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  2. Steamboats of the Mississippi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboats_of_the_Mississippi

    Vesuvius was the third Mississippi steamboat. [9] Launched in 1814 at Pittsburgh for the company headed by Robert Livingston and Robert Fulton, her designer, she was very similar to the New Orleans. [10] Enterprise, or Enterprize, was the fourth Mississippi steamboat. [11]

  3. Enterprise (1814) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_(1814)

    The Enterprise was the first steamboat to reach Louisville from New Orleans. [35] Then the Enterprise steamed to Pittsburgh and Brownsville. [2] This voyage, a distance of 2,200 miles (3,500 km) from New Orleans, was performed against the powerful currents of the Mississippi, Ohio and Monongahela rivers.

  4. Cedar River (Iowa River tributary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cedar_River_(Iowa_River...

    The first Mississippi steamboat reached Cedar Rapids, Iowa in 1844, and during the next decade, the Red Cedar (as it was still called) was an important commercial waterway. [4] The surrounding region is known officially as the Cedar River Valley, though it is more commonly referred to simply as the Cedar Valley. The stream is young geologically ...

  5. This historic Mississippi restaurant is changing locations ...

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  6. Anchor Line (riverboat company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anchor_Line_(riverboat...

    Anchor Line steamboat City of New Orleans at New Orleans levee on Mississippi River. View created as composite image from two stereoview photographs, ca. 1890. The Anchor Line was a steamboat company that operated a fleet of boats on the Mississippi River between St. Louis, Missouri, and New Orleans, Louisiana, between 1859 and 1898, when it went out of business.

  7. Brownsville, Pennsylvania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brownsville,_Pennsylvania

    This was followed by its rapid entry into the building of steamboats: local craftsmen built the Enterprise in 1814, the first steamboat powerful enough to travel down the Mississippi River to New Orleans and back. [11] Earlier boats did not have enough power to go upstream against the river's current.

  8. Steamboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steamboat

    The first sea-going steamboat was Richard Wright's first steamboat "Experiment", an ex-French lugger; she steamed from Leeds to Yarmouth, arriving Yarmouth 19 July 1813. [20] "Tug", the first tugboat, was launched by the Woods Brothers, Port Glasgow, on 5 November 1817; in the summer of 1818 she was the first steamboat to travel round the North ...

  9. Mud Island, Memphis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mud_Island,_Memphis

    The Mississippi River Museum was on Mud Island from 1982 to 2019. It included 18 galleries and exhibits and presented the history of the lower Mississippi River Valley over the span of the last 10,000 years. The museum also displayed over 5,000 artifacts. [7] The Mud Island Amphitheater is a concrete outdoor amphitheater that seats up to 5,000 ...

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