only 6 months and was a fraction of the cost. But although the Minnesota route was faster and easier, it was no walk in the park. To get there you went through miles by miles by miles of tall prairie grass, and it was definitely a frontier. It had not been drained; much of it was much muddier and boggier than it is now. The main barrier was getting through the mudholes. (narrator) But even with the primitive condition of the oxcart trails, trade between St. Paul and Hudson's Bay Company began to flourish. But both were always on the lookout for a way to decrease their costs and increase their profits. If you are going to move freight, or for that matter, if you're going to move people, the cheapest, fastest way of doing it is by water. (Don Lilleboe) In 1858, the St. Paul merchants commissioned a fellow to make a survey of the Red River Valley and the river specifically to evaluate whether it was feasible to place steam navigation on the river. There were no railroads close to the Red River at that time, and they just saw it as a means of conveying a lot more goods up to what is now Manitoba, then could be accomplished via the oxcart. It was an opportunity that they felt they wanted to investigate. And the fellow who did the survey came back and said yes, I think you can run steamboats for 3 or 4 months a year, and it can be a feasible thing. (Dr. William Lass) So after Blakeley's reconnaissance, then you have the nice little problem of how do you get a steamboat to the Red River? (narrator) The St. Paul Chamber of Commerce offered a prize of $1000 to the first person to launch an operating steamboat on the Red. That's about $26,000 today. No takers--finally, one enterprising businessman proposed a bold plan to claim the prize. A guy named Anson Northrup had a little boat called the "North Star" on the upper Mississippi River north of what's now Brainerd, and during that winter, he disassembled his boat at Crow Wing, loaded it onto a sledge and he used about 40 brace of oxen. (narrator) Unfortunately for Northrup, the winter of 1859 was extremely harsh. [acoustic guitar plays softly] As the party reached the halfway point, conditions got even worse. Bitter temperatures, blizzards, and deep snowdrifts took their toll. One by one, the animals pulling the disassembled steamboat across the open prairie, began to die of overwork and starvation, forcing him to leave behind parts of the boat all along the route. At last, on April 1st, exhausted and near starvation, with only 7 oxen left, Northrup and his team reached the Red River, pulling only the boiler behind him. After recuperating their strength, Northrup put his crew to work building a hull, while the oxteams went back to retrieve the rest of the engine. When word reached St. Paul, anticipation mounted. (man) The sound of the blacksmith's hammer and the caulking iron is heard where one year ago the buffalo were seen in large numbers. And another chain in the link of interoceanic navigation will soon be welded. The enterprise is now in the hands of men who know no such words as fail, and it will inaugurate a new era in the commercial history of this nation, and the prosperity of this state. And the enterprising citizens of Minnesota will be the first to reap the benefits! (narrator) At 10:45 a.m. on May 16, 1859, the steamboat "Anson Northrup," christened with the name of its owner, slid into the muddy waters of the Red River 10 miles north of present day Moorhead. [fife & drum play "Yankee Doodle Dandy"] He slid it into the river and took it up to Winnipeg essentially to Fort Garry, turned around, came back to Fort Abercrombie and tried for a while to almost extort a lot of money from people to ship stuff on the boat. They just said nuts, we can continue using the Red River carts. So he abandoned the boat basically, went down to St. Paul, got his cash reward. Simpson came by at that point, on his way from Fort Garry through St. Paul, spotted it and saw dollar signs hanging above it. (narrator) Because U.S. law prohibited foreign ownership of riverboats, Simpson used one of Hudson's Bay Company's St. Paul agents to buy the "Anson Northrup." Now the company had a monopoly on the import of trade goods, as well as export of furs. But even though local merchants grumbled about high prices, crowds cheered the first steamboat to reach Winnipeg. When the Anson Northrup came in 1859, it really revolutionized the economy. It brought them goods that they hadn't been used to. In fact, the newspapers of the year just proclaimed it as finally we have a link to the outside world. (narrator) But not all residents were enthusiastic about the advent of the steamboat trade. The reaction of Indians traditionally, according to international law, if you were foreigners and you were traversing their land, you gave gifts, you made arrangements, there was a protocol for allowing it. Certainly the Chippewa would not have objected to a boat or two, but the fact that the Americans just assumed they had the right to do it, regardless of