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  2. Great Lakes passenger steamers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Lakes_passenger_steamers

    As early as 1844, palace steamers carried passengers and cargo around the Great Lakes. By 1900, fleets of relatively luxurious passenger steamers plied the waters of the lower lakes, especially the major industrial centres of Chicago, Milwaukee, Detroit, Cleveland, Buffalo, and Toronto.

  3. SS Coya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Coya

    Increasing traffic had outstripped their cargo and passenger capacities so the Peruvian Corporation, a UK-owned company that had taken over Peru's railways and lake shipping in 1890, ordered a much larger ship to supplement them. [2] Coya, at 546 tons and 170 feet (52 m) long, was the largest steamship on Lake Titicaca when she was launched in ...

  4. History of steamship lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_steamship_lines

    The shipping company is an outcome of the development of the steamship. In former days, when the packet ship was the mode of conveyance, combinations, such as the well-known Dramatic and Black Ball lines, existed but the ships which they ran were not necessarily owned by the organizers of the services. The advent of the steamship changed all ...

  5. SS Ollanta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Ollanta

    Her four oil-fired steam engines gave her a top speed of 14.5 knots (26.9 km/h; 16.7 mph). [2] She was the Peruvian Corporation's most luxurious steamer on the lake [2] and the culmination of nearly 70 years' development of Titicaca steamers since the building of Yavari started in 1862.

  6. SS Inca - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Inca

    SS Inca was a steamship on Lake Titicaca in Peru. History. The Peruvian Corporation, a UK-owned company, had controlled Peru's railways and lake shipping since 1890.

  7. Pacific Mail Steamship Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Mail_Steamship_Company

    Later sold to the Japanese Oriental Steam Ship Co. She was scrapped in 1926. SS Peru (1892) (1892-1915) A 3,615 GRT steamship built by Union Iron Works, San Francisco, for Pacific Mail launched June 11, 1892. Peru, official number 150595, was the largest steel freight and passenger ship ever built on the Pacific coast at the time.

  8. Pacific Steam Navigation Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Steam_Navigation...

    House flag used by Pacific Steam Navigation Company. The company was founded by William Wheelwright in London in 1838 and began operations in 1840 when two steam ships Chile and Peru were commissioned to carry mail. [3] [4] Early ports of call were Valparaíso, Coquimbo, Huasco, Copiapó, Cobija, Iquique, Arica, Islay, Pisco and Callao.

  9. Ticonderoga (steamboat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticonderoga_(steamboat)

    Ticonderoga is a museum ship and one of just two [a] remaining sidewheel passenger steamers with an intact walking beam engine of the type that powered countless thousands of American freight and passenger vessels on America's bays, lakes and rivers for more than a century.