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<ead><eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0"><eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="wauar" encodinganalog="identifier" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv53540" identifier="80444/xv53540">WAUShipsPHColl1290.xml</eadid><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper>Guide to the Ships Subject File Photograph and Drawings Collection <date encodinganalog="date" era="ce">approximately 1826-2000</date></titleproper><titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">Ships Subject File Photograph and Drawing Collection</titleproper></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries</publisher><date normal="2012" encodinganalog="date">© 2012 (Last modified: 6/26/2025)</date><address><addressline>Seattle, WA 98195</addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><langusage>Finding aid written in 
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage><descrules>Finding aid based on DACS (<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Describing Archives: A Content Standard</title>).</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21"><did><repository><corpname>University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections</corpname></repository><unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="wauar">PH1290</unitid><origination><corpname role="compiler" encodinganalog="110">University of Washington. Libraries. Special Collections Division</corpname></origination><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="collection">Ships subject file
		  photograph and drawing collection</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1826/2000" certainty="approximate" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">approximately 1826-2000</unitdate><unitdate type="bulk" encodinganalog="245$g" normal="1870/1960" certainty="approximate" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1870-1960</unitdate><physdesc><extent>1.11 cubic feet (3 boxes; 597
		  photographic prints and drawings) : 2 cyanotypes ; various sizes</extent></physdesc><langmaterial>Collection materials are in 
		<language langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn" encodinganalog="546">English</language>.</langmaterial><abstract encodinganalog="5203_$a">Photographs and
		  illustrations of ships organized by ship name</abstract></did><scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_" id="a3"><p>Photographs and illustrations of ships organized by ship name.</p></scopecontent><altformavail><p> <extref actuate="onrequest" show="new" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/PH%20COLL%201290/field/all/mode/exact/conn/and/order/title">View selections from the
			 collection in digital format</extref> </p></altformavail><accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14"><p>The collection is open to the public.</p><p>Selected images can be viewed on the Libraries' Digital Collections
		  website.</p><p> <extref href="https://uw.aeon.atlas-sys.com/logon/?Action=10&amp;Form=31&amp;Value=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv53540/xml " role="text/html" actuate="onrequest" show="new" id="aeon" linktype="simple">Request at
			 UW</extref></p></accessrestrict><userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15"><p>Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication.
		  Contact Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries for
		  details.</p></userestrict><processinfo><p>Processed by Elaine Carter, 2019; Kate Norgon, 2020.</p></processinfo><controlaccess><subject source="uwsc">Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)</subject><subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650">Ships--Photographs</subject><subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Ships and Shipping</subject><subject source="archiveswest" altrender="nodisplay" encodinganalog="690">Photographs</subject></controlaccess><dsc type="combined" id="a23"><p> </p><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>A-D</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Acapulco</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">S.S. Acapulco </emph>was a cruise
				  liner first launched in 1922 as the <emph render="italic">SS Mongolia</emph>.
				  It was moored in Seattle during the World's Fair in 1962 as a floating hotel.
				  The ship proved to be too expensive to operate and was scrapped after the fair.
				  Information from Bill Cotter's Seattle 1962 World's Fair (Charleston: Arcadia
				  Publishing, 2010).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did altrender="autolink:itemphoto"><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Acapulco1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Acapulco </emph>at port in
					 Seattle during the World's Fair</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Acapulco1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Adams</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Adams1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Adams</emph> in dry dock
					 at Mare Island in San Francisco Bay, California</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Adams1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Admiral Benson</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Wrecked in 1930. Stranded at the Columbia entrance near Peacock
				  Spit on February 15, 1930. All 39 passengers were removed. On February 17 there
				  was worsening weather and all non-essential crew were removed. On February 18,
				  all crew were removed besides Capt. C.C. Graham, who left on February 24. It is
				  believed that the wreck of the <emph render="italic">Laurel</emph> was mistaken
				  for a range buoy. Capt. Graham pled guilty to negligence, and his license was
				  suspended for 6 months.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did altrender="autolink:itemphoto"><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">AdmiralBenson1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Admiral
					 Benson</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1927 and 1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AdmiralBenson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">A.J. West</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 543 ton, four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">A.J.
				  West</emph> was built in 1898 at Aberdeen by John Howson at the West &amp;
				  Slade Mill for the Slade Shipping Co. of San Francisco (p. 33). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">R.C.Slade1</container><unittitle>Schooners <emph render="italic">R.C. Slade</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">A.J. West</emph> docked at the Slade Mill, Aberdeen,
					 Washington </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.R.C.Slade1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: No. 2. Shipping at Aberdeen Washington.</p><p>Written on verso: 4 m. sch. R.C. SLADE, 4 m. sch. A.J. WEST at
					 the Slade Mill, Aberdeen, W.T. Wishkah &amp; Chehalis Rivers. G.R.
					 Weinstein.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Alameda</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Alameda1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Alameda</emph> in
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1911 and December 1931?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alameda1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Alameda2</container><unittitle>Deck of the steamship <emph render="italic">Alameda</emph> looking aft</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and November 1931?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alameda2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Alameda3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Alameda</emph> beached
					 at Seattle after fire</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 28, 1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alameda3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic"> U.S.S. Albatross</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Albatross1</container><unittitle>Officers of the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Albatross</emph> on return trip from Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Albatross1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ensigns S.V. Graham, Yates Stirling (?), Lt.
					 M. Guinness (?), + H.L. Fassett (?), Chamberlain, Lt. H.E. Parmenter, Capt.
					 Moser, Dr Louis Young, Paymaster B.P. Du Boise. Officers of U.S.S. ALBATROSS
					 Return from trip in Alaskan waters, October, 1897. Zoe Agnes Semple.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Alcazar</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Alcazar1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Alcazar</emph> in
					 Hoquiam Bay, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1887 and June 10, 1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alcazar1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: St. Sch. ALCAZAR in the Hoquiam River.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Aleut</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The tug <emph render="italic">Aleut </emph> was built in
				  Benicia, California in 1898 for the Alaska Packers' Association. She was
				  purchased by Captain Ray Small and W.J. Allison of Seattle and was one of the
				  most active vessels in the Puget Sound towing business in the early 1920s. In
				  1922, the tug was sold to Captain Frank Fogarty and Jack Fogarty of Yaquina
				  Bay, Oregon.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Aleut1</container><unittitle>Tugboat <emph render="italic">Aleut</emph> with a
					 barge</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Aleut1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Aleutian</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">Aleutian1</container><unittitle>A ship, probably the <emph render="italic">Aleutian</emph>, in ice with a man in the
					 foreground</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1926 and 1929?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Aleutian1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Alice</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Alice1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Alice</emph> at dock
					 with crowd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1895 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alice1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Alice2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Alice</emph> at Fort
					 Yukon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1955?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Alice2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Alice Ross</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Alice Ross</emph> was a 70 foot motor
				  passenger boat designed by Naval Architect L.H. Coolidge. She was built by
				  Seattle City Light for Diablo Lake excursions to the new hydro-electric plant,
				  which was built in 1935. She was a 300 passenger vessel, and was powered by a
				  175-horsepower Hull-Scott gasoline engine (p. 437). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co., 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">AliceRoss1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Alice Ross</emph> on
					 Diablo Lake, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AliceRoss1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Alki</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Alki</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">AlkiA1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Alki</emph> on
					 Skykomish River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1878</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AlkiA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>This was the first steamer up Skykomish River.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Al-KiB1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Al-Ki</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1884 and 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA0321/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The steamship <emph render="italic">Al-Ki </emph> (built in
					 1884) was owned by the Pacific Coast Steamship Co. She participated in the
					 Klondike Gold Rush in 1897 and operated on various routes including Seattle to
					 Southeast Alaska until she was laid up in Eagle Harbor in 1909. In 1912, she
					 was purchased and, along with two other vessels owned by Dodwell &amp; Co.,
					 serviced Sitka and the Prince of Wales Islands beginning in 1914. On November
					 1, 1917 during a storm she ran aground near Point Augusta, Alaska.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">AlkiC1</container><unittitle>Fireboat <emph render="italic">Alki</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1927 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AlkiC1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> The <emph render="italic">Alki</emph> was a fireboat of steel
					 construction built for the city of Seattle and launched in 1927 or 1928 from
					 Oakland, California. Her dimensions were 123.6 x 26 x 11.6. She was originally
					 propelled by triple screws and seven 350-horsepower Winton gas engines. Six of
					 those gas engines were connected to the water pumps, and only 1 was reserved
					 for propulsion. Her equipment included a hydraulically operated elevator
					 monitor tower, and her pumps could throw 17,000 gallons of water per minute (p.
					 384). Ivar Haglund helped to preserve her by pestering the Seattle fire chief
					 (p. 532). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
					 Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co., 1966). </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Amazon</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Amazon1</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Amazon</emph>, along
					 with schooner <emph render="italic">W. H. Talbot</emph> and steam schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Helene</emph> at Lewis Mill in Raymond,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 22, 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Amazon1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Amazon2</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Amazon</emph> at dock
					 in Raymond, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and July 4, 1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Amazon2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Amelia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Amelia1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamers <emph render="italic">Amelia</emph>
					 and <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Amelia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Amelia Wheaton</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Amelia Wheaton</emph> was an 85 foot
				  sternwheel steamer built in 1878 by Captain C.P. Sorenson for the federal
				  government to operate with Fort Sherman. She was the first steam vessel to
				  operate on Lake Coeur d'Alene. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">AmeliaWheaton1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Amelia
					 Wheaton</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and 1890?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AmeliaWheaton1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Armeria</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 201 foot steel <emph render="italic">Armeria</emph> was
				  built by John A. Dialogue in Camden, New Jersey in 1892 as a lighthouse tender
				  for the Atlantic and Gulf Coasts. In 1898, she was transferred to the Navy from
				  the Lighthouse Service and converted for naval service at the Norfolk Navy
				  Yard. She was assigned to the North Atlantic Squadron for the duration of the
				  Spanish-American war. <emph render="italic">Armeria</emph> returned to the
				  Lighthouse Service in 1898. In 1907 she was reassigned to the 13th Lighthouse
				  District, and transferred again to the 16th Lighthouse District at Ketchikan in
				  1911, becoming the first tender to be permanently assigned to Alaska.</p><p><emph render="italic">Armeria</emph> struck a submerged
				  uncharted rock while servicing Cape Hinchinbrook Light on May 20, 1912 and
				  wrecked. Considered a total loss, her hulk was sold at auction. Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966) and the US Coast Guard website:
				  https://www.history.uscg.mil/Browse-by-Topic/Assets/Water/All/Article/2157728/armeria-1890/</p></scopecontent><c03 level="file"><did><container type="item">Armeria1</container><unittitle>Lighthouse tender <emph render="italic">Armeria</emph>, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1911 and 1912</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Annette Rolph</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">AnnetteRolph1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Annette Rolph</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1918 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.AnnetteRolph1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph> was a steamer on Lake
				  Washington owned by Capt. Anderson, lessee of the county ferry fleet. She was
				  returned to King County in 1938 and ordered sold at sheriff's sale. She was
				  sold to Pacific Metal &amp; Salvage Co. of Seattle for $360 and scrapped (p.
				  466). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co., 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Aquilo1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph> under
					 construction</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Aquilo1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Aquilo2</container><unittitle>Launching of the steamship <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Aquilo2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Aquilo3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph> on Lake
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1912?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Aquilo3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did altrender=""><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Triton3</container><unittitle>Steamships <emph render="italic">Triton</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph>, probably on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1938</unitdate></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Triton </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Arago</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> was a four masted
				  barkentine built at the Simpson yard in North Bend, Washington, in 1891 for
				  carrying lumber. She was sold to Chilean owners as the <emph render="italic">Judith</emph> in 1914, and then to Peruvian owners as the 
				  <emph render="italic">Aurrera</emph> (p. 248). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed.,
				  The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arago1</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> and
					 towboat <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph> on Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1914</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arago2</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> and
					 three-mast bald-header <emph render="italic">North Bend</emph> at Hoquiam,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1914</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arago2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Arrow</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arrow1</container><unittitle>Passenger launch <emph render="italic">Arrow</emph>,
					 possibly at wharf on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arrow1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arrow2</container><unittitle>People on beach near passenger launch 
					 <emph render="italic">Arrow</emph>, possibly at wharf on Lake
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arrow2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Arthur Foss</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">ArthurFoss1</container><unittitle>Tugboat <emph render="italic">Arthur Foss</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1929 and 1942?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Dick Whittington</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ArthurFoss1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The tug "Arthur Foss" which played the part
					 of the "Narcissus" in Marie Dressler's last and greatest motion picture -
					 "Tugboat Annie."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/10</container><container type="item">Constitution2</container><unittitle>Frigate <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Constitution</emph> with tugboat <emph render="italic">Arthur Foss</emph> at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Constitution2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Constitution
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Athlon</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The propeller steamer <emph render="italic">Athlon</emph> was
				  operated on the Seattle-Bremerton run. She was built in 1900 by J.H. Johnston
				  at Portland for Shaver, Kamm, and Kellogg for a contract price of $4,935. She
				  was 112.4 feet long with a gross tonnage of 157, a beam of 19.7 feet, and a
				  depth of 7 feet. She was declared a total loss on August 1, 1921. Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Athlon1</container><unittitle>Propeller steamer <emph render="italic">Athlon</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Athlon1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Atlanta</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Atlanta</emph> was a 90 foot long, 87
				  ton passenger steamer built by Captain John Anderson for passenger service on
				  Lake Washington (p 150). The <emph render="italic">Atlanta</emph> was completed
				  in 1908, and remained in service until 1938 when she was ordered sold at the
				  sheriff's sale (p 150, 466). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">Atlanta1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Atlanta</emph> and
					 other boats docked on east side of Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1908 and 1912?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Atlanta1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">Atlanta2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Atlanta</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1908 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Atlanta2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Azalea</emph></unittitle></did><bioghist><p>Used during Prohibition to bootleg alcohol from Canada into the
				  Pacific Northwest.</p></bioghist><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">Azalea1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Azalea</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 1939</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Azalea1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">4/1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Azalea</emph> in Portland,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">approximately 1925</unitdate></did><note><p>Purchased from Zephyr Rare Books, March 2023</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Babbitt</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">Babbitt1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Babbitt</emph>
					 (DD-128)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1918 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Babbitt1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The ship behind the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Babbitt</emph> is most likely the <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Twiggs</emph>
					 (DD-127).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph> was a sternwheel
				  steamer built in Ballard in 1890, and was launched in 1891 sideways on 177 foot
				  ways (p. 223). She operated in Puget Sound, on the Pacific Coast, and on the
				  Columbia River. She was refitted with an elevator in 1917 for loading cars, and
				  was the first automobile ferry to serve the Olympic Peninsula. She was laid up
				  in 1926 and her hull converted to a floating machine shop on Lake Union, but
				  her whistle and nameboard are at the Museum of History and Industry (MOHAI),
				  Seattle, Washington (p. 291). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">BaileyGatzert1</container><unittitle>Ships <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Chas. R. Spencer</emph> at the Cascade Locks,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BaileyGatzert1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">BaileyGatzert2</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamship <emph render="italic">Bailey
					 Gatzert</emph> at the Cascade Locks, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 11, 1911</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BaileyGatzert2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">BaileyGatzert3</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamship <emph render="italic">Bailey
					 Gatzert</emph> with passengers in the Cascade Locks, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 28, 1912</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BaileyGatzert3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">BaileyGatzert4</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamship <emph render="italic">Bailey
					 Gatzert</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1926</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BaileyGatzert4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter4</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.J.