the Indians, did not sit well with them. The Chippewa decided that they were going to enforce their own protocol on these people who had no manners. There were incidents with the steamboats themselves, where the Chippewa boarded a steamboat and said okay, pay us or you can't go any further. So the steamboat captain I think paid them $300 or something and they allowed him to proceed. But Americans again, tended to see this kind of thing not as defending one's own land, but as theft, as pirates, as depredations in the language of the 19th century. So it wasn't a good deal. (narrator) In 1863, former fur trader and St. Paul businessman Norman Kittson, helped negotiate a treaty that bought the Red River Valley from the Chippewa, opening the way for unimpeded use of the river by steamboats. Not too surprisingly, Kittson became Hudson's Bay Company's new American partner. What the river provided you, the river promised you was the cheapest transportation you could find. This is not to say that it was perfect. The joys of steamboating on the Red River, they were very small steamboats, they frequently sunk, they frequently got stuck, and when you had floods, you didn't know where the river was. You just paddled across the prairie. It was a very adventuresome thing, but steamboating was not really very feasible on the river, but compared to dragging carts through the mud, it looked pretty good. The boats themselves of course, were designed specifically for travel in shallow waters. They were all designed for a very shallow draft. Most of those steamboats could operate in only 3 or 4 feet of water, and as for their size, well, yes, it does pose problems, and I know they would often have sort of jacking equipment that they would use if they tried to do a corner and they maybe ran aground and they would have these poles that they would use to kind of push themselves up and over. So it was just an ongoing operational hazard. There was a survey done of the Red River in the 1870s, and they found it at the railroad bridge in Moorhead, the Northern Pacific railroad bridge, the river was 140-feet wide, that's about what it is today. One of the steamboats, the "International," the biggest steamboat to run regularly around this part of the Red, was 137 feet long. So if you want to turn this thing around at Moorhead, you've only got a foot or two on either end of the boat to do it. In the 1860's the steamboat was driven at one point upstream to Fort Abercrombie and they found that the river was so narrow there, that they couldn't turn it around. They had to put it into reverse and back it up all the way to where the Wild Rice River comes in before they found a spot wide enough in the river to turn it about. I understand there were places where the riverbank had to be dug out in order to let the "International" negotiate some of these sharp bends; it's a real serious problem. (narrator) Despite the difficulties navigating the Red, by 1870 more boats were built, and the open prairie began to see small settlements spring up with wharves, depots, customs houses and boatyards. Steamboats brought workers, then settlers, then merchants. And the once-empty river banks began to bustle in places like Emerson, Grand Forks, and Moorhead. Emerson was the first city when you cross the border where goods have to clear customs coming into the country. There was at least 8 to 10 steamboats of different companies that were transporting goods back and forth. We became a rather Dodge City, you might say. It definitely brought a lot of people in. It was sort of the roaring 1800's, you might say. Things were changing quickly, and Emerson was right in there (narrator) It did not escape the notice of Winnipeg and St. Paul merchants that Kittson and the Hudson's Bay Company had a stranglehold on the steamboat trade. In 1870, Kittson's former protege, James J. Hill, launched a competing steamboat line. James J. Hill had an infallible instinct for monopoly. That was a great deal of his success as a robber baron. He made an arrangement with the U.S. government that his operation would be the only one allowed to carry goods in without going through customs. (narrator) Hill's customs monopoly meant Hudson's Bay Company couldn't bring their own goods across the border on their own steamboats. (Dr. Rhoda Gilman) It was one year of competition, but Hill and Kittson who knew each other, of course, they were both strong St. Paul businessmen, got together. And Kittson joined Hill as his partner in the steamboat trade. Through a secret agreement, Kittson became the head of the company that was established, and that was the Red River Transportation Company. And Hill stayed behind the scenes. Donald Smith, who was the representative of the Hudson's Bay Company, actually was the major shareholder in the Red River Transportation Company. And what that allowed the Hudson's Bay Company to have was a monopoly; you had to think of them as being pirates. I mean, that's how they got ahead. They're interest was their own