Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Olympia 60 18.3 11 1895 A Olympia: side psgr 1869 New York 180 54.9 T-BC Olympian [R 90] 200012 stern psgr 1912 Everett 185 56.4 386 243 1920 T-OR Olympian: 155089 side psgr 1883 Wilmington, DE 262 79.9 1,419 1.083 1906 B [44] Olympian [R 91] 204749 prop tug 1907 Olympia 60 18.3 47 32 1920 C-G Olympian: 155385 prop psgr 1900
Tugboat Annie also features Robert Young and Maureen O'Sullivan as the requisite pair of young lovers. Captain Clarence Howden piloted Annie's tugboat "Narcissus" (real name Wallowa), which was owned by Foss Tug and Barge of Tacoma and had been leased to MGM for the film. Howden's son Richard Howden is seen rolling rope during the credits.
Acme (steamboat) Alaskan (sidewheeler) Albion (steamboat) Alice (1897 tugboat) Alice (sternwheeler) Annie Faxon; Annie M. Pence; Aquilo (steam yacht) Arcadia (steamboat) Atlanta (1908 steamboat) Audrey (tugboat)
Puget Sound and the many adjacent waterways, inlets, and bays form a natural transportation route for much of the western part of Washington. For navigation purposes, Puget Sound was sometimes divided into the "upper Sound" referring to the waters south of the Tacoma Narrows, and the lower sound, referring to the waters from the Tacoma Narrows north to Admiralty Inlet.
Vancouver, WA 154 46.9 382 342 1923 R Georgie Burton: 223042 stern psgr 1923 Portland, Oregon 154 46.9 572 455 1948 W Georgie Oakes: stern psgr 1890 Coeur d'Alene, Idaho 150 45.7 1927 B Gerome: 86642 stern psgr 1902 Wenatchee, WA 81 24.7 109 74 1905 W Gertrude: 202963 prop psgr 1906 Astoria, Oregon 39 11.9 10 7 1907 O Gleaner: 85825 prop genl
Annie M. Pence was built at Lummi Island in 1890. The boat was a sternwheeler intended to carry freight. For most of the career of Annie M. Pence, the vessel was under the command of Capt. Peter Falk, who was also one of their owners. Annie M. Pence was purchased by the La Conner Trading and Transportation Company as one of the company's first ...
Telegraph was a sternwheel-driven steamboat built in 1903 in Everett, Washington.Except for the summer of 1905, from 1903 to 1912, Telegraph served in Puget Sound, running mainly on the route from Seattle to Everett, and also from Seattle to Tacoma and Olympia, Washington.
North Pacific was an early steamboat operating in Puget Sound, on the Columbia River, and in British Columbia and Alaska. The vessel's nickname was "the White Schooner" which was not based on the vessel's rig, but rather on speed, as "to schoon" in nautical parlance originally meant to go fast.