					 Potter</emph>, sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph>,
					 and sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Ramona</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.J.Potter4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Three popular Portland excursion
					 steamers.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">T.J. Potter
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Baltimore</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">Baltimore1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Baltimore</emph> at Port
					 Townsend, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1885 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Baltimore1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Beaver</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships called <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverA1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1875 and 1888?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Jeffries</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> was a Canadian
					 steamer. She was the "first steam vessel to ply the North Pacific" (p. 369).
					 She was lost on Prospect Point in 1888 while under the command of Captain
					 George Marchant. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverA2</container><unittitle>Photo of steamship <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph>
					 Christmas card tacked to wall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1855 and 1888</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> was a Canadian
					 steamer. She was the "first steam vessel to ply the North Pacific" (p. 369).
					 She was lost on Prospect Point in 1888 while under the command of Captain
					 George Marchant. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverA3</container><unittitle>Wreck of the steamship <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> at Prospect Point, British Columbia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1888?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverA3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> was a Canadian
					 steamer. She was the "first steam vessel to ply the North Pacific" (p. 369).
					 She was lost on Prospect Point in 1888 while under the command of Captain
					 George Marchant. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverA4</container><unittitle>Photo of wreck of steamship <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> tacked to wall</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverA4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> was a Canadian
					 steamer. She was the "first steam vessel to ply the North Pacific" (p. 369).
					 She was lost on Prospect Point in 1888 while under the command of Captain
					 George Marchant. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverA5</container><unittitle>Mural of steamship <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph>
					 by Kenneth Callahan at the Washington State Library in Olympia,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1958 and 2000?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverA5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Beaver</emph> was a Canadian
					 steamer. She was the "first steam vessel to ply the North Pacific" (p. 369).
					 She was lost on Prospect Point in 1888 while under the command of Captain
					 George Marchant. Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverB1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Beaver </emph> and other boats
					 at Fisherman's Terminal in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1914 and 1959?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Fisherman's Terminal opened in 1914.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BeaverB2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Beaver </emph> and other boats
					 at Fisherman's Terminal in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1914 and 1959?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BeaverB2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Bella</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">Bella1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Bella</emph> in the
					 Klondike</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1896 and 1899?</unitdate><note><p>Written on photo: Steamer "Bella's" first landing at
						Klondike.</p></note><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Bella1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Berringo</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1918</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Built by Patterson-MacDonald Shipbuilding Co.</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><unittitle>Launching the <emph render="italic">Berringo</emph> in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">27 July 1918</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Blue Ox</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/5</container><container type="item">BlueOx1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Blue Ox</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1940?</unitdate><note><p>Written on verso: Used in clearing project for Coulee
						Dam.</p></note><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BlueOx1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Breakwater</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Breakwater</emph> was a 200 foot long
				  iron passenger steamer. She was operated by the North Pacific Steamship Co.,
				  running on the Portland-California route (p. 295). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Breakwater1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Breakwater</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Breakwater1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Burnside</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> United States Army Transport (U.S.A.T.) <emph render="italic">Burnside </emph>acted as a cable-laying vessel in and north of
				  the Puget Sound in the early 1900s. She was built in 1892 as the 
				  <emph render="italic">Yeoman</emph>by Campbell, MacIntosh, &amp; Bowstead in
				  Newcastle, England. The ship was sold to a Spanish company in 1891 and renamed
				  the <emph render="italic">S.S. Rita</emph>. In 1898, during the
				  Spanish-American War, the ship was captured by the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Yale</emph>, was acquired by the U. S. Quartermaster Department from the U.S. 
				  <emph render="italic">Prize Court </emph>, and renamed the 
				  <emph render="italic">U.S.A.T. Burnside </emph> after Maj. Gen. Ambrose P.
				  Burnside in 1899. She was assigned to the A.T.S. Pacific fleet and based in
				  Seattle where she maintained the cable network of the Washington-Alaska
				  Military Cable System (W.A.M.C.A.T.S). She was condemned in 1923, sold, and
				  scrapped in 1924 in Oakland, California. Source: US Army Source of Battle
				  1919-1941, Volume 4, The Services, p. 2144.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Burnside1</container><unittitle>U.S. Army Transport cable ship <emph render="italic">Burnside</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1899 and 1923</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Burnside1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: U.S. Coast Guard Cutter "Burnside." Geo.
					 Leonhardt served on this around 1905 or so. Geo. was my grandfather's son by
					 Lida Hasford(?). </p><p>Contrary to what is written on the verso, this is not the
					 Coast Guard ship.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Burton</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">S.S. Burton </emph> was owned by the
				  Kitsap Transportation Co. She was destroyed by fire on February 22, 1924.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Burton1</container><unittitle>Ferry S.S. <emph render="italic">Burton</emph> in Doe
					 Bay, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and February 22, 1924</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Hall</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Burton1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: S. S. Burton, Doe Bay, Wash. No. 8, Hall
					 photo.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">California</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">California1</container><unittitle>Drawing of sailing ship <emph render="italic">California</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1853</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.California1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Image published p. 48 of Lewis &amp; Dryden's Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest by E.W. White, ed. (Portland: Lewis &amp; Dryden
					 Printing Co.).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Carol Foss</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">ShannonFoss1</container><unittitle>Tugboats <emph render="italic">Shannon Foss</emph> and
					 <emph render="italic">Carol Foss</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1957 and 1997</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ShannonFoss1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Shannon Foss
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Carpenter</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Carpenter1</container><unittitle> U.S. Engineer Department tug <emph render="italic">Carpenter</emph> departing for Nome, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1933</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Carpenter1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Tug Carpenter and Scow No. 1 before loading
					 for Nome, Alaska.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Casca</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">approximately 1898-1911</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Name derived from the Kaska Dena people who have lived in
				  British Columbia and the Yukon since time immemorial. Built in 1898, she was
				  described in company records as being so "practically worn out and useless..."
				  that she was rebuilt almost completely in 1911. She was wrecked at Rink Rapids
				  on July 9th, 1936.</p></bioghist><c03><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Casca</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1898 and 1911?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Cascade</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Cascade1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Cascade</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1885 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Cascade1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Catala</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">Catala1</container><unittitle>Receipt from a cabin on the <emph render="italic">Catala</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 5, 1962</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Catala1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">C.D. Dorr</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">C.D.Dorr1</container><unittitle>Sternwheeler <emph render="italic">C.D. Dorr</emph>
					 loading lumber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1920? </unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA0311/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Charles Nelson</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/6</container><container type="item">CharlesNelson1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Charles
					 Nelson</emph>, probably at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CharlesNelson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Chas. R.
				  Spencer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/4</container><container type="item">BaileyGatzert1</container><unittitle>Ships <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Chas. R. Spencer</emph> at the Cascade Locks,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.BaileyGatzert1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Charmer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Charmer1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Salvor</emph> assisting
					 steamship <emph render="italic">Charmer</emph> after a collision at the
					 entrance to Vancouver harbor, British Columbia </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Charmer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Charmer2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Salvor</emph> assisting
					 steamship <emph render="italic">Charmer</emph> after a collision at the
					 entrance to Vancouver harbor, British Columbia </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Charmer2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Chelohsin</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chelohsin1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Chelohsin</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chelohsin1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">MV Chetzemoka</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chetzemoka1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">MV Chetzemoka</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1938 and 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chetzemoka1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of
				  Bremerton</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Originally named <emph render="italic">Majestic</emph>. Built at
				  Everett by E. Heath for the Thompson Steamboat Co. in 1901 (p. 70), renamed the
				  <emph render="italic">Whatcom </emph> in 1904, operated under the Alaska
				  Steamship Co. (p. 100), lost off Pt. Pfeiffer in 1909 (p. 165), purchased by
				  the Puget Sound Navigation Co. and converted in 1921 into the steam ferry 
				  <emph render="italic">City of Bremerton</emph> (p. 324). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofBremerton1-2</container><unittitle>Steam ferry <emph render="italic">City of
					 Bremerton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1921 and 1936</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA0260%20TRA0243/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of Everett</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">City of Everett </emph> was a bulk
				  carrier vessel known as a "whaleback." These vessels were used extensively
				  between the 1890 and 1910. Their unconventional bow and stern structure and
				  their rounded weather deck and low freeboard when fully loaded gave them the
				  appearance of a partly submerged whale. These vessels were used mostly for
				  transport in the freshwater of the Great Lakes. Only two operated in the
				  Pacific waters. The first was the <emph render="italic">Charles W.
				  Wetmore</emph>. The other was the <emph render="italic">City of Everett</emph>,
				  which launched in Everett on October 24, 1894. She was the only whaleback
				  constructed on the Pacific Coast. The American Steel Barge Co. owned the 
				  <emph render="italic">Everett </emph>through the end of 1899. The American
				  Agricultural Chemical Co. owned the vessel from 1900 through 1901. The Standard
				  Oil Company of New York then took over ownership until 1915. The 
				  <emph render="italic">Everett </emph>was in service for 28 years, during which
				  she was the first U.S. merchant steamship to pass through the Suez Canal and
				  circumnavigate the globe. She sank in the Gulf of Mexico on October 11, 1923.
				  Information from the Seattle Times, November 11, 1962.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofEverett1</container><unittitle>Whaleback steamer <emph render="italic">City of
					 Everett</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1894 and 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Caption from Seattle Times article: Under way at full speed,
					 the City of Everett presented a startling appearance, almost that of a ship
					 foundering in a heavy sea. </p><p>Vintage print in University of Detroit Mercy Fr. Edward J.
					 Dowling, S.J. Marine Historical Collection.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofEverett2</container><unittitle>Whaleback steamer <emph render="italic">City of
					 Everett</emph> in dry dock at Dockton, Vashon Island, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1894 and 1923</unitdate></did><note><p>Vintage print in Mariners' Museum Collection, Virginia
					 (P0001.003/01-#PB4707)</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofEverett3</container><unittitle>Copy of the Certificate of Registry for the 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Everett</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 18, 1895</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofEverett3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of
				  Kingston</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">City of Kingston </emph>was brought
				  to the Pacific Northwest in 1890 for the Puget Sound &amp; Alaska Steamship Co.
				  and handled the company's Puget Sound-British Columbia service. Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). The <emph render="italic">City of
				  Kingston </emph>collided with another ship, the <emph render="italic">Glenogle</emph>, near Tacoma, Washington in 1900, and sunk off
				  of Point Defiance.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofKingston1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">City of
					 Kingston</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofKingston1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of Los
				  Angeles</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1899 in Danzig, Germany; 12,642 tons, 560 ft. long.
				  Formerly the North German Lloyd liner <emph render="italic">S.S. Grosser
				  Kurfurst </emph>(different from the German battleship of the same name). The
				  ship was seized by the U.S. during WWI. She was turned over to the U.S. Navy,
				  renamed the <emph render="italic">Aeolus</emph> , and used as a transport ship
				  until 1919 (p. 1). Notes from Marine Engineering, Vol. 26, Issue 1 (New York:
				  Aldrich Publishing Co., 1921). In 1922, the ship was assigned to the Los
				  Angeles Steamship Co. and renamed the <emph render="italic"> S.S. City of Los
				  Angeles</emph> , sailing between Los Angeles and Honolulu. In 1937, the ship
				  was sold for scrapping in Japan. Information from the Naval History and
				  Heritage Command website, "Aeolus I" article. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofLosAngeles1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">City of Los
					 Angeles</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1922 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofLosAngeles1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">CityofLosAngeles2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">City of Los
					 Angeles</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1922 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofLosAngeles2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of Puebla</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic"> S.S. City of Puebla</emph> was an
				  iron steamer built in Philadelphia in 1881 for the run between New York and
				  Havana. She was later transferred to service between Puget Sound and San
				  Francisco in 1889 (p. 261). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p><p>Operated by Pacific Coast Steamship Co. Stranded near Bellingham
				  September 19, 1910. Salvaged and repaired by Moran Bros. Co. for $39,000 (p.
				  13). Notes from Railway and Marine News, Vol. 9 (Seattle: J.P. Parkinson,
				  1911). Sold to East Coast owners in 1916 when Pacific Alaska Navigation Co.
				  merged with Pacific Coast Steamship Co. to become Pacific Steamship Co.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofPuebla1-2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">City of
					 Puebla</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1889 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofPuebla1%201290.CityofPuebla2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofPuebla3-4</container><unittitle>Passengers departing on the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Puebla</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1889 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA519%20TRA518/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofPuebla5</container><unittitle>Passengers on deck of the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Puebla</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1889 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofPuebla5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofPuebla6</container><unittitle>Women on deck of the steamship <emph render="italic">City of Puebla</emph> waving University of Washington
					 pennants</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1889 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofPuebla6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">City of Seattle</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">City of
				  Seattle</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofSeattleA1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamship <emph render="italic">City of
					 Seattle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofSeattleA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph> was built in
					 Philadelphia and brought to the Pacific Northwest on orders of Captain D.B.
					 Jackson in 1890 for the Puget Sound and Alaska Steamship Company. The 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph>provided ferry service in Puget
					 Sound on the Victoria route until 1897. During the Klondike Gold Rush, the 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph>ran on the Alaska route, and was
					 known as the "Alaska Lightning Express." She was sold to the Pacific Coast
					 Steamship Company in 1901. In 1904, the ship hit a rock near Eagle Harbor and
					 was remodeled and refurnished with steel by 1914. In 1921, she was moved to the
					 East Coast after being bought by C.L. Dimon of Florida for the Miami Steamship
					 Company. After many years of service the ship was sold and scrapped in
					 Philadelphia in 1937.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofSeattleA2</container><unittitle>Passenger steamship <emph render="italic">City of
					 Seattle</emph> at a dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofSeattleA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph> was built in
					 Philadelphia and brought to the Pacific Northwest on orders of Captain D.B.
					 Jackson in 1890 for the Puget Sound and Alaska Steamship Company. The 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph>provided ferry service in Puget
					 Sound on the Victoria route until 1897. During the Klondike Gold Rush, the 
					 <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph>ran on the Alaska route, and was
					 known as the "Alaska Lightning Express." She was sold to the Pacific Coast
					 Steamship Company in 1901. In 1904, the ship hit a rock near Eagle Harbor and
					 was remodeled and refurnished with steel by 1914. In 1921, she was moved to the
					 East Coast after being bought by C.L. Dimon of Florida for the Miami Steamship
					 Company. After many years of service the ship was sold and scrapped in
					 Philadelphia in 1937.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/8</container><container type="item">CityofSeattleB1</container><unittitle>Steam ferry <emph render="italic">City of
					 Seattle</emph> docked at Martinez, California</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1946</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CityofSeattleB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> The steam-driven sidewheeler <emph render="italic">City of
					 Seattle </emph> was built in Portland, Oregon in 1888 by John Steffen, for the
					 West Seattle Land and Improvement Company. She officially entered into service
					 between Seattle and West Seattle on New Year's Eve 1888. Notes from M.S.