interest and anything to make a profit. (narrator) In 1874, Winnipeg businessmen banded together to challenge the monopoly by establishing The Merchants International Steamboat Line. In the new boatyard in Moorhead, two ships took shape, the aptly named "Manitoba" and her sister ship, the "Minnesota." For perhaps the first time, the Red River would see what true competition could bring. On its maiden voyage, the "Manitoba" was plagued by troubles. Suspicious fires, customs delay, vanishing cargo, and all fingers pointed to Kittson. Finally, when it got underway, they were able to get to Winnipeg on May 14th, 1875. There was a banner on it that said, "We've got him," referring to Kittson, of course, 'cause they thought they had broken the monopoly. What they didn't sort of count on was what Kittson would do next, or allegedly do next. On the return journey, they got as far as a place called Le Mays Mill. And there, the "International," which was a Kittson steamboat, refused to cede ground; the "International" captain managed to ram the "Manitoba" with his steamboat, and that literally sank it. All these manipulations by Kittson resulted in, they couldn't deliver their freights. There was a lawsuit launched against them by businessmen from Minneapolis and from St. Paul, and from, believe it or not, New York City, which made the court seize the "Manitoba." The same thing happened to the "Minnesota," which again, was seized. The merchants line tried to negotiate with Kittson. They came up with an agreement with him, but what happened was, Kittson again had a monopoly because he basically gained the steamboats for a pittance as to their value. So that was the end of it; the great dream of having competition on the Red River ended very abruptly. Despite the lack of competition, steamboating flourished. In 1876, Kittson bragged that he shipped more 76 million pounds of freight on the Red River between Fargo and Winnipeg. More than on the Mississippi between St. Paul and St. Louis. The 1870's were really the decade of prosperity for steamboating on the Red River, and what was going on, by 1870 Manitoba was formed as a province, the railroad was inching across Minnesota, and by 1871, it had reached the banks of the Red River. And this whole area changed tremendously during that period. (narrator) As steamboats became more common, they did not become more comfortable for their passengers. It sounds very romantic and Mark Twainish and stuff, but apparently, it was not a lot of fun to be on. Mosquitos would come out in clouds, people were sleeping outside and the boat shakes because the big paddle really vibrates the boats. It was not a pleasant ride, it was overcrowded, expensive for those days, but you didn't have a choice. You either went overland, it took weeks or months, or you took a riverboat, it took you days. (narrator) Despite the reality of riverboat travel, steamboats took on a dashing air. They were seen as colorful and romantic, and it became fashionable to be aboard. Upper class tourists became a new clientele. One such traveler was Lady Dufferin, wife of the Governor General of Western Canada. Although at first charmed by the gaiety, decorated boats and effusive welcoming ceremonies, she was less impressed after the boat pulled away from the dock. (woman, as Lady Dufferin) "Imagine sailing through hundreds of small ponds all joined together, the second concealed by the curve of the first, and you may form some idea of the Red River. We run against one bank, a steam is shut off, and in some mysterious manner, we swinground till our bow is into the other, then we rebound, and go on a few yards till a sharp curve, brings us up against the side. Our stern wheel is often ashore, and our captain and pilot must require the patience of saints." [acoustic guitar plays in bright rhythm] The river was so shallow in places that there's no way a vessel fully loaded would get down that river. I know you hear reports of they would occasionally have to just get off the boat because they can make it light enough that it would float and it would become sort of an operational, okay, everybody off, everybody back on, get going. Then, a little while later, okay, everybody off again. (narrator) The steamboats that plied the Red were not designed for comfort, but for capacity. 