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Steamboat is located in northeastern Arizona on the Colorado Plateau. Natural resources on the Colorado Plateau include coal, uranium, petroleum, and natural gas. Steamboat is located along Arizona State Route 264. According to the United States Census Bureau, the CDP has a total area of 2.4 square miles (6.2 km 2), all land. [4]
Steamboat Mountain is a 7,410-foot-elevation (2,260-meter) summit located in the Grand Canyon, in Coconino County of northern Arizona, US. [3] It is situated four miles northwest of Holy Grail Temple, and 2.5 miles west-southwest of Timp Point on the North Rim.
Mohave II at Yuma, Arizona, with Sunday school group embarked, 1876. [2] Mohave, the second stern-wheel steamboat of that name running on the Colorado River for the Colorado Steam Navigation Company (C.S.N.C) between 1876 and 1900. It was the first and only double smokestack steamboat to run on the river.
Arizona City, May 1867 George A. Johnson & Company, Colorado Steam Navigation Company 231 147.5' 28' unknown unknown - unknown Dismantled 1881 Colorado I: stern 1855 San Francisco John G. North [2] Estuary, Dec. 1855 George A. Johnson & Company unknown 120' unknown unknown 80 hp - 70 tons Dismantled April, 1862 Colorado II: stern 1862 Arizona City
Mohave II at Yuma, Arizona, with Sunday school group embarked, 1876. [1] Mohave, the second stern-wheel steamboat of that name running on the Colorado River for the Colorado Steam Navigation Company (C.S.N.C) between 1875 and 1876. It was the first and only double smokestack steamboat to run on the river.
Cocopah. Cocopah II, was a stern-wheel paddle-steamer, the tenth steamboat on the Colorado River, first put on the river in 1867. [1]: 51, 161 The Cocopah II was built at Arizona City in March 1867 for the George A. Johnson & Company as the replacement for the original Cocopah that had been taken off the river that year, had its engine and boiler removed and used as housing for workmen at the ...
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The Charles H. Spencer was a stern-wheel steamboat that was briefly used on the Colorado River to transport coal for gold refining operations at Lee's Ferry, Arizona.. In 1910, Charles H. Spencer was a prospector who arrived at Lee's Ferry in search of gold hidden in shale of the Chinle Formation.