					 Kline's Ferryboats: A Legend on Puget Sound (Seattle: Bayless Books, 1983).
					 This double ended vehicle ferry was sold in 1913 to the Martinez and Benicia
					 Ferry Co. in California (p. 96). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
					 McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
					 Co, 1966).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Clallam</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Launched in 1903 for Puget Sound Navigation Co. 168 ft. long.
				  Sank in a storm in the Straits of Juan de Fuca on January 8, 1904. Considered a
				  cursed ship. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">Clallam1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Clallam</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1903 and January 8, 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Clallam1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Clan McDonald</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Freighter - launched in 1891 at Aberdeen. 95 feet long - 24' 7"
				  beam, 5' 5" depth, 118.13 tons. Destroyed by fire at Chuckanut Bay in 1902.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ClanMcDonald1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Clan
					 McDonald</emph> with tugs <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Printer</emph> on Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ClanMcDonald1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ClanMcDonald2</container><unittitle>Freighter <emph render="italic">Clan McDonald</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ClanMcDonald2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Clifford Sifton</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">CliffordSifton1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Clifford Sifton</emph> in Miles
					 Canyon Rapids, Yukon Territory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1899 and 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.CliffordSifton1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Her captain was Capt. George M. Shaver.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Coeur d'Alene</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">Coeurd'Alene1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Coeur d'Alene</emph> at
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1880 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Coeurd'Alene1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Colfax</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>100 ft shallow draft propeller steamer, built along with 
				  <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph> in 1902 to serve lumber trade on Lake
				  Coeur d'Alene.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">Colfax1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Colfax</emph> on Lake
					 Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Colfax1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">Colfax2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Colfax</emph>,
					 probably on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1908?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Colfax2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Colfax" approaching dock.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">Colfax3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Colfax</emph> with
					 excursion party aboard, probably on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1908?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Colfax3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Colorado</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska5</container><unittitle> Ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Nebraska</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Colorado</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Pennsylvania</emph>, and <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wisconsin</emph> at Puget
					 Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Big Four. Advance guard of U.S. naval
					 rendezvous scheduled for North Pacific Ocean this summer on arrival of Atlantic
					 fleet under Admiral Evans. Scene at Puget Sound Navy Yard (Bremerton opposite
					 Seattle). Reading from left to right: Battleship Nebraska, Armored Cruiser
					 Colorado, Armored Cruiser Pennsylvania, Battleship Wisconsin.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Nebraska
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph>.</p><p>The <emph render="italic">Columbia Rediviva</emph> and the 
				  <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph> are the same ship.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ColumbiaA1</container><unittitle>Illustration of Captain Gray ashore at Whampoa showing
					 the ship <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1793</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">George Davidson</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ColumbiaA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>From: Voyages of the "Columbia" to the Northwest Coast
					 1787-1790 and 1790-1793, edited by Frederic W. Howay.</p><p>George Davidson was the ship's artist.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ColumbiaA2</container><unittitle>Illustration of ship <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1773 and 1806</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">George Davidson</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ColumbiaA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Columbia Rediviva.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ColumbiaA3</container><unittitle>Illustration of ship <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1773 and 1806</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ColumbiaA3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Columbia Rediviva.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ColumbiaA4</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1773 and 1806</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ColumbiaA4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Ship Columbia, Capt. Robert Gray, and the
					 Boston Brig Hancock, Capt. Crowell.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ColumbiaB1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ColumbiaB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ClanMcDonald1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Clan
					 McDonald</emph> with tugs <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Printer</emph> on Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ClanMcDonald1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Clan McDonald</emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Commerce</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Wasp1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Wasp</emph> with
					 steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph> and four-masted schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Commerce</emph> on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wasp1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph>Wasp </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Concordia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/10</container><container type="item">Concordia1</container><unittitle> Passenger and freight steamer <emph render="italic">Concordia</emph> on the Puget Sound, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Concordia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Constitution</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> During the summer of 1933, the principal ports of the Northwest
				  were visited by the historic United States frigate <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Constitution</emph>, recently restored to seaworthy condition with funds
				  contributed by the nation's school children. Old Ironsides, manned by a crew
				  from the steam and diesel navy, was operated as a glorified barge, being towed
				  by the minesweeper <emph render="italic">Grebe </emph>(p. 421). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/10</container><container type="item">Constitution1</container><unittitle>Frigate <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Constitution</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Constitution1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Constitution2</container><unittitle>Frigate <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Constitution</emph> with tugboat <emph render="italic">Arthur Foss</emph> at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1933</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Constitution2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Coquitlam</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Coquitlam</emph> was originally the 
				  <emph render="italic">HMCS Leaside</emph>, a Royal Navy corvette (p. 540). She
				  was converted to a cruise liner in 1947 with 100 first class accommodations,
				  dancing, movies, and other entertainment. She was sold by Union Steamships Ltd.
				  to C.B. West of Alaska Cruise Lines in 1958 and renamed the 
				  <emph render="italic">Glacier Queen</emph> (p. 626). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/10</container><container type="item">Coquitlam1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Coquitlam</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Coquitlam1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Corwin</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Thetis1</container><unittitle> U.S. Revenue Cutter <emph render="italic">Thetis</emph> and the <emph render="italic">S.S. Corwin</emph>
					 in Unalaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1881 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Thetis1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Thetis </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Cosmopolis</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Cosmopolis1</container><unittitle> Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Cosmopolis</emph> in the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1887 and 1895?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Cosmopolis1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Cosmopolis2</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Cosmopolis</emph>
					 proceeding upstream in the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1887 and 1895?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Cosmopolis2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Cyrene</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Cyrene1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Cyrene</emph>
					 on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1914?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Cyrene1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> Rebuilt by Capt. Anderson for service to the Alaska Yukon
					 Pacific Exposition (AYPE) from Lake Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dakota</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Dakota1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Dakota</emph> in dry
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and March 3, 1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dakota1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Dakota2</container><unittitle>Wreck of the steamship <emph render="italic">Dakota</emph> in Japan</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dakota2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Great Northern liner wrecked on Osano Reef,
					 Japan.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Dale</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Dale1</container><unittitle>Drawing of the sailing ship <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Dale</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1903</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">R.G. Skerrett</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dale1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Danmark</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The auxiliary steel full-rigged ship <emph render="italic">Danmark</emph>, built in 1932 for the Danish Ministry of
				  Shipping and Fisheries for use as a training ship, visited Seattle on a
				  training cruise in 1946, mooring at Pier 54 on the central waterfront and
				  causing considerable tourist traffic for the month of December. Under command
				  of Captain Knud L. Hansen, the little square-rigger and her 16 officers and 116
				  Danish Merchant Marine cadets arrived after a 13,000 mile voyage from
				  Copenhagen under sail. <emph render="italic">Danmark</emph> had found herself
				  in the United States at the outbreak of World War II and was lent to the United
				  States Coast Guard Academy at New London for use as a training ship, in which
				  service she trained 5,000 United States Coast Guard cadets (p. 533). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Danmark1</container><unittitle>Danish schooner <emph render="italic">Danmark</emph>
					 in Puget Sound, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 20, 1946</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Danmark1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: (Seagulls eye view) Capt. Hansen and boys on
					 deck.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Danmark2</container><unittitle>Danish schooner <emph render="italic">Danmark</emph>
					 in Puget Sound, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 20, 1946</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Danmark2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Danmark3</container><unittitle>Danish schooner <emph render="italic">Danmark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 20, 1946</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">David Campbell</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">David Campbell</emph> was a steam
				  fireboat of steel construction. She was built at Portland in 1913. Her
				  machinery could develop 1,200 horsepower. She remained in service until 1928
				  (p. 224). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">DavidCampbell1</container><unittitle>Portland fireboat <emph render="italic">David
					 Campbell</emph> in Portland, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DavidCampbell1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dawn</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Dawn1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Dawn</emph> at
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dawn1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Built by Capt. Anderson who operated the Anderson Steamboat
					 Co. that ran ferries on Lake Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Decatur</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Decatur</emph>, built in 1839, came to
				  Seattle in 1855. It was called a "sloop of war," being less than a frigate or
				  "line of battle" ship. In 1855, it carried sixteen guns, and had a crew of 104
				  men. It took part in the defense of Seattle against the Indians in 1855-1856.
				  In later years the <emph render="italic">Decatur</emph> was in the Puget Sound
				  lumber trade. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/11</container><container type="item">Decatur1</container><unittitle>Drawing of <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Decatur</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1854?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Decatur1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on front: Beating round "Cape Froward:" Straits of
					 Magellan, Dec: 1854. J.Y.T.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Decatur2</container><unittitle>Drawing of <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Decatur</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1854?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on front: U.S. Sloop-of-War "Decatur" Length: 117' 7"
					 ~ Beam: 33' 10" ~ Depth in Hold: 15' ~ Burthen: 566 tons. ~ 16 guns ~ Ship's
					 Company: 145 men. Built, N. York Navy Yard, 1839; Sold out of Navy; Broken up
					 at S. Francisco 1865.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Decatur3</container><unittitle>Drawing of <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Decatur</emph>
					 in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1855 and 1856</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">Albert H. Robinson and A.Y. Jackson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Buildings along shoreline labeled: 1st M.E. Church. Lake Trail
					 &amp; Skidroad. North Block House~Oct. '55. The Mound. Yesler's Mill, Wharf,
					 House. Elliot House. Hotel. South Block House~Feby. '56. Madame Damnable's.
					 local legend has it that she was so wicked that she turned to stone when
					 buried! S.W. Pl. </p><p>Written on front: Seattle, Washington Territory ~~
					 1855-1856.....A village of fifty souls &amp; about thirty houses on Duwamish
					 Bay, swelled to about one-hundred &amp; seventy men, women &amp; children
					 during the Indian Troubles, the reluctant hosts of some eighty odd border
					 ruffians.....</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">SOS1/1</container><container type="item">Decatur4</container><unittitle>The <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Decatur</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1855 and 1859</unitdate></did><note><p>Another copy of this photo is in the Prosch Seattle Views
					 Album, Vol. 2, page 22. From a caption beneath that photo: This is a picture
					 taken at one of the Atlantic Yards when the vessel was new, and when she seemed
					 to have more guns</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Defiance</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph>
				  was built at Hoquiam, Washington in 1897 by Peter Matthews. Weighing 604 tons,
				  179.8 feet long, and 37.7 feet by 13.7 feet, the <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> was the largest sailing vessel built in the
				  Pacific Northwest that year. She was built for the E.K. Wood Lumber Company,
				  and was initially commanded by Captain Blum (p. 21). She burned in 1922 while
				  loading copra in the Solomon Islands while under the command of Captain Clark.
				  He and all his crew reached shore safely (p. 330). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> under
					 construction at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: DEFIANCE in frame at Hoquiam, W.T.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA2</container><unittitle> Raising the frame of the schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> during construction at Hoquiam,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA3</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> under
					 construction at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Vessel building - in frame - may be DEFIANCE
					 at Hoquiam, W.T.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA4</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> under
					 construction at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA5</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> under
					 construction at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA6</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> being
					 readied for launch at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 4 m. sch. DEFIANCE being spaired [sic],
					 ready for launch - Hoquiam River, W.T.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA7</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> ready
					 for launch at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA7/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA8</container><unittitle>Launch of the schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> in the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA8/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA9</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> at the
					 time of her launching at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA9/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceA10</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> loaded
					 with lumber for departure on her maiden voyage on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DefianceA10/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/12</container><container type="item">DefianceB1-B3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1913</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA405%20TRA455%20TRA408/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Defiance</emph> was built in 1901 by
					 Matthew McDowell at Tacoma to replace the Dauntless on the Seattle-Tacoma-West
					 Pass run. Defiance was 93' long. In about 1913, she was was sold to the
					 Kingston Transportation Company, which renamed her Kingston and put her on a
					 route between Ballard, Washington and Kingston.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Del Norte</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph>Del Norte</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">DelNorteA1</container><unittitle>Watercolor painting of the wreck of the 
					 <emph render="italic">Del Norte</emph> in British Columbia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1868</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DelNorteA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on painting: Wreck of the Del Norte. [illegible] S. by
					 E. - Low water - morning 27th Oct. 1868. Looking from Gulf of Georgia through
					 Porlier's Pass into Trincomali Channel.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">DelNorteB1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Del Norte</emph>
					 loaded with lumber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DelNorteB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The <emph render="italic">Del Norte</emph> was a steam
					 schooner constructed in 1888. She towed a group of river steamers from Seattle
					 to Alaska in 1898 (p. 29). She sank in 1905 after colliding with the steam
					 schooner <emph render="italic">Sea Foam</emph> off the entrance to the Coquille
					 River (p. 115). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Diamond Cement</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Japanese built steamer in 1919 (p. 587), carried limerock
				  cargoes from the quarries at View Cove, Alaska to Seattle (p. 423), operated by
				  the Permanente Cement Co. of Seattle (p. 542), chartered to the Alaska
				  Steamship Co. for general service in 1949 (p. 563), sold in 1952 to Italian
				  owners (p. 587). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
				  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">DiamondCement1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Diamond Cement</emph>
					 with starboard anchor dragging</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.DiamondCement1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dirigo</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Dirigo</emph> was built in 1898 at
				  Grays Harbor, Washington, and was engined at San Francisco (p 33). Operated in
				  the Alaska trade, first under J.S. Kimball &amp; Co. of Seattle, then by the
				  Alaska Steamship Co. (p 33, 52). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966). This ship sank on November 16, 1914, 100 miles west from Cape
				  Fairweather on a voyage from Cordova, Alaska, to Seattle.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">Dirigo1</container><unittitle>Passenger-carrying schooner <emph render="italic">Dirigo</emph> leaving Hoquiam, Washington, under tow for San
					 Francisco for the installation of steam engines</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dirigo1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: ASTORIA ex DIRIGO leaving Hoquiam, under
					 tow, for S.F. where engines were installed - Built 1898.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Discovery</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">Discovery1</container><unittitle>Illustration of the sailing ship <emph render="italic">Discovery</emph> in Puget Sound, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1792</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Discovery1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> Depiction of George Vancouver's ship <emph render="italic">Discovery</emph> during a voyage to the North Pacific Ocean and
					 Pacific coast of North America, 1792.</p><p>Written on painting: The Discovery off Blakely Rocks. The
					 first vessel on Puget Sound, 1792. Copyright applied for by S.E. Coombs.