'Cause it was all about commerce, the tonnage, is what was crucial. Remember, you're talking about a hundred tons of freight, and there's a going rate for freight in 1870s of $2 per mile a ton, first class from St. Paul to Winnipeg. It's all about moving goods. (narrator) For $2 per ton per mile, the boats were crammed with cargo of all kinds, including imported goods, food, farm implements, wagons, horses, sheep, and cows, and as many passengers as possible. During one memorable trip, the captain of a boat loaded with Mennonite immigrants, recorded 7 births in a single day! People really became attached to the steamboats. When the boats tied up, people would come running down to the shore to see what kind of immigrants are coming, and what kind of freight's being offloaded and who was going on for the next trip. In Winnipeg when the boats landed, they had to have special police to keep back the crowds until the boat could be unloaded and all the passengers disembarked, and the people getting on their way. So it was the thing . In the fall, when the last one left, apparently people sighed a big sigh of regret and the steamboats are gone for another year, even though they were not very happy with the owners of the steamboats who were gouging them in every corner, they still loved the steamboats. (narrator) As settlement grew and railroads extended to the Red, buffalo robes and furs were displaced by a new cargo headed to the Twin Cities. Hard number one spring wheat. Beginning in the late '80s, early '90s, you'll see images of elevators along the Red River. That's because the Red River and the riverboats were a crucial portion of the grain industry. The farmer would harvest his grain, haul it in a wagon to the elevator to be offloaded from the elevator onto the riverboat, and there the grain would be taken to a major shipping point like Fargo, North Dakota, where it'd be offloaded onto a railroad car, then be taken to a mill. The thing was to try and get the best price for your wheat. Those boats were crucial to agriculture in the Red River Valley. In 1878, a Twin Cities based railroad and a branch of the Canadian Pacific met in Pembina. So you have a rail link established between the Twin Cities and Winnipeg. And that's a great turning point in the history of Red River navigation. Our first train in Western Canada, the "Countess of Dufferin," they brought the steam train up on a barge, being pulled by one of these steamboats up from Fargo to Winnipeg. So that was the first train in Western Canada and they fired up the train in Pembina, so that they could blow the whistle on the train as it cleared the border at Emerson. (narrator) Ironically, that whistle sounded the eventual death knell for the steamboat trade. In 1909, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the maiden voyage of the "Anson Northrup," the Red River Transportation Company planned one final cruise for its flagship the "Grand Forks," which they hoped would revive the failing steamboat industry. (Wayne Arseny) The steamboat stopped in Emerson that last time. The mayor and the town came out with the band and had the captain and everybody for dinner, and had quite a celebration. When the boat arrived in Winnipeg, it was no to-do affair at all and barely made the news. (narrator) On its return, the Grand Forks ran into a bridge piling in Grand Forks and sunk, the last of the great Red River steamboats. But for its owners, the end of the steamboat era was not the end of the world. So you have a stereotypical image of a crusty steamboat captain who can't do anything else. When steamboating ends, he's sort of reduced to nostalgic memories. The rest of his life is ruined; it's a complete misrepresentation of what these people were like. Steamboat people were not solely speaking "steamboat people." The steamboat people were businessmen. This is James J. Hill, this is Norman Kittson, but what they're really doing is providing a unified transportation system and if it entailed a combination of railroads and steamboats, fine. If you reach the point where railroads can do it and you no longer need steamboats, they're not going to stay awake at night crying about it. They've made their money. [cash register bell rings] [5-string banjo & guitar play softly] I think when we put Red River steamboating in perspective, the entire history of transportation in Red River Valley, it's not a huge chapter, but it's an important chapter. They were the transitional cog between the oxcarts and the railroads. Once the railroads came in, that spelled the end of steamboats on the Red River, but they served an important purpose at a time when the Valley was just really opening up to commerce and settlement. And at the core of it all, of course, is this twisting, winding river that we have here. (woman) Winnipeg unloads, old tables, printing presses, Flour, paper, plows, Fancy dresses, Whistles screech, paddles ping, Time to fill the hold, Boat returns from Moorhead with furs and buffalo robes. Place your bets on the first spring day, The steamboats on the Red, Steamboat round the bend, it's a steamboat on the Red, Whistle on ahead, Got a steamboat on the Red, Red River. Steamboat round the bend, it's a steamboat on the Red, Whistle on ahead, got a steamboat... (woman) To order a DVD copy of this program call... Or visit our online store at... ...and click on "shop." Production funding is provided by: the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, with money from the vote of the people of Minnesota on Nov. 4th, 2008; The North Dakota Humanities Council, a nonprofit independent state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities; The Winnipeg Foundation; and the members of Prairie Public.

