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Small Boat, C105343, August 27, 1946; Floating Equipment, December 3, 1948 "RCT-13" November 7, 1949; Identification: MMSI number: 367655060; Callsign: WDH8139; Fate: Sold June 30, 1958; Museum ship from 1993; General characteristics; Class and type: PT-625-class Higgins 78 ft (24 m) PT boat: Displacement: 103,000 lb (47,000 kg) Length: 78 ft 6 ...
Portland (or the Portland) is a sternwheel steamboat built in 1947 for the Port of Portland, Oregon, in the United States. The Portland is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, and presently hosts the Oregon Maritime Museum which owns the vessel.
The Columbia Gorge on the Willamette River, in Portland, in 1987. The M.V. Columbia Gorge is a 145-foot (44 m) sternwheeler in service on both the Columbia and Willamette Rivers. She was built in Hood River by Nichols Boat Works and was launched on August 30, 1983. [15] The motors driving her 17-foot (5.2 m) paddle wheel are diesel-powered.
Coos Bay is a large and mostly shallow harbor on Oregon's southwest coast, to the north of the Coquille River valley. It is the major harbor on the west coast of the United States between San Francisco and the mouth of the Columbia River. Two steamboat captains from the Columbia River began steamboat operations on Coos Bay in 1873.
David Campbell. (1927 fireboat) David Campbell in 2006. The David Campbell was a long-serving fireboat built in 1928 for Oregon 's Portland Fire & Rescue. [1] She underwent an extensive rebuild, in 1976. In 2010 Portland acquired a new smaller, faster fireboat, the Eldon Trinity, named after the two children who were thrown off the Sellwoord ...
The Portland Fire Bureau of the city of Portland, Oregon owns and operates Fireboats in Portland, Oregon . In 1973 the Fire Bureau had the responsibility for patrolling the harbor transferred to it from the Police Bureau. [1] The Karl Prehn and the L.V. Jenkins were added to the fleet at that time.
Historic ferries in Oregon are water transport ferries that operated in Oregon Country, Oregon Territory, and the state of Oregon, United States.These ferries allowed people to cross bodies of water, mainly rivers such as the Willamette in the Willamette Valley, and the Columbia, in order to transport goods, move people, and further communications until permanent bridges were built to allow ...
Pomona (sternwheeler) Pomona. (sternwheeler) Pomona at the 8th Street dock in Oregon City circa 1890. Original: 365 gross; 295 net tons; after 1926 rebuild: 216 gross and 120 net tons. 133.5 ft (40.7 m) measured over hull. 28.4 ft 9 in (8.9 m) measured over hull. Known to carry 200 passengers prior to rebuild.
The sternwheeler MV Columbia Gorge, a 1983 diesel-powered replica steamboat, operates on the Willamette River in non-summer months. In much more recent decades, starting in the early 1980s, a number of replica steamboats have been built, for use as tour boats in river cruise service on the Columbia and Willamette Rivers.
This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total. Ships built in Astoria, Oregon (23 P) Ships built in Canemah, Oregon (17 P) Ships built in North Bend, Oregon (8 P) Ships built in Portland, Oregon (1 C, 282 P)