					 Vancouver, master.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dix</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Dix</emph> was a passenger steamboat
				  used as a ferry in Puget Sound, particularly on the Seattle-Alki Point run. She
				  was built in 1904 by Crawford &amp; Reid, Tacoma. She was rammed and sunk by
				  the Alaska Coast Company steamship <emph render="italic">Jeanie</emph> off of
				  Duwamish Head on November 18, 1906, resulting in between 40 and 54 deaths.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">Dix1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Dix</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1906</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dix1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Photographer possibly Webster &amp; Stevens. Information from
					 Puget Sound Maritime Historical Society.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph> was built in 1892 on
				  the East Coast as the charter fishing vessel <emph render="italic">Al
				  Foster</emph>. She was a composite steel and iron-hulled passenger steamer
				  operated by the Alaska Steamship Co. (p. 55). She bested the 
				  <emph render="italic">City of Seattle </emph> in a race from Vancouver to
				  Skagway (800 miles) in early May, 1902 (p. 76); temporarily placed on the
				  Seattle-Port Townsend-Victoria run after the sinking of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Clallam </emph>on Jan. 8, 1904 (p. 100); sold to South
				  American owners for Chilean coastal service in 1917, then rebuilt as a gunboat
				  for the Chilean government (p. 292). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/13</container><container type="item">Dolphin1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dolphin1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/2</container><container type="item">Dolphin2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph> covered
					 in ice in Juneau, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 18, 1901</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dolphin2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Capt. O'Brien.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/2</container><container type="item">Dolphin3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph> docked
					 at Juneau, Alaska and covered in ice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 18, 1901</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dolphin3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Capt. Johnnie O'Brien of Seattle, Wash.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/2</container><container type="item">Dolphin4</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Dolphin</emph> covered
					 in ice at Juneau, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 18, 1901</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dolphin4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Dora</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1880, 229 tons. Operated by the Alaska Commercial Co.
				  from San Francisco to St. Michael and Nome, Alaska. Struck ice in the Icy
				  Straits in 1899 and suffered $2000 in damages. Purchased for the Alaska Pacific
				  Navigation Co. in 1903. Disabled Dec. 30, 1905 off Chignik, Alaska when her
				  steam line broke in heavy weather. She drifted for 63 days, across the Gulf of
				  Alaska, out into the Pacific south of the Columbia River entrance, north of
				  Kodiak Island, until she reached Port Angeles, Washington under jury-rigged
				  sails, February 23, 1906. All the crew and 3 passengers lived, though were
				  greatly rationed on food and water, just enough to barely sustain life. Never
				  spotted. She was stranded on Noble Island December 20, 1920, later beached on
				  Vancouver Island after her brief career as a codfishery.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">Dora1</container><unittitle>Mail steamer <emph render="italic">Dora</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1920</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Dora1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">D.R. Campbell</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">SeattleNo.3</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboats <emph render="italic">Seattle
					 No. 3</emph> and <emph render="italic">D.R. Campbell</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1927</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SeattleNo.3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Seattle No. 3 </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Duwamish</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built at Richmond Beach for the Seattle Fire Dept. in 1909 (p.
				  158). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). 309 tons, 113 ft
				  long, 1,100 hp steam engines, costing more than $125,000.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">Duwamish1</container><unittitle>Fireboat <emph render="italic">Duwamish</emph> docked
					 at Seattle harbor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Duwamish1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Duxbury</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Power schooner that operated in the Arctic trade by Capt.
				  Alexander Allen (p. 152), sold in 1909 (p. 165), and wrecked June 3, 1925 after
				  being caught in the ice off Cape Halkett (p. 368). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">Duxbury1</container><unittitle>Wreck of the <emph render="italic">Duxbury</emph> on
					 the beach at Nome, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Duxbury1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">E-J</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Eagle</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">Eagle1</container><unittitle>Passenger launch <emph render="italic">Eagle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Eagle1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p><emph render="italic">Eagle</emph> was a smaller type of
					 steamboat called a steam launch. The wooden vessel was built at Eagle Harbor,
					 Washington to run on routes connecting Seattle and Bainbridge Island,
					 Washington. Eagle was destroyed by fire in 1902 at Eagle Harbor. The vessel was
					 replaced in service by the <emph render="italic">Florence
					 K</emph>.--Wikipedia</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">Eagle2</container><unittitle>Fishing vessel <emph render="italic">Eagle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Eagle2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">East African</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/14</container><container type="item">EastAfrican1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">East African</emph> and other
					 ships at Seattle dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1895 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.EastAfrican1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Edith</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>This Alaska Steamship Company iron freighter was built in 1882.
				  Originally named the <emph render="italic">Glenochil </emph> (British), she
				  came to Alaska during the Klondike Gold Rush. In late August 1915, on a
				  southbound voyage from Nome to Tacoma, the <emph render="italic">Edith </emph>
				  was caught in a heavy storm. The cargo shifted to one side, endangering the
				  ship and crew. On August 30, the crew of 37 abandoned ship and were picked up
				  by the <emph render="italic">S.S. Mariposa</emph>. The foundering freighter
				  eventually sank in the Gulf of Alaska.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Edith1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Edith</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1882 and 1915</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Edith1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Electra</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>A two-masted schooner known to have operated on the Mendocino
				  Coast. The <emph render="italic">Electra </emph>was built in 1877 at Little
				  River, California, by shipbuilder Thomas H. Peterson. Information from the
				  Mendocino Coast Model Railroad &amp; Historical Society.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Electra1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">Electra</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1877 and 1894</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Eliza Anderson</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in Portland in 1858. Served Puget Sound initially on the
				  Olympia-Victoria mail run in 1859. In 1897, sent to Alaska where she was
				  beached outside of Unalaska.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">ElizaAnderson1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Eliza
					 Anderson</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 12, 1884</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ElizaAnderson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>This is the ship in later years, with forward deck enclosed,
					 with upper deck extended fully to bow.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">ElizaAnderson2</container><unittitle> Wreck of the sidewheel steamboat 
					 <emph render="italic">Eliza Anderson</emph> at her final resting place in Dutch
					 Harbor on Unalaska Island, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ElizaAnderson2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Elk</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did altrender="autolink:itemphoto"><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Elk1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Elk</emph> at a
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Elk1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Emily Keller</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/2</container><container type="item">EmilyKeller1-2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Emily Keller</emph> on
					 Lake Washington near Kirkland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA811%20TRA810/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Emma</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Emma1</container><unittitle>Passenger launch <emph render="italic">Emma </emph>in
					 Elliott Bay</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Emma1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Denny Hotel, also known as Washington Hotel, in the
					 background.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.M.S. Empress of
				  Russia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Construction on the <emph render="italic"> Empress of Russia
				  </emph> began in 1912 and was completed in 1913. The ship had remarkable speed,
				  defeating the record set by the <emph render="italic">Empress of Japan
				  </emph>of the fastest crossing of the Pacific. For a brief time in 1914, she
				  was taken over as an armed military vessel, but was returned to full commercial
				  service by 1919. She made her final crossing in 1940.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">EmpressofRussia1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.M.S. Empress of Russia
					 </emph>in Vancouver Harbor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1940</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.EmpressofRussia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The R.M.S. "Empress of Russia" passing out
					 of the harbor of Vancouver. In the foreground may be seen the nine-mile drive
					 which encircles the Park.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Enetai</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Enetai1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">MV Enetai</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1968</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Enetai1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Eric</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in Port Blakely, Washington, in 1898 by Hall Bros.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/15</container><container type="item">Eric1</container><unittitle>Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Eric</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Eric1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Eureka</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">Eureka1</container><unittitle>Fishing vessel <emph render="italic">Eureka</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Eureka1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Exact</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">Exact1</container><unittitle>Drawing of the schooner <emph render="italic">Exact</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1851 and 1950</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Exact1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: Schooner "Exact." Captain Folger.
					 Length 73 ft. Beam 20 ft. Depth 6 ft. 75 tons. The "Exact" arrived at Alki
					 Point Nov. 13, 1851 bringing the families of A.A. Denny, C.D. Boren, I.N. Low,
					 W.N. Bell and C.O. Terry. She arrived at Olympia Nov. 15, 1851 with John
					 Alexander and family. Drawn from a sketch by John S. Alexander.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Excelsior</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">Excelsior1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Excelsior</emph> leaving
					 San Francisco for the Klondike</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 28, 1897</unitdate><origination><persname role="photographer">Sam C. Partridge</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Excelsior1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Leaving San Francisco for the Klondike. -
					 The first steamer to carry passengers to Alaska after the news of the discovery
					 of the rich placers of the Klondike was received, was the <emph render="italic">Excelsior</emph>, which sailed from San Francisco on July 28,
					 1897. She was laden with 350 passengers and about 800 tons of provisions and
					 supplies. Fully 10,000 persons gathered at Mission Street wharf to see the
					 first part of gold seekers depart. The <emph render="italic">Excelsior</emph>
					 was the vessel which brought from Alaska the miners who returned with the first
					 gold from the Klondike. There were about $500,000 in gold dust and a
					 considerable number of prospective millionaires in the party.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>E-Z-Way</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">E-Z-Way1</container><unittitle>Small boat <emph render="italic">E-Z-Way </emph> in
					 profile</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1930?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Cyanotype.</p></phystech></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">E-Z-Way2</container><unittitle>Passengers aboard small boat <emph render="italic">E-Z-Way</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1930?</unitdate></did><phystech><p>Cyanotype.</p></phystech></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Falcon</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">Falcon1</container><unittitle>Fishing boat <emph render="italic">Falcon</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Falcon1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fantome</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Owned by A.E. Guinness, manufacturer of Guinness stout. Arrived
				  in Seattle in 1939 and remained in Portage Bay for the duration of World War
				  II. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/16</container><container type="item">Fantome1</container><unittitle> Auxiliary schooner yacht <emph render="italic">Fantome</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1939 and 1945</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fantome1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fleetwood</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Fleetwood </emph>was built in 1881 in
				  Portland, Oregon and ran routes along the Columbia River and in Puget Sound. In
				  1889, she was placed on the Seattle-Tacoma route alongside the 
				  <emph render="italic">Flyer</emph>. In 1898, the ship was abandoned in
				  Quartermaster Harbor.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fleetwood1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Fleetwood</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1881 and 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fleetwood1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Brought fire fighting equipment from
					 Olympia.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Flora</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Flora </emph>was placed in service by
				  the Bennett Lake and Klondike Navigation Co. for the Bennett, B.C. to Taku City
				  run.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Flora1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Flora</emph> at dock,
					 May 22, 1899 </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/collection/Transportation Collection/searchterm/TRA0302/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><odd><p>Caption on image: First Arrival: "Flora" May 22, '99</p></odd></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Flottbek</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Flottbek1</container><unittitle>Sailing vessel <emph render="italic">Flottbek</emph>
					 foundering off the Washington coast</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">January 1901</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Flottbek1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The photograph shows the <emph render="italic">Flottbek
					 </emph>shortly before it was rescued from a dangerous situation by the two
					 tugs, <emph render="italic">Tacoma </emph> and <emph render="italic">Wanderer</emph>. The rescue happened on January 16th 1901, so
					 the photograph must have been taken between January 14th and 16th, 1901. The
					 photographer is unknown, but it is highly probable the photograph was taken by
					 Wilhelm Hester. There is a similar photo in the Wilhelm Hester Photo Collection
					 of the San Francisco Maritime National Park.</p><p>Written on verso: German ship? at Ozette Rock.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic"> Flyer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item"> Flyer1-2</container><unittitle> Propeller steamer <emph render="italic">Flyer</emph>
					 on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between October 11, 1906 and 1936</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA0293%20TRA0294/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Flying Fish</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item"> FlyingFish1</container><unittitle>Plan drawing for schooner <emph render="italic">Flying
					 Fish </emph> profile view with ship's dimensions</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1972</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">Hewitt Robinson Jackson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written below drawing: A Draught of His Majesty's Schooner
					 Flying Fish, ex Prize Revenge, built at Baltimore and taken off at Portsmouth
					 Dockyard in September 1806. Courtesy: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich,
					 England (64-4546-7-8). Delineated &amp; Respectfully Inscribed to ye Gentlemen
					 at ye Sign of ye Smuggler's; H. Robinson Jackson. </p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item"> FlyingFish2</container><unittitle>Plan drawing for schooner <emph render="italic">Flying
					 Fish </emph>cross-section, with details of launch and anchor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1972</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">Hewitt Robinson Jackson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Drawing of ship as it was in September 1806.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item"> FlyingFish3</container><unittitle>Plan drawing for schooner <emph render="italic">Flying
					 Fish </emph>cross-section profile</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1972</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">Hewitt Robinson Jackson</persname></origination></did><note><p>Written below drawing: Plans of His Majesty's Schooner Flying
					 Fish ex Revenge as taken off in September 1806.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>, 81
				  tons, 107 feet in length, was built at the Anderson Steamboat Co. yard for
				  Capt. Anderson and the Seattle Street Railway Co. and placed in service on Lake
				  Washington in 1906. In 1927, the <emph render="italic">Fortuna </emph> was sold
				  by King County to the King Shipbuilding Co. of Seattle. Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966). The steamer was re-built in 1919 as an
				  automobile ferry (p. 152). Notes from M.S. Kline's Ferryboats: A legend on
				  Puget Sound (Seattle: Bayless Books, 1983).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>
					 on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna2</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>
					 at a dock on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>This may have been taken at Kirkland.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna3</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>
					 on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna4</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph> on Lake
					 Washington after conversion to automobile ferry</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1919 and 1928?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ferry to Mercer Island.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna5</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>
					 loading passengers on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1906 and 1919</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/17</container><container type="item">Fortuna6</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>
					 at Fortuna Park on Mercer Island, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1906 and 1919</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fortuna6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fram</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Fram </emph> was a ship used by polar
				  explorers including Fridtjof Nansen and Roald Amundsen. It was designed to
				  survive the pressure of sea ice by its shape which allowed it to be pushed up
				  on top of the ice, rather than frozen and crushed within the ice.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">Fram1</container><unittitle>Polar exploration vessel <emph render="italic">Fram
					 </emph> in ice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1895</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Fram1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gardiner City</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>This four-masted schooner was built at North Bend, Oregon, in
				  1889 for A. M. Simpson, San Francisco. About 1895 she was rerigged as a
				  three-masted barkentine, and later came under the ownership of Swayne &amp;
				  Hoyt. Shortly before the first World War, she was dismasted in a southeaster
				  while lying at a Southern California pier, but was refitted once more as a
				  four-masted schooner by the Port Blakely Mill Company and renamed by them the 
				  <emph render="italic">Kitsap</emph>. She was sunk in collision in Kauai Channel
				  with the steamer <emph render="italic">Wailele </emph>without loss of life on
				  March 21, 1919.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GardinerCity1</container><unittitle> Barkentine <emph render="italic">Gardiner City</emph>
					 at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1889 and 1895?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GardinerCity1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 4 m. bald-header Gardiner City at Hoquiam,
					 W.T.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">General J.W. Jacobs</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1908 and 1940?</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">General J.W. Jacobs </emph>was a
				  sternwheel steamer built in 1908 in Portland, Oregon, for the Army
				  Quartermaster Department.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeneralJ.W.Jacobs1</container><unittitle>U.S. news steamer <emph render="italic">General J.W.