Construction and specifications

The Far West was built in Pittsburgh in 1870 for the Coulson Packet Company. The Far West was 190 ft (58 m) long with a beam of 33 ft (10 m) and had three decks, a cupola like pilot house and two tall smoke stacks.[1][4]: 27–8  She drew only 20 in (51 cm) of water unloaded and 30 in (76 cm) fully loaded with 200 tons of freight.[4] Between her first and second decks were two powerful high-pressure steam engines built by Herbertson Engine Works of Brownsville, Pennsylvania, each with 15-inch-diameter (38 cm) pistons and a 5 ft (1.5 m) stroke. The engines were powered by steam from three boilers that consumed as many as 30 cords of wood a day.[1][4] The engines drove a single 30-foot-wide (9.1 m) stern wheel. The Far West also had two steam capstans, one on each side of the bow, being the first boat built with more than one.[1]

Description of decks

The steamboat rested in the water on its hull. The hull of the boat was hollow and was used to store cargo. Cargo was often contained in casks or barrels. This storage could only be reached through hatches on the deck, and men working in the hull to store or move cargo could not stand up, but had to work while hunched over or crawling through the hull space.

The platform that closed the top of the hull was the main deck, and the name applied not only to the floor of this space, but also the space between the main deck and the cabin deck, just above the main deck. The main deck had the boilers and the two steam engines which powered the paddle wheel at the rear of the boat. Wood for the boilers was stacked on the main deck. Freight was carried on the main deck. The cheapest passenger accommodations were on the main deck, but the passengers had to find their own space.

Above the main deck on the Far West was the cabin deck. Each side of the boat had a row of small cabins with doors that opened to the outside where there was a covered walkway. Inside the two rows of cabins and between them there was a central cabin — like a long wide hallway running from the front of the boat to the back. Here there was a long table where the cabin passengers and the ships officers were fed, and where they could spend leisure time.

Above the main deck was its roof, known as the hurricane deck, because it was unprotected from the elements. The Far West had no structures on this deck, other than the pilot house. On the Far West the hurricane deck had no cabins, and no "Texas deck" structures.

The pilot house was a cupola like box, with glass-paned windows on all four sides, that perched on the hurricane deck. From this vantage point the river pilot (who has often the captain, in a smaller steamship like the "Far West") guided the boat, while also regulating the power applied to the paddle wheel. The pilot guided the boat using a large spoked wheel, which was connected by a series of ropes or chains to the rudders at the rear of the boat. The pilot also regulated the power applied to the stern paddle wheel, using a voice tube to talk to the engineer, telling him when and in what amount to provide steam to power the stern wheel, and when to stop or reverse the paddle wheel.

Two tall smoke stacks towered above the forward part of the hurricane deck and the 'scape pipes were in the rear, venting steam from the engines.