					 Jacobs</emph> at St. Michael, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1933?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA0345/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Genevieve</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Built for the Sesnon Lighterage Co. of Nome in 1913.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">Genevieve1</container><unittitle> Passenger and towing motor tug <emph render="italic">Genevieve</emph> in operation</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Genevieve1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">George E. Starr</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>148 foot wooden steamer built in 1878 in Seattle for the Puget
				  Sound service.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph> docked at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1894</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/tra0346/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Shows the Arlington Hotel on University St. to the right.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr2</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1879 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA463/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr3</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph> and <emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph> south of Wall St.
					 dock, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgeE.Starr3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Geo. E. Starr, built 1879, n. side Yesler's
					 Wharf. N. Pacific raced the Olympia June 27, 1871 Victoria to Port Townsend
					 winning in 2 hrs &amp; 41 min.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr4</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph> and <emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph> in the Seattle
					 Harbor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgeE.Starr4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Denny Hotel, also known as Washington Hotel, visible in the
					 background.</p><p>Written on verso: Geo. E. Starr, built 1879, n. side Yesler's
					 Wharf. N. Pacific raced the Olympia June 27, 1871 Victoria to Port Townsend
					 winning in 2 hrs &amp; 41 min.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Georgie Oakes</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GeorgieOakes1</container><unittitle>Excursion boat <emph render="italic">Georgie
					 Oakes</emph> passing Tubbs Point on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgieOakes1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GeorgieOakes2</container><unittitle>Purser J.I. Shallis in the purser's office on the
					 excursion boat <emph render="italic">Georgie Oakes</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgieOakes2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gjoa</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Gjoa</emph> was the first vessel to
				  navigate the Northwest Passage between 1903 and 1906. She was on display in San
				  Francisco before being returned to Norway.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">Gjoa1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gjoa</emph> on
					 display</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1972</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Gjoa1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">Gjoa2</container><unittitle>Sign on the <emph render="italic">Gjoa</emph>
					 explaining the Gjoa Expedition</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1972</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Gjoa2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GleanerA1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph> docked at the Seattle waterfront</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GleanerA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Gleaner of Mount Vernon.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">T.C.Reed1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">T.C.
					 Reed</emph> with four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph>Gleaner </emph> in
					 background at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.C.Reed1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner
					 </emph>was built 1892 in Hoquiam, Washington.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">T.C. Reed
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.J.Patterson1</container><unittitle>Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph> at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam
					 River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA792/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner
					 </emph>was built 1892 in Hoquiam, Washington.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">W.J. Patterson
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.J.Patterson2</container><unittitle> Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph> on the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.W.J.Patterson2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner
					 </emph>was built 1892 in Hoquiam, Washington.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">W.J. Patterson
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Glenmark</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">Glenmark1</container><unittitle>Three-masted bark <emph render="italic">Glenmark</emph> at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Glenmark1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 3 m. bark. GLENMARK, Hoquiam Lumber +
					 Shingle Mill at Hoquiam, W.T.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">Glenmark2</container><unittitle> Tug <emph render="italic">Hoquiam</emph> with the
					 bark <emph render="italic">Glenmark</emph> in the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Glenmark2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 3 m. bark, GLENMARK of Dundee, tug HOQUIAM,
					 Northwest Lumber Mill, Hoquiam River, W.T.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gloria II</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GloriaII1</container><unittitle>Fishing vessel <emph render="italic">Gloria II</emph>
					 at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1960?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GloriaII1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Glory of the
				  Seas</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GloryoftheSeas1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Glory of the
					 Seas</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1869 and 1923</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GloryoftheSeas1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Golden State</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">GoldenState1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Golden State</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GoldenState1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item">GoldenState2</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Golden State</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GoldenState2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Cod transporting schooner, Golden State.
					 Capacity 500 tons.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item">GoldenState3</container><unittitle>Engine room of the <emph render="italic">Golden
					 State</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GoldenState3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Engine room of cod transporting schooner
					 "Golden State."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Goliah</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in New York in 1849. Purchased by Pope and Gamble in 1871
				  for service in Puget Sound. Burned off of Duwamish Head in 1899 for her metal.
				  </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Goliah1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steam tug <emph render="italic">Goliah</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1871 and 1899?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Goliah1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Gov. Pingree</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Carried people and cargo to Alaska and the Yukon. Renamed 
				  <emph render="italic">Bonanza King </emph> in 1899.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Gov.Pingree1</container><unittitle>Steamboats <emph render="italic">Gov. Pingree</emph>
					 and <emph render="italic">Philip B. Low</emph> with other
					 steamboats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Gov.Pingree1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Grace Dollar</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">GraceDollar1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Grace Dollar</emph>
					 carrying cargo of lumber</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GraceDollar1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Formerly known as the <emph render="italic">Dix</emph> before
					 it was sold to the Robert Dollar Co. in 1922 and renamed the 
					 <emph render="italic">Grace Dollar</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Graf Spee</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">GrafSpee1</container><unittitle>German armored ship <emph render="italic">Graf
					 Spee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1934 and 1939</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GrafSpee1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>"Great White Fleet" </unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">GWF1</container><unittitle>Battleships of the Great White Fleet probably in Puget
					 Sound </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1908?</unitdate></did><odd><p>Written on verso: Property of Mrs. Francis Behrle.</p></odd></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Halco</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Halco1</container><unittitle> Wreck of the steam schooner <emph render="italic">Halco</emph> in Grays Harbor, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Halco1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Steam schooner "Halco" built in Eureka,
					 Calif. 1918. Wrecked on the north side of Grays Harbor bar in 1925 as shown in
					 this picture.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Harrison</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Harrison1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Harrison</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1912 and 1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Harrison1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The "Harrison" at the dock at Harrison.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Harry Luckenbach</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">HarryLuckenbach1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Harry Luckenbach</emph>
					 and tug <emph render="italic">Loyal N1</emph> probably docked at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1942</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.HarryLuckenbach1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Harry Luckenbach, freighter. Tug, Loyal
					 N1</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hassalo</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built at the Dalles, Oregon for the Oregon Railway and
				  Navigation Co. in 1880.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Hassalo1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Hassalo</emph> at the Oregon Improvement Co. dock at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Hassalo1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">H.B. Kennedy</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Two funnel propeller steamer built at Portland by the
				  Willamette Iron and Steel Co. for the Puget Sound Navigation Co. in 1909 (p.
				  159). She was renamed <emph render="italic">Seattle </emph> in 1922 and
				  converted to a steam ferry in 1924 (p. 324). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">H.B.Kennedy1-2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">H.B. Kennedy</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA647%20TRA2332/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">H.B.Kennedy3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">H.B. Kennedy</emph> at
					 Colman Dock at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.H.B.Kennedy3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">H.C. Henry</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item">H.C.Henry1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">H.C. Henry</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1909?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA813/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Helena</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Helena1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Helena</emph> at
					 Castle Rock on the Missouri River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and October 23, 1891</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Helena1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Helena2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Helena</emph> moored
					 at Cow Island on Missouri River at Nez Perce Crossing</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and October 23, 1891</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Helena2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">HelenP.Drew1</container><unittitle> Steam schooners <emph render="italic">Svea</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph>, <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/RA420/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">HelenP.Drew2</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Helen P.
					 Drew</emph> at a dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.HelenP.Drew2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hermina</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Hermina1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hermina</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Hermina1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">H.F. Alexander</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">H.F.Alexander1</container><unittitle>Passenger ship <emph render="italic">H.F.
					 Alexander</emph> at dock with cars</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1926?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.H.F.Alexander1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hipper</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Hipper1</container><unittitle>German cruiser <emph render="italic">Hipper</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1937 and 1945?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Hipper1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Holiday</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Holiday1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Holiday</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Holiday1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hoquiam</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/19</container><container type="item">Glenmark2</container><unittitle> Tug <emph render="italic">Hoquiam</emph> with the
					 bark <emph render="italic">Glenmark</emph> in the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Glenmark2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 3 m. bark, GLENMARK of Dundee, tug HOQUIAM,
					 Northwest Lumber Mill, Hoquiam River, W.T.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Glenmark </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Howard</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">Howard1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Howard</emph> in the
					 Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1885 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Howard1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Two mast schooner HOWARD built in San
					 Francisco in 1869. This little vessel is typical of many of her type that
					 carried the commerce of the Pacific Coast in their tiny hulls. This picture
					 shows the HOWARD with a tug alongside in the Hoquiam River. Her dimensions give
					 a fair idea of the size of these vessels: 82' long, 25' beam, 4' depth.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Hyak</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Hyak1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Hyak</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1941</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Hyak1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Hyak2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Hyak</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1941</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Hyak2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Idaho</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">IdahoA1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph> on Lake Coeur d'Alene</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1914?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.IdahoA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">IdahoA2</container><unittitle> Officers of the ship <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph> on deck at Juneau, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1882 and 1888?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.IdahoA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: The Idaho and its officers at Juneau,
					 Alaska. 7347. Louisa A. Turner.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">IdahoB1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Idaho</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.IdahoB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">HelenP.Drew1</container><unittitle> Steam schooners <emph render="italic">Svea</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph>, <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1917 and 1925?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.HelenP.Drew1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Illahee</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Illahee1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">MV Illahee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Illahee1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Inland Flyer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">InlandFlyer1</container><unittitle>Launch <emph render="italic">Inland Flyer</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.InlandFlyer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Lake Washington. Inland Flyer, 66 ft x 9 ft,
					 Ladies cabin, 17 ft, Engine room, 16 ft, Toilet in engine room, 4 ft. 6 x 3 ft,
					 Seats on deck, 16 ft 6 in on each side, Power, 50 HP. Equipped with electric
					 lights.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Inlander</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Inlander1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Inlander</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Inlander1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Inverclyde</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Inverclyde1</container><unittitle>Bark <emph render="italic">Inverclyde</emph> under
					 sail</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1923?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Inverclyde1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Iroquois</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Iroquois </emph>was built in Toledo,
				  Ohio in 1901 for the Arnold Transportation Company. The vessel registered 1,169
				  tons, with dimensions of 214x34.4x21.2 ft. The engine was of triple-expansion
				  steam type and produced 2,000 hp. The <emph render="italic">Iroquois
				  </emph>arrived in Puget Sound March 1907, purchased from the Great Lakes for
				  the Puget Sound Navigation Company by Charles E. Peabody and Joshua Green. She
				  was one of the first two vessels in Inland Puget Sound service to be fitted
				  with United Wireless Telegraph equipment. The <emph render="italic">Iroquois
				  </emph>served initially on the Victoria-Seattle route, moving later to Puget
				  Sound routes. Following World War I, a growing need for car ferries caused the
				  passenger-only <emph render="italic">Iroquois </emph>to return to service on
				  the Great Lakes in 1920. It was purchased again by Puget Sound Navigation in
				  1928 and refitted as a "night steamer" between Seattle, Port Angeles, and
				  Victoria. In 1947, the <emph render="italic">Iroquois </emph>was sold to Black
				  Ball Transport and extensively modified as a freighter, remaining in service on
				  the Puget Sound. Eventually sold to an Alaskan crab processor, the vessel was
				  scuttled in 1982, having served for over 80 years. Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: The
				  Superior Company, 1966) and The Evergreen Fleet website.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Iroquois1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Iroquois</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1960?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Iroquois1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Island Belle</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">IslandBelle1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Island Belle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1920</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.IslandBelle1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Islander</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Wood burning passenger and freight steamer built at Newhall,
				  Washington for the Bellingham Bay-San Juan Island route, 1904.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Islander1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Islander</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1924</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Islander1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>This is the first <emph render="italic">Islander</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Issaquah</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1914 by the Anderson Steamboat Co. for service on Lake
				  Washington between Leschi, Mercer Island and Newport. The vessel was sold in
				  early 1918 to the Rodeo-Vallejo Ferry System, operating in northern San
				  Francisco Bay. In 1927, the ferry was shifted to the Mare Island routes from
				  Vallejo, Martinez, and Benicia. The ferry ended up abandoned on a mud flat in
				  Sausalito. Ca. and dismantled in the 1970s.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Issaquah1</container><unittitle> Steam propeller ferry <emph render="italic">Issaquah</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1927 and 1948?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Issaquah1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">James Domville</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The steamer <emph render="italic">James Domville </emph> was
				  wrecked on Thirty Mile River in the spring of 1899.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Domville1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">James
					 Domville</emph> wrecked in the Thirty Mile River, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Domville1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Domville2</container><unittitle>Wreck of the sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">James Domville</emph> in the Thirty Mile River,
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Domville2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/22</container><container type="item">Domville3</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">James
					 Domville</emph> wrecked in the Thirty Mile River, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Domville3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Str "Domville." Wreck in 30 Mile River,
					 Y.T. Then on the margin of Lake Lebarge [Laberge] - where I cremated Sam
					 McGee.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Jane A.
				  Falkenberg</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built at New Bedford in 1854. Lost at sea in 1899 on a trip from
				  Port Hadlock to San Francisco. The wreck was salvaged and eventually used as a
				  breakwater at Saint Michael, Alaska. Information from Alaska Shipwrecks:
				  1750-2010 by Captain Warren Good.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JaneA.Falkenberg1</container><unittitle>Drawing of the barkentine <emph render="italic">Jane
					 A. Falkenberg</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1854 and 1899 </unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA2348/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Janet
				  Carruthers</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JanetCarruthers1</container><unittitle>Five-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Janet
					 Carruthers</emph> wrecked at Pacific Beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1919</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.JanetCarruthers1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Aux. Five mast schooner "Janet Carruthers"
					 wrecked at Pacific Beach in 1919 built by Wallace in Vancouver B.C. 1917.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Jefferson</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1904 for the Alaska Steamship Co., the wooden passenger
				  steamer <emph render="italic">Jefferson </emph> was 1,615 tons, 207x39.8x25.6
				  feet, powered by a triple-expansion engine with steam from three Scotch
				  boilers, developing a total of 1,450 horsepower. The <emph render="italic">Jefferson </emph> was dismantled in late 1925 in the
				  shipbreaking yard of Nieder &amp; Marcus in Seattle. Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest. (Seattle: The
				  Superior Company, 1966.)</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">Jefferson1</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Jefferson</emph> in
					 Sitka harbor, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Jefferson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">J.M. Weatherwax</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in Aberdeen, Washington, 1890.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">J.M.Weatherwax1</container><unittitle> Launching day of the three-masted schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">J.M. Weatherwax</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA435/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">J.M.Weatherwax2</container><unittitle>Three-masted schooner <emph render="italic">J.M.
					 Weatherwax</emph> being towed by the tug <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph>
					 on the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA436/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">John C. Barr</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JohnC.Barr1</container><unittitle> Steamboat <emph render="italic">John C. Barr</emph>
					 nearing boat landing, probably on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA443/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">John Cudahy</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The John Cudahy was built in 1898 by the Moran Brothers in Dutch
				  Harbor, Alaska. It was named for John Cudahy (1843–1915), Chicago merchant and
				  director of NAT&amp;T Co. Originally owned by North American Transportation
				  &amp; Trading Co., it was sold to Northern Navigation Co. in 1911. Later in
				  1914, it was acquired by the White Pass &amp; Yukon Railroad. It was sold by
				  WP&amp;YR and abandoned by new owner at St. Michael, Alaska in 1927. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JohnCudahy1</container><unittitle>John Cudahy at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1898 and 1905</unitdate></did><note><p>Album page with eight photos on it.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">John D.
				  Spreckels</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Wrecked in April 1913 en route from Baranof Harbor, Alaska to
				  San Francisco, California. Collided with British steamer <emph render="italic">Statesman </emph>near Point Reyes.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JohnD.Spreckels1</container><unittitle>Wreck of the schooner <emph render="italic">John D.
					 Spreckels</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.JohnD.Spreckels1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Josephine</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Josephine </emph>was built in Lake's
				  Yard in North Seattle in 1878 when she began making regular trips between
				  Seattle and the Upper Skagit River in 1878. The steamer exploded in the Puget
				  Sound near Mukilteo on January 16, 1883 during one of her regular trips to the
				  Upper Skagit River. After the explosion, the steamer was rebuilt and made its
				  first trip on March 24, 1883. In 1891 the ship was sold and began making trips
				  between Olympia and Shelton.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item">Josephine1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Josephine</emph> on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Josephine1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Destroyed Jan. 16th 1883 blown up and many
					 killed J. Perkins and [illegible] were included in the passengers.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Josie Burrows</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">JosieBurrows1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Josie
					 Burrows</emph> with passengers and freight</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1893 and 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.JosieBurrows1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Stern wheeler "Josie Burrows" built in
					 Aberdeen, Wash. 1893. Used for passengers as well as freight &amp; towing.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">J.P. Light</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The steamer <emph render="italic">J.P. Light</emph> was the
				  first of the Moran Brothers Co. "assembly line" steamers. She was launched
				  April 23, 1898 and delivered in May to Frank Waterhouse &amp; Co., agents for
				  the British American Corporation, at the mouth of the Yukon. She was 409
				  tons.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">J.P.Light1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">J.P. Light</emph> at a
					 boat landing on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA442/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">J.P.Light2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">J.P. Light</emph> at a
					 wood camp, probably on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA434/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Steamer J.P. Light loading venison.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">J.P.Light3</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">J.P. Light</emph> in
					 Five Finger Rapids on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA433/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">K-N</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kailua</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kailua1</container><unittitle> Launching of the four-masted schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Kailua</emph> at Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1901</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kailua1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 4 m. sch. KAILUA - launching at Hitchings
					 yard, Hoquiam, W.T. for Hind, Rolph &amp; Co. 1901. - Lost at sea - 1904.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Reconstructed from the San Francisco Bay ferry steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">Peralta</emph> in July 1937 by the Puget Sound Navigation
				  Co. for the run between Seattle and Bremerton (p. 437). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kalakala1</container><unittitle> Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph> at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kalakala1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kalakala2-5</container><unittitle>Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1967</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA637/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kalakala6</container><unittitle>Men standing on a ship watching the motor ferry 
					 <emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1967</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kalakala6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kalakala7</container><unittitle>Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph> on
					 Puget Sound</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1967</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kalakala7/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><phystech><p>Hand-colored photograph</p></phystech><note><p>TWritten on image: Streamlined ferry "Kalakala."</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">Kalakala8</container><unittitle>Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Kalakala</emph> on
					 the Puget Sound</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1967</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kalakala8/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kekoskee</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Kekoskee1</container><unittitle>Oil tanker <emph render="italic">Kekoskee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kekoskee1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kennewick</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Kennewick1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kennewick</emph> ferry being
					 built on Bainbridge Island, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kennewick1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kinugawa Maru</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">KinugawaMaru1</container><unittitle>Wreck of the <emph render="italic">Kinugawa
					 Maru</emph> near Bonegi Beach, Solomon Islands</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1942 and 1960?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KinugawaMaru1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Sank off of Bonegi Beach Nov. 15 1942
					 Guadalcanal.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kirkland</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Sidewheel steamer ferry <emph render="italic">Kirkland</emph>
				  built on Lake Washington for the Jackson Street Cable Railway for service
				  between Juanita-Kirkland-Houghton-Leschi Park (p. 43). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Kirkland1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamship <emph render="italic">Kirkland</emph> on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kirkland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kitsap</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Kitsap</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">KitsapA1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Kitsap</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KitsapA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> Built by Joseph Supple of Portland in 1905. Operated on the
					 Poulsbo route and the Bellingham route. Sunk by steamer <emph render="italic">Indianapolis </emph>in Seattle in 1910. Eventually raised by
					 the Elliot Bay Dry Dock Co. and renamed the Bremerton. Notes from Gordon
					 Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">KitsapB1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Kitsap</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1925 and 1961</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KitsapB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Built by Lake Washington Shipyards for Puget Sound service,
					 1925 (p. 366). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Klamath</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Passenger and freight steamer belonging to the Klamath Lake
				  Navigation Co.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Klamath1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Klamath</emph> backed
					 into a mud bank on Klamath Lake, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Klamath1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Klikitat</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>493 ton 3-masted barkentine built by John Kruse in 1881 at the
				  Simpson yard in North Bend, Oregon. She set a speed record in 1896 making the
				  voyage from Honolulu to Port Townsend in 9 days, 16 hours, a record for sailing
				  vessels which stood until 1909 (p. 3). Stranded on Honlii Point, Hawaii on Nov.
				  9, 1912 while operated by the Puget Sound Commercial Co. (p. 213). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Klikitat1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">Klikitat</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1881 and 1912</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Klikitat1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Klondike</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were two successive steamships named the 
				  <emph render="italic">Klondike </emph>in the Yukon Territory. The first, 
				  <emph render="italic">Klondike I</emph>, was built in Whitehorse and launched
				  in 1929. The <emph render="italic">Klondike </emph>ran aground in 1936. While
				  the ship itself was wrecked, the machinery and other parts were used to rebuild
				  the <emph render="italic">Klondike </emph>with the same basic design. The 
				  <emph render="italic">Klondike II </emph>launched in 1937, continuing the route
				  of her predecessor carrying passengers and freight between Whitehorse and
				  Dawson. The <emph render="italic">Klondike II </emph>continued to operate until
				  1955, the last sternwheeler working on the Yukon River. Information from Parks
				  Canada, "S.S. Klondike National Historic Site."</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Klondike1</container><unittitle>Sternwheeler <emph render="italic">Klondike</emph> on
					 the Yukon River near Whitehorse</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1929 and 1955</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Klondike1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Probably the <emph render="italic">Klondike II</emph>.</p><p>Written on verso: Last sternwheeler to operate on the Yukon
					 River.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kona</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">Kona1</container><unittitle>Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Kona</emph>
					 on the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kona1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 4 m. sch. Kona in the Hoquiam River, W.T. -
					 Hoquiam Lumber &amp; Shingle Mill, st. sch. Melville Dollar.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kootenai</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">Kootenai1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Kootenai</emph> tied
					 up</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1885 and 1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Kootenai1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Japanese freighter wrecked off the coast of the Aleutian
				  Islands, Alaska in 1930. Wrecked near the lighthouse off the coast of Unimak
				  Island. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">KoshunMaru1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph> with rocks
					 and logs in the foreground</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KoshunMaru1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">KoshunMaru2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph> with rocks
					 and logs in the foreground</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KoshunMaru2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">KoshunMaru3</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph> with rocks
					 and logs in the foreground</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KoshunMaru3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">KoshunMaru4</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph> and a
					 building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KoshunMaru4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">KoshunMaru5</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Koshun Maru</emph> and a
					 building</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.KoshunMaru5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lady Cecilia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">LadyCecilia1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Lady Cecilia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.LadyCecilia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: SS Lady Cecilia (Union Steamship Co.?
					 1949?)</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lady Cynthia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">LadyCynthia1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Lady Cynthia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.LadyCynthia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: S.S. Lady Cynthia. Union Steamship Co.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lady of the Lake</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">LadyoftheLake1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lady of the Lake</emph> on Lake
					 Chelan, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1897 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.LadyoftheLake1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lamaina</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">Lamaina1</container><unittitle>Drawing of sailing ship <emph render="italic">Lamaina</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1850 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lamaina1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Latona</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Latona1</container><unittitle>Steam launch <emph render="italic">Latona</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Latona1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The steam launch "Latona" was built by James
					 M. Colman. It was purchased by Edw. C. Kilbourne who took it up the Duwamish
					 River into the Black River into Lake Washington and via D.J. Denny's log ditch
					 into Lake Union. Dr. Kilbourne was joined by J.A. Moore forming the Lake Union
					 Transportation Co. which operated the Latona and Maud Foster. The two steamers
					 carried freight and passengers between the terminus of Frank Osgood's horse car
					 line, near Valley &amp; Fairview Ave., and their additions on the north side of
					 the lake.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Images featuring the <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph> are
				  pasted on album pages.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton1a</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph> at a
					 dock where people are walking</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton1a/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton1b</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph> at a
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton1b/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton1c</container><unittitle>People aboard steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton1c/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton1d</container><unittitle>Two men and a women aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton1d/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton2a</container><unittitle>Crew and passengers aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton2a/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton2b</container><unittitle>Crew and young girls aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton2b/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton2c</container><unittitle>Four men and a little girl aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton2c/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton2d</container><unittitle>Crewmen aboard steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton2d/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton3a</container><unittitle>Men standing aboard steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton3a/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton3b</container><unittitle>Two men aboard steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton3b/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton3c</container><unittitle>A man and a woman aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton3c/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton3d</container><unittitle>A man and a woman aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton3d/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton4a</container><unittitle>Three men and three women aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton4a/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton4b</container><unittitle>Three men aboard steamship <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton4b/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Lawton4c</container><unittitle>Seven men and one woman aboard steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Lawton</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 6, 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lawton4c/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Mr. Hoag, Mr. Gray, Majr. Tucker, Mrs.
					 Walker, Majr. Brigham (?), Dr. Bailey on the Lawton.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Leba</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Leba1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Leba</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Leba1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Liberty</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">Liberty1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Liberty</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Liberty1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pacific Fisherman. 5 ½ inches long. 133 zinc
					 enamel.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S. Lily</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">Lily1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamboat <emph render="italic">U.S.
					 Lily</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1911?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Lily1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Loreli</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">Loreli1</container><unittitle>Tug <emph render="italic">Loreli</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Loreli1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Loyal N1</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">HarryLuckenbach1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Harry Luckenbach</emph>
					 and tug <emph render="italic">Loyal N1</emph> probably docked at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1919 and 1943</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Harry Luckenbach, freighter. Tug, Loyal
					 N1</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Harry Luckenbach
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph> was operated by
				  Carlson Brothers as the Interlake Steamship Co., on the Leschi Park-Meydenbauer
				  Bay run (p. 81). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
				  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/3</container><container type="item">L.T.Haas1</container><unittitle>Steamboat ferry <emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph>
					 on Lake Washington near Kirkland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA819/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">L.T.Haas2</container><unittitle>Steamboat ferry <emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph>
					 on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.L.T.Haas2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">L.T.Haas3</container><unittitle>Steamboat ferry <emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph>
					 docked on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA645/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">L.T.Haas4</container><unittitle> Steamboat ferry <emph render="italic">L.T.
					 Haas</emph> unloading passengers on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA481/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">L.T.Haas5</container><unittitle>Steamboat ferry <emph render="italic">L.T. Haas</emph>
					 on Lake Washington near Kirkland</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.L.T.Haas5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lydia Thompson</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/6</container><container type="item">LydiaThompson1</container><unittitle>Puget Sound passenger steamship <emph render="italic">Lydia Thompson</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1893 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.LydiaThompson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Built in 1893 at Port Angeles. 92' long, 22'
					 beam, 6'8" long. Gross 202 net 101. Engines triple 11-15-25x16 160# steam.
					 Built by Enos Raymond for the Thompson Bros. who later incorporated as the
					 Thompson Steamboat Co. Her first service was for a year on the Seattle-Hood
					 Canal route relieving the <emph render="italic">Delta</emph>. Then on the
					 Seattle-Bellingham run. In 1896 the <emph render="italic">Thompson </emph> went
					 on the Seattle-San Juan Island-Bellingham Bay route where she remained until
					 replaced by the <emph render="italic">Rosalie </emph>in 1905. Had been sold to
					 Puget Sound Navigation Co. in 1903. Her last service was as freight boat on
					 Hoods Canal and other short routes. Bought by Harry Crosby in 1910 and cut down
					 for tug-boat. Renamed <emph render="italic">Monitor</emph>. Passed to the
					 Independent Towing Co. who wore her out and stripped her in 1930. Hull in Lake
					 Union in 1943.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">North Pacific2</container><unittitle>Steamers <emph render="italic">North Pacific
					 </emph>and <emph render="italic">Lydia Thompson </emph>at the Chautauqua dock
					 on Vashon Island</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.North Pacific2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Maid of Orleans</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Maid of Orleans</emph> was a
				  two-masted schooner of 180 tons built at San Francisco in 1882 for the South
				  Seas trade. She was acquired by the Pacific Coast Codfish Co. In 1906, the
				  largest codfishing fleet yet assembled on Puget Sound sailed for the Bering Sea
				  grounds from Seattle, Tacoma, and Anacortes, consisting of the schooners, 
				  <emph render="italic">Carrier Dove</emph>, <emph render="italic">Fanny
				  Dutard</emph>, <emph render="italic">Lizzie Colby</emph>, <emph render="italic">Maid of Orleans</emph>, <emph render="italic">Harold
				  Blekum</emph>, <emph render="italic">Fortuna</emph>, <emph render="italic">Joseph Russ</emph>, and <emph render="italic">Alice</emph>.
				  Their catch totaled 1,014,618 fish (p. 123). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">?</container><container type="item">MaidofOrleans1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Maid of Orleans</emph>
					 on the Bering Sea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.MaidofOrleans1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Cod fish vessel and dories, Bering Sea.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Majestic</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Built at Everett by E. Heath for the Thompson Steamboat Co. in
				  1901 (p. 70), renamed the <emph render="italic">Whatcom </emph> in 1904,
				  operated under the Alaska Steamship Co. (p. 100), lost off Pt. Pfeiffer in 1909
				  (p. 165), purchased by the Puget Sound Navigation Co. and converted in 1921 to
				  the steam ferry <emph render="italic">City of Bremerton </emph> (p. 324). Notes
				  from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Majestic1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Majestic</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Majestic1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Malaspina</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Designed in 1962 for the State of Alaska's Commission of Public
				  Works for the run between Prince Rupert and Haines, Alaska (p. 663). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Malaspina1</container><unittitle>Ocean going ferry <emph render="italic">Malaspina</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1962 and 1980?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Malaspina1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: State of Alaska M/V Malaspina.