Capabilities

The Far West was neither graceful nor grand in appearance, but she was strong, powerful, fast, durable and had an enormous capacity for hard work. She had limited accommodation for passengers on her second deck, and consequently she did not have a large central cabin. The absence of these features meant that she had a lower profile, and no "Texas" deck, which resulted in her having less wind resistance and therefore being both faster and more manageable in the high winds that prevailed in Montana and North Dakota during the summer months. She possessed ample freight carrying capacity, and she had a shallow draft.[1]

Her powerful engines and three boilers combined with her other features to make her not only a speedy boat, but also a boat that was able to traverse shallow channels, cross sand bars, breast strong currents and go up through rapids.

A unique feature of light river steamboats like the Far West was their ability to "grasshopper" to get across shallow sand bars to reach a deeper river channel beyond the sand bar. In this "grasshopper" maneuver, the boat used spars and steam capstans on the front of the boat to lift and swing the front of the boat onto the sand bar, moving forward a few feet at a time. Once the front of the boat was on the sandbar, when the boat was lifted the current would help dislodge loose sediment under the boat, and often the paddle wheel would be accelerated to generate a current in the water under the boat that would also pull the loose sandbar sediment from under the boat. This process was intended to create enough draft or flotation in the water, so the steamboat could then move forward into the deeper channel beyond the sand bar.

Ownership

Far West was first owned by the Coulson Packet Line which was also known as the Missouri River Transportation Company.[5] The Coulson Packet line sold the Far West to the Northwest Transportation Co. called the Peck Line out of Sioux City/Yankton, ND. The boat was later sold to Capt. Henry M. Dodds and Victor Bonnet.[6]

Early use

In 1870 the Far West made trips to and from Fort Benton, Montana, which was the upper terminus of river travel on the Missouri. In 1872 the Far West made the quickest trip on record from Sioux City, Iowa, to Fort Benton, Montana – seventeen days, twenty hours – with Mark Coulson as master.[7]

Activities during the Great Sioux War of 1876

In 1876, the Far West was contracted by the United States Army to be part of the Custer/Terry military expedition against the Sioux Indians. The Far West was used to ferry supplies from the rail head at Bismarck up the Missouri to the Montana Territory, and then up the Yellowstone River where the military column was seeking the villages of the Sioux.[8]

The military column led by General Terry and Custer's 7th Cavalry traveled westward over the prairies from Fort Lincoln, Dakota Territory to the Yellowstone River. The Far West, captained by Grant Marsh, brought supplies up the Missouri and Yellowstone river and met the military column at the mouth of Powder River in Montana Territory, near present-day Terry, Montana. General Terry then used the Far West as the expedition's headquarters. On June 21, 1876, at the mouth of the Rosebud a meeting was held on the Far West which mapped out the next steps in the campaign to attempt to find the Sioux/Cheyenne village in the valleys of the Rosebud or the Little Bighorn.

The next day, Custer and the 7th Cavalry rode up Rosebud Creek seeking the Indian villages. Far West was ordered to proceed up the Yellowstone to the Big Horn and then up the Big Horn to the mouth of the Little Big Horn River so that supplies would be close to the area of expected troop activities. On June 25, Custer encountered the Sioux/Cheyenne village on the Little Bighorn river and suffered a disastrous defeat. Unaware of this defeat, Grant Marsh had the "Far West" on station at the mouth of the Little Big Horn on 26 June. While tied along the bank, Curley a Crow scout who had been with Custer, emerged from the willows on the riverbank and came on board and by drawings and signs indicated that Custer had been "wiped out".[4]: 295  After General Terry learned of the battle he ordered the Far West to stand by to receive the wounded. On June 29 set about preparing the Far West to become a hospital ship.[4]: 282  Captain Marsh ordered grass cut and placed on the decks, and covered with canvas tarpaulins for the wounded, which soon began to arrive from the battle site which was only about 15 mi (24 km) distant. On June 30, 1876, 52 wounded were on board. Casting off from the mouth of the Little Big Horn, Captain Marsh descended 53 mi (85 km) to the column's base camp on the north bank of the Yellowstone River.

The Far West spent the next two days ferrying troops across the Yellowstone and taking on a heavy load of wood to power the two engines.[9] Stacks of cordwood and grain sacks were positioned along the gunwales to protect the wounded from possible Indian attack. Sheets of boiler iron were placed around the pilot house. At 5 p.m. on July 3 Terry ordered the Far West to take the wounded to Bismarck 710 mi (1,140 km)river miles away. Piloted by Grant Marsh and under a full head of steam the "Far West" proceeded down the Yellowstone and then down the Missouri. With only brief stops the Far West arrived at Bismarck in at 11 p.m. on 5 July,[4] after an amazing downriver run of 710 miles in 54 hours which set a record for riverboat travel. Along the way only one trooper died, Private William George and the "Far West" stopped briefly at 4 a.m. on July 4 at "Terry's Landing" at the mouth of the Powder River where Pvt. George's remains was hastily put ashore, (to be buried by the detachment located there) while the "Far West" proceeded on down-river.[10] The "Far West" brought the first news of the Custer disaster, which was promptly put on the telegraph at Bismarck, and received in the east in the afternoon of 6 July, during weekend celebrations of the July 4th, 1876 centennial birthday of the United States. Only 9 days later, Captain Marsh and the Far West steamed back up river with horses and supplies for the Terry column.

Far West after 1876

The Far West continued to carry freight and passengers on the upper Missouri and Yellowstone, and she continued to set records. In 1881, the Missouri River was so high that the arrival of river boats coming up river was delayed. The Far West was the first boat to reach Fort Benton that year. However, due to the high water it did not arrive until May 19.[11]

1883 sinking

In October 1883 the Far West hit a snag on the Missouri River, near St. Charles, Missouri, and was lost.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Hanson, Joseph Mills (1909). The Conquest of the Missouri, Being the Story of the Life and Exploits of Captain Grant Marsh. Chicago: A. C. McClurg & Co. p. Chapter XXXI, p. 237 et. seq.
  2. ^ Merrick, George Byron. Old Times on the Upper Mississippi: Recollections of a Steamboat Pilot from 1854 to 1863, pp. 74-7, Minnesota Historical Society Press, St. Paul, Minnesota, 1987. ISBN 0-87351-204-9.
  3. ^ Hunter, Louis C. Steamboats on the Western Rivers: An Economic and Technological History, pp. 254-6, Octagon Books, New York, New York, 1969.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Philbrick, Nathaniel (2010). The Last Stand. New York, NY: Viking (Penguin Group). ISBN 978-0-670-02172-7.
  5. ^ "Riverboat Dave's Riverboat Companies and Owners, Names Starting with M." Riverboat Dave. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
  6. ^ Olson, Tristan. "History of the Farwest". University of Mary. Archived from the original on 28 February 2014. Retrieved 22 February 2014.
  7. ^ History of Montana 1739-1885. Chicago, Illinois: Warner, Beers & Company. 1885. p. 396.
  8. ^ "A Steamboat And An Indian War". Western Trips. 23 April 2011. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  9. ^ Thackery, Lorna. "Steamer had key role in historic battle". Billings Gazette. Retrieved 14 June 2013.
  10. ^ Pvt. George's burial site may be visited today on a large empty flat at the mouth of the Powder River. The flat was the bustling Terry's landing where supplies for the Montana column were stacked. The single grave is surrounded by an old-fashioned iron fence, and marked with a standard U.S. Army marble headstone, like those on Last Stand Hill.
  11. ^ Corbin, Annalies (2006). The Life and Times of the Steamer Red Cloud. Corbin, Allalies. p. 86. ISBN 1-58544-484-7.

External links

38°47′05″N 90°28′35″W / 38.7848°N 90.4764°W / 38.7848; -90.4764

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