					 Ketchikan-Wrangell-Petersburg-Sitka-Juneau-Haines-Skagway.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mame</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Mame1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Mame</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Mame1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Margaret</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Margaret1-2</container><unittitle>Boat <emph render="italic">Margaret</emph> at dock in
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Margaret1%201290.Margaret2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Marion</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Marion1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Marion</emph> on the
					 Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1882 and 1906</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Marion1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Lost at Sanak, Alaska on April 11, 1906.</p><p>Written on verso: Sch. Marion. Built S.F. 1882 under tow in
					 Hoquiam River, W.T. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Marutta</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Marutta1</container><unittitle>Yacht <emph render="italic">Marutta</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1935 and 1966?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Marutta1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mary Moody</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">MaryMoody1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Mary Moody</emph> on
					 Lake Pend Oreille, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1867</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.MaryMoody1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: A pack train on its way to Kootenai is
					 boarding the Mary Moody at the south end of Lake Pend Oreille.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mascot</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><bioghist><p>Lewis River Transportation Co. sternwheeler which ran aground on
				  January 4, 1900 on the North Fork of the Lewis river under Captain Davis. It
				  was popularly known as the "Hoodoo".</p></bioghist><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Mascot</emph>,
					 wrecked</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900</unitdate></did><scopecontent><p>Also includes the sternwheel <emph render="italic">Lurline</emph>. Taken near La Center, Washington.</p></scopecontent><note><p>Purchased from Zephyr Used &amp; Rare Books, 2024</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Massachusetts</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Chicago
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="file"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Maud</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built for Roald Amundsen in Norway in 1917 as a polar
				  exploration vessel. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Maud1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Maud</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Maud1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mazama</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">Winema1</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Winema</emph> and
					 steamship <emph render="italic">Mazama</emph> on Klamath Lake,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Winema1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Winema </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Melrose</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1902 for the Coast Shipping Co.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Melrose1</container><unittitle>Tug <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph> towing
					 four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Melrose</emph> on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Melrose1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Melrose2</container><unittitle> Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Melrose</emph> on the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Melrose2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mercury</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Mercury1</container><unittitle> Bark <emph render="italic">Mercury</emph> wrecked in
					 Skagway Harbor, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">April 11, 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Mercury1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mexico</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Mexico1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Mexico</emph>,
					 probably in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1882</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Mexico1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Minnesota</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Minnesota1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Minnesota</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1903 and 1919</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Minnesota1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Missouri</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Missouri1</container><unittitle>People getting off tour bus in front of the 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Missouri</emph> at Bremerton,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1954 and 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Missouri1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Mohican</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Mohican1</container><unittitle>Steam sloop of war <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Mohican</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Mohican1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Monarch</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Monarch1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Monarch</emph>,
					 probably on the lower Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1927?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Monarch1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Montana</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">S.S. Montana </emph> was a Pacific
				  Mail Steam Ship Company (P.M.S.S. Co.) steamer that operated between San
				  Francisco and Panama from 1866 to 1869. In the early 1870s the Colorado Steam
				  Navigation Company bought the <emph>Montana </emph>from the Pacific Mail
				  Steamship Company, to run between San Francisco and the mouth of the Colorado.
				  The <emph>Montana </emph>caught fire and ran aground just out of Guaymas,
				  Mexico in December 1876 (p.58). Information from Steamboats on the Colorado
				  River, 1852-1916 by Richard E. Lingenfelter (Tucson: University of Arizona
				  Press, 1978). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Montana1</container><unittitle>Copy of lithograph of the sidewheel steamer 
					 <emph render="italic">S.S. Montana</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1865 and 1876</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Montana1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Lithograph by Endicott &amp; Co., of New York. Color print of
					 this lithograph in the California State Library's collection. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Monterey</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Monterey</emph> was a U.S.
				  naval monitor ship, a steam-powered ironclad vessel with a low deck and armored
				  turrets.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Monterey1</container><unittitle>U.S. Navy monitor <emph render="italic">Monterey</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Monterey1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: U.S. Navy built 1889 monitor MONTEREY, first
					 ship in first dry dock at Bremerton.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Monterey2</container><unittitle>U.S. Navy monitor <emph render="italic">Monterey</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Monterey2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/8</container><container type="item">Monterey3</container><unittitle>U.S. Navy monitor <emph render="italic">Monterey</emph> in dry dock at Port Orchard,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Monterey3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mount Vernon</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Formerly the <emph render="italic">Robert Bridges</emph>, used
				  on the Anacortes-Sydney, B.C. run in 1935 (p. 341). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">MountVernon1</container><unittitle>Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Mount Vernon</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1923 and 1953?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.MountVernon1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Muskoka</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Muskoka1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">Muskoka</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Muskoka1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nann Smith</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> C.A. Smith, who had completed a large sawmill at Marshfield,
				  engaged Edward S. Hough of San Francisco to design a specialized steel
				  lumber-carrying steamer for operation between Coos Bay, Washington, and
				  California. This vessel, the <emph render="italic">Nann Smith</emph> of 2,009
				  tons, with a carrying capacity of 2,250,000 board feet, was completed in 1907
				  by the Newport News Shipbuilding &amp; Dry Dock Co. of Virginia and placed in
				  operation in 1908 by the Inter-Ocean Transportation Co., a Smith subsidiary.
				  This was a particularly interesting development from the historical standpoint,
				  for it marked the beginning of packaged lumber shipments. Water shipment of
				  packaged lumber is generally considered to be a post-World War II development
				  and few are aware that it was pioneered well over half a century before (p.
				  152). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">NannSmith1</container><unittitle>Bird's-eye view of the steamer <emph render="italic">Nann Smith</emph> in Coos Bay, Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1913?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NannSmith1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Navarino</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Navarino1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Navarino</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1937 and 1962</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Navarino1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Nebraska</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska1</container><unittitle>Invitation to launch of battleship 
					 <emph render="italic">Nebraska</emph> on October 7, 1904 with drawing of the
					 ship</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on invitation: The Moran Bros. Company requests the
					 pleasure of your company at the Launching of the United States Battleship
					 "Nebraska." Friday, the seventh of October, nineteen hundred and four at two
					 thirteen o'clock, p.m. Christened by Miss Mary Nain Mickey.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/4</container><container type="item">Nebraska2</container><unittitle> Launching of the battleship <emph render="italic">Nebraska</emph> at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">October 7, 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska3</container><unittitle>Battleship <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Nebraska</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Built in Seattle by Robt. Moran. This was
					 the first ship of war to be built in Seattle. Contemporary Snapshot. 189.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska4</container><unittitle> Main propelling engines on battleship 
					 <emph render="italic">Nebraska</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Main Propelling engines, 19,000 horsepower.
					 Battleship Nebraska U.S.N. Moran Bros. Company Builders, Seattle Wash.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska5</container><unittitle> Ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Nebraska</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Colorado</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Pennsylvania</emph>, and <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wisconsin</emph> at Puget
					 Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Big Four. Advance guard of U.S. naval
					 rendezvous scheduled for North Pacific Ocean this summer on arrival of Atlantic
					 fleet under Admiral Evans. Scene at Puget Sound Navy Yard (Bremerton opposite
					 Seattle). Reading from left to right: Battleship Nebraska, Armored Cruiser
					 Colorado, Armored Cruiser Pennsylvania, Battleship Wisconsin.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nellie</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nellie1</container><unittitle> Steamboats <emph render="italic">Nellie</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Wm. F. Monroe</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1896</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nellie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Nellie &amp; Wm. F. Monroe. Nellie built at
					 Seattle 1876, 55.03 or 100 tons. Wm. F. Monroe built at Seattle 1883, 99.81
					 tons.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">New England</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NewEngland1</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">New England</emph>
					 docked at the New England Fish Co.</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1897 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NewEngland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Chicago
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">New Life</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NewLife1</container><unittitle>Purse seiner <emph render="italic">New Life</emph> on
					 Puget Sound</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NewLife1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">New York</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">New
				  York</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NewYorkA1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">New York</emph> in Half Moon
					 Bay, California</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NewYorkA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NewYorkB1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">New York</emph> in the
					 Yukon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NewYorkB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Chicago
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Niels Nielsen</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built by Todd Shipyards Corp. for the Norwegian shipping firm of
				  B. Stolt-Nielsen, she was the first merchant steamship ever built there for
				  foreign owners. Keel was laid in May of 1916, work on the vessel began in June,
				  and she was launched in September of the same year (p. 266). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NielsNielsen1</container><unittitle> Launching of the steamship <emph render="italic">Niels Nielsen</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NielsNielsen1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nizina</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The veteran West Coast steel cargo carrier 
				  <emph render="italic">Nizina</emph> was brought out from the Great Lakes in
				  1902 as the <emph render="italic">Eureka</emph> by the old Globe Navigation Co.
				  She was operated by the Pacific Coast Steamship Co. from 1908 to 1916, and
				  later by the Alaska Steamship Co. as the <emph render="italic">Ketchikan</emph>
				  and (from 1926) the <emph render="italic">Nizina</emph>. Sold to Japanese
				  scrappers and loaded with lumber and scrap metal on Puget Sound for her final
				  voyage (p. 458). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
				  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">Nizina1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Nizina</emph> on a
					 beach</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1916 and 1937</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nizina1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nome City</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The 939 ton wood steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nome
				  City</emph> was chartered by the Pacific Clipper line. She was built in 1900
				  and had extensive passenger accommodations (p. 55). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/10</container><container type="item">NomeCity1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nome City</emph>
					 in ice floes in the Bering Sea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NomeCity1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">North Bend</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arago2</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> and
					 three-mast bald-header <emph render="italic">North Bend</emph> at Hoquiam,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1914</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arago2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Arago </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The North Pacific Co. operated the old Puget Sound sidewheel
				  steamer <emph render="italic">North Pacific </emph> to Skagway and Dyea early
				  in the 1898 season, departing Seattle every 15 days carrying 150 first-class
				  and 150 second-class passengers and 70 tons of freight. She made her last
				  voyage from the north on April 26, 1898, and was then temporarily laid up at
				  Port Townsend before resuming local service on Puget Sound. (pg. 36). While
				  operating on the Tacoma-Vancouver service on July 18, 1903, the 
				  <emph render="italic">North Pacific </emph> struck the rocks off Marrowstone
				  Point during a heavy fog. Her hull was badly damaged. The tug 
				  <emph render="italic">C.B. Smith </emph> removed her passengers and crew, after
				  which she drifted off and sank in deep water (p. 94). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">NorthPacific1</container><unittitle> Sinking of the sidewheel steamer 
					 <emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph> off Port Townsend,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 18, 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NorthPacific1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">NorthPacific2</container><unittitle>Steamers <emph render="italic">North Pacific
					 </emph>and <emph render="italic">Lydia Thompson </emph>at the Chautauqua dock
					 on Vashon Island</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.NorthPacific2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr3</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph> and <emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph> south of Wall St.
					 dock, Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgeE.Starr3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Geo. E. Starr, built 1879, n. side Yesler's
					 Wharf. N. Pacific raced the Olympia June 27, 1871 Victoria to Port Townsend
					 winning in 2 hrs &amp; 41 min.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">George E. Starr
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/18</container><container type="item">GeorgeE.Starr4</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">George E.
					 Starr</emph> and <emph render="italic">North Pacific</emph> in the Seattle
					 Harbor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.GeorgeE.Starr4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Geo. E. Starr, built 1879, n. side Yesler's
					 Wharf. N. Pacific raced the Olympia June 27, 1871 Victoria to Port Townsend
					 winning in 2 hrs &amp; 41 min.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">George E. Starr
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><note><p>The steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph> was
					 built at San Francisco in 1904 for the Alaska Packers Association. She was a
					 739-ton steel vessel of the single-ended steam schooner type. She was renamed 
					 <emph render="italic">Casper</emph> in 1925 (p. 519). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p><p>Filed under <emph>Wasp </emph>subseries.</p></note></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Wasp1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Wasp</emph> with
					 steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph> and four-masted schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Commerce</emph> on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wasp1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph>Wasp </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">O-S</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ocean Wave</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 724 ton <emph render="italic">Ocean Wave </emph> was
				  designed by Jacob Kamm and built at Portland, Oregon, for the "seaside route"
				  of the Ilwaco Railway &amp; Navigation Co. between Portland and Ilwaco, having
				  been placed in service in 1891. On May 20, 1899, she departed Port Angeles,
				  bound for San Francisco towed by a tug. The Atchison, Topeka, &amp; Santa Fe
				  Railway, having established its transcontinental western terminus at Richmond,
				  California, was in need of a steamer to ferry passengers into San Francisco.
				  She was laid up in 1911 at Antioch. She was then put back into service during
				  World War I, having been purchased by the U.S. Shipping Board. In the 1920s she
				  was sold for use as a floating restaurant (p. 50). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">OceanWave1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Ocean
					 Wave</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1911</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OceanWave1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: S.S. Ocean Wave. Ilwaco R.R. &amp;
					 Navigation Co. Went to S.F. Santa Fe.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">OceanWave2</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Ocean
					 Wave</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1911</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OceanWave2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Octavia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph>Octavia </emph> was a four-masted German bark out of
				  Hamburg built as the <emph render="italic">Loch Nevis </emph> by J. Reid &amp;
				  Co., Glasgow in 1894 and was renamed the <emph render="italic">Octavia </emph>
				  in 1900. She was damaged by a fire in 1902. Her hull was used in building the
				  Argentine steamer <emph render="italic">Primero </emph> in 1916.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">Octavia1</container><unittitle> Four-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Octavia</emph> at the Pike Street Wharf in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Octavia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ohio</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">Ohio1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Ohio</emph> at Nome,
					 Alaska, after collision with ice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 12, 1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Ohio1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Olympia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The naval cruiser <emph render="italic">Olympia </emph>pictured
				  here is a different vessel than the steamship <emph render="italic">Olympia
				  </emph> which was wrecked near Bligh Island in Prince William Sound, Alaska in
				  1910.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/11</container><container type="item">Olympia1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Olympia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1922</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="mapcase:oversize">M</container><container type="item">Olympia2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Olympia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1900 and 1957</unitdate><origination><corpname role="photographer">Philadelphia Naval Shipyard Photographic Laboratory</corpname></origination></did><note><p>Written on photo: 203-45.</p><p>The <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Olympia</emph> was commission
					 in 1895 and served in the Spanish American War. She now serves as a museum ship
					 at Independence Seaport Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Olympian</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">Amelia1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamers <emph render="italic">Amelia</emph>
					 and <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Amelia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph>
					 was built in Wilmington, Delaware in 1883 for the Oregon Railroad &amp;
					 Navigation Co. (O.R.&amp;N.). The <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph> was
					 wrecked in 1903 (p 94). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
					 History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Amelia </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OlympianA1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OlympianA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph>
					 was built in Wilmington, Delaware in 1883 for the Oregon Railroad &amp;
					 Navigation Co. (O.R. &amp; N.). The <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph> was
					 wrecked in 1903 (p 94). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
					 History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OlympianA2</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OlympianA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph>
					 was built in Wilmington, Delaware in 1883 for the Oregon Railroad &amp;
					 Navigation Co. (O.R. &amp; N.). The <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph> was
					 wrecked in 1903 (p 94). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
					 History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OlympianB1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Olympian</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1912 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OlympianB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Formerly the <emph render="italic">Telegraph</emph> prior to
					 1912 (p. 209). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
					 of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Oncorhynchus</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">Oncorhynchus1</container><unittitle>University of Washington research ship 
					 <emph render="italic">Oncorhynchus</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1947 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">E.F. Marten</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Oncorhynchus1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">Oncorhynchus2</container><unittitle>University of Washington research ship 
					 <emph render="italic">Oncorhynchus</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1947 and 1955?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Seattle Times</corpname></origination></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Oregon</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OregonA1</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph> in the
					 ice at Nome, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 11, 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Iron steamer built at Chester, PA, in 1878 and arrived on the
					 Pacific Coast the following year for the Portland-San Francisco service. Laid
					 up at Portland in 1894 but came back into service for the Klondike Gold Rush,
					 holding the Nome-Puget Sound record at the time of her loss. White Star
					 Steamship Co. owned the <emph render="italic">S.S. Oregon </emph> from ca. 1902
					 to 1905. (p. 75 and p. 125). At midnight on September 13, 1906, she struck the
					 rocks on the beach at Cape Hinchinbrook near the entrance to Prince William
					 Sound and was later deemed a total loss (pp. 124-125). Notes from Gordon
					 Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did altrender="autolink:itemphoto"><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OregonA2</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph> with
					 logo of White Star Steamship Co. on funnel</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1905?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Iron steamer built at Chester, PA, in 1878 and arrived on the
					 Pacific Coast the following year for the Portland-San Francisco service. Laid
					 up at Portland in 1894 but came back into service for the Klondike Gold Rush,
					 holding the Nome-Puget Sound record at the time of her loss. White Star
					 Steamship Co. owned the <emph render="italic">S.S. Oregon </emph> from ca. 1902
					 to 1905. (p. 75 and p. 125). At midnight on September 13, 1906, she struck the
					 rocks on the beach at Cape Hinchinbrook near the entrance to Prince William
					 Sound and was later deemed a total loss (pp. 124-125). Notes from Gordon
					 Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OregonA3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Oregon </emph>underway
					 with passengers</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1878 and September 13, 1906</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonA3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p><note><p>Iron steamer built at Chester, PA, in 1878 and arrived on
						  the Pacific Coast the following year for the Portland-San Francisco service.
						  Laid up at Portland in 1894 but came back into service for the Klondike Gold
						  Rush, holding the Nome-Puget Sound record at the time of her loss. At midnight
						  on September 13, 1906, she struck the rocks on the beach at Cape Hinchinbrook
						  near the entrance to Prince William Sound and was later deemed a total loss
						  (pp. 124-125). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
						  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OregonB1</container><unittitle>Battleship <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Oregon
					 </emph>taking on crew, probably off of West Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">September 7, 1895</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> The U.S. battleship <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph> was a
					 noted Spanish American War fighting ship. It was idle from 1906 to 1911, when
					 it was recommissioned at the Bremerton Navy Yard at Bremerton, Washington,
					 after extensive modernization (p. 193). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
					 McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
					 Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/12</container><container type="item">OregonB2</container><unittitle> Battleship <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph> taking
					 on crew</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1893 and 1919</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonB2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The U.S. battleship <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph> was a
					 noted Spanish American War fighting ship. She was idle from 1906 to 1911, when
					 she was recommissioned at the Bremerton Navy Yard at Bremerton, Washington,
					 after extensive modernization (p. 193). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
					 McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
					 Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">HelenP.Drew1</container><unittitle> Steam schooners <emph render="italic">Svea</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph>, <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.HelenP.Drew1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Oregon Mail</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">OregonMail1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Oregon Mail</emph> at
					 Pier 28 in Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 8, 1947</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.OregonMail1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Orizaba</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Orizaba1</container><unittitle>Painting of steamship <emph render="italic">Orizaba</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1875?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Orizaba1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Pacific Coast Steamship Co's Steamer
					 Orizaba.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Otsego</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Otsego1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Otsego</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1944?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Otsego1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Pacific</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Pacific</emph> was owned by Alaska
				  Packers Association and converted to gasoline-powered engines in 1912 (p. 206).
				  Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Pacific1</container><unittitle> Motor cannery tender <emph render="italic">Pacific</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Pacific1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: Washington State Halibut Schooner.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Parthia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Parthia1</container><unittitle>Painting of steamship <emph render="italic">Parthia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1892?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Parthia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Parthia, from a painting.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Paul Shoup</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">PaulShoup1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Paul Shoup</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1921 and 1954?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PaulShoup1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">P.B. Anderson</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">P.B.Anderson1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">P.B. Anderson</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1942 and 1966</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA2398/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Pennsylvania</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska5</container><unittitle> Ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Nebraska</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Colorado</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Pennsylvania</emph>, and <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wisconsin</emph> at Puget
					 Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1908?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Big Four. Advance guard of U.S. naval
					 rendezvous scheduled for North Pacific Ocean this summer on arrival of Atlantic
					 fleet under Admiral Evans. Scene at Puget Sound Navy Yard (Bremerton opposite
					 Seattle). Reading from left to right: Battleship Nebraska, Armored Cruiser
					 Colorado, Armored Cruiser Pennsylvania, Battleship Wisconsin.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Nebraska
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Perdita</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Perdita</emph> was a propeller
				  passenger steamer built at Seattle by W.W. McKenzie for Hood Canal service, As
				  originally built, she registered 209 tons. She was later rebuilt to 286 tons.
				  She was powered by a triple-expansion engine (p. 90). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Perdita1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Perdita</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1903 and 1911</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Perdita1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Philadelphia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Chicago
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Philip B. Low</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/20</container><container type="item">Gov.Pingree1</container><unittitle>Steamboats <emph render="italic">Gov. Pingree</emph>
					 and <emph render="italic">Philip B. Low</emph> with other
					 steamboats</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Gov.Pingree1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Gov. Pingree</emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Pioneer</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The three-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Pioneer </emph>
				  lost her rudder and was wrecked on the Oregon coast near Nestucca Beach on
				  December 17, 1900 (p. 62). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">Pioneer1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Pioneer</emph> at a
					 lumber mill dock in Hoquiam, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1892?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Pioneer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Mill scene Hoquiam. Schooner closest to
					 camera is the "Pioneer" built Hoquiam in 1886.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Point Loma</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 310-ton steam schooner <emph render="italic">Point
				  Loma</emph> stranded on Long Beach, Washington, near Seaview on February 28,
				  1896, while en route from Grays Harbor for San Francisco with lumber and in
				  charge of Capt. Conway. The coastal lumber carrier had been struck the previous
				  day by one of the worst gales of the year. At midnight the engine broke down,
				  the sails blew away and the wooden hull began leaking so badly that the boiler
				  fires were extinguished. As the wind and high seas carried her toward the
				  beach, rockets were fired, alerting the Fort Canby lifesaving crew. High seas
				  made it impossible to launch the surf boat, but a line fired from the beach
				  reached the grounded steamer and the 17-man crew was rescued by breeches buoy.
				  The <emph render="italic">Point Loma</emph>, which became a total loss, was one
				  of the early vessels of her type built at San Francisco in 1888, showing
				  sailing ship lines, two masts with fore-and-aft sails and a swinging cargo
				  gaff. She was the first to establish regularly scheduled steamship service
				  between that port and Grays Harbor. At the time of her loss she was owned by
				  the Grays Harbor Commercial Co., an association of the mill owners belonging to
				  the Pacific Pine Lumber co., which operated a large lumber mill at Cosmopolis,
				  Washington (p. 6). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">PointLoma1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Point Loma</emph>
					 in the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PointLoma1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/13</container><container type="item">PointLoma2</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Point Loma</emph>
					 in the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1889?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PointLoma2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Polar Star</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">PolarStar1</container><unittitle>Motor vessel <emph render="italic">Polar Star</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PolarStar1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: MV Polar Star, West Lines, Tracy Arm between
					 Juneau and Petersburg. A11434-7.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Politofsky</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Politofsky1</container><unittitle>Painting of the ship <emph render="italic">Politofsky</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1867 and 1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Politofsky1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Politovsky2</container><unittitle>Don Clark and Martha Flahaut with the cannon from the 
					 <emph render="italic">Politovsky</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">DeLaurenti</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Politovsky2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Don Clark and Martha Flahaut. Politofsky
					 Cannon, 1867-1897, on loan, Seattle Historical Society, October 22, 1954.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Port Douglas</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">PortDouglas1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">Port Douglas</emph>
					 at Port Blakely Mill, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PortDouglas1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Shipping lumber at Port Blakely Mill,
					 Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Portland</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>In July 1897, the <emph render="italic">Portland </emph>brought
				  the first load of gold from the Yukon gold fields to Seattle (p. 12). Notes
				  from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Portland1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Portland</emph>
					 anchored at Kodiak, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Portland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Portland2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Portland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Portland2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Portland3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Portland</emph> docked
					 in Seattle with a crowd</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Portland3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: But possibly not the PORTLAND - but probably
					 the PORTLAND ca. 1897 as another deck may have been added.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Portland4</container><unittitle>Passengers aboard the steamship <emph render="italic">Portland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Portland4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Preble</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/14</container><container type="item">Preble1</container><unittitle>Drawing of the U.S. practice ship 
					 <emph render="italic">Preble</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1839 and 1863?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Preble1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: U.S.S. Preble 10 guns 556 tons, was built at
					 Navy Yard, Portsmouth N.H. 1839.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">President</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">President</emph> was built in 1907 for
				  the Pacific Coast Steamship Co. She was a single-screw vessel of 5,453 tons,
				  originally built as a coal-burner and having a very tall funnel. She was built
				  by the New York Shipbuilding Co. at Camden, NJ. She serviced the run between
				  Puget Sound, Victoria, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego, developing a
				  heavy trade in citrus fruits between southern California and Puget Sound (p.
				  138). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">President1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">President</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1922?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.President1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">President Madison</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Formerly the <emph render="italic">Bay State</emph>, the 
				  <emph render="italic">President Madison </emph> was one of five
				  25,000-deadweight ton passenger and freight liners of the "535" class allocated
				  by the U.S. Shipping Board in 1921 for operation by the Admiral Line between
				  Puget Sound and the Orient. (pg. 317) Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PresidentMadison1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">President
					 Madison</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1921?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PresidentMadison1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Prince George</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Prince George </emph>was a Canadian
				  National Steamship vessel.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrinceGeorge1</container><unittitle>Image of sounder recording showing depths in Seymour
					 Narrows from Johnstone Straits to Straits of Georgia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate></did><odd><p>Sounder recording made by crew of the <emph render="italic">S.S. Prince George </emph> on Voyage 330. Written on verso:
					 Ripple Rock area after blasting off of top in 1948. Voyage 330 was the cruise
					 that departed Vancouver B.C., August 21, 1961.</p></odd></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrinceGeorge2</container><unittitle>Image of sounder recording showing depths in Wrangell
					 Narrows southbound from Buoy #63</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate></did><odd><p>Sounder recording made by crew of the <emph render="italic">S.S. Prince George </emph> on Voyage 330. Written on verso:
					 Voyage 330 was the cruise that departed Vancouver B.C. August 21, 1961.</p></odd></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Prince Henry</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Prince Henry </emph>was one of three
				  passenger liners from British yards that arrived in Vancouver in 1930 to
				  provide passenger service between Vancouver, Victoria, and Seattle. The other
				  ships were the <emph render="italic">Prince David </emph> and the 
				  <emph render="italic">Prince Robert</emph>. The <emph render="italic">Prince
				  Henry </emph> was the first of the trio of ships to arrive in Vancouver on June
				  21, 1930 (p. 400). This service ended in 1931. The <emph render="italic">Prince
				  Henry </emph>left Vancouver in November 1931 on a cruise to Halifax and
				  subsequent East Coast service (p. 409). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrinceHenry1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Prince Henry</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrinceHenry1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Prince Rupert</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrinceRupert1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Prince Rupert</emph>
					 at Burrard Inlet, Vancouver, Canada</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1955</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrinceRupert1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Alice</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrincessAlice1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess Alice</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessAlice1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: S.S. Princess Alice CPR 1947.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Beatrice</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Princess Beatrice</emph> was built in
				  1903 by the British Columbia Marine Railway at Victoria. She was a wooden
				  vessel of 1,290 tons powered by a single reciprocating engine of 1,392
				  horsepower, giving her a speed of 13 knots. She was the first new vessel to
				  enter the Canadian Pacific Railway service (p. 90). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrincessBeatrice1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Beatrice</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1903 and 1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessBeatrice1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Elaine</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Princess Elaine</emph> was constructed
				  by the John Brown yards on the Clyde in England. She was put into service in
				  May of 1928 on the Nanaimo-Vancouver service. She was a triple-screw turbine
				  steamer of 2,027 tons (p. 384). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrincessElaine1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess Elaine</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessElaine1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Elizabeth</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Princess Elizabeth</emph> was built by
				  the Fairfield Co. of Glasgow, Scotland, for the B.C. Coast Service of the
				  Canadian Pacific Railway. She was put into service in 1930 and was in service
				  until 1959 (p. 634). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrincessElizabeth1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Elizabeth</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessElizabeth1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Kathleen</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">S.S. Princess Kathleen </emph>was
				  launched in September of 1924 and was owned and operated by Canadian Pacific
				  Steamships. She arrived at Victoria in 1925 from the builder's yards in
				  Clydebank, Scotland. <emph render="italic">Princess Kathleen </emph>transported
				  passengers between Victoria, Vancouver, and Seattle. She was requisitioned by
				  the Royal Canadian Navy as a troop ship during World War II. The 
				  <emph render="italic">Kathleen </emph>met her fate in 1952 when she struck
				  Point Lena rock near Juneau, Alaska, during a storm, became stranded, and sank
				  upon being freed from the rock. All aboard the ship at the time of the wreck
				  survived.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/15</container><container type="item">PrincessKathleen1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Kathleen</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessKathleen1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess
				  Marguerite</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Princess Marguerite</emph> was built
				  by the John Brown yards on the Clyde in England for the B.C. Coast Service of
				  the Canadian Pacific Railway. The older <emph render="italic">Princess
				  Marguerite</emph> was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean in 1942. The new 
				  <emph render="italic">Princess Marguerite</emph> was put in service in 1949,
				  having been designed for day service on the Seattle-Victoria-Vancouver
				  international triangle run during the summer months. She and her sister ship,
				  the <emph render="italic">Princess Patricia</emph>, were of 5,911 tons and were
				  powered by twin-screw steam turbo-electric drive (p. 561). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessMarguerite1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Marguerite</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessMarguerite1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessMarguerite2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Marguerite</emph> near Victoria, Canada with Mt. Baker in the
					 background</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1924 and 1942</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Canadian Pacific Railway</corpname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessMarguerite2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: M 4785 Princess Marguerite, Mt. Baker near
					 Victoria, B.C.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess May</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessMay1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess May</emph>
					 wrecked on a rock at Sentinel Island, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 5, 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessMay1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessMay2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess May</emph>
					 wrecked on a rock at Sentinel Island, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 5, 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessMay2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: C.P.R. Cos S.S. Princess May, wrecked on
					 Sentinel Island Alaska Aug. 5 1910.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Norah</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Princess Norah</emph>, designed for
				  West Coast of Vancouver Island freight and passenger service, was a
				  single-screw, single-stack vessel of 2,731 tons with a service speed of 16
				  knots. She was equipped to carry 700 day passengers or 179 in 61 staterooms. A
				  product of the Fairfield yard in Glasgow, Scotland, her maiden voyage was April
				  1928. Later renamed the <emph render="italic">Queen of the North </emph>(pp.
				  384-385). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessNorah1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Norah</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1928 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessNorah1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Princess Norah, Canadian Pacific S.S.
					 Co.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess of Vancouver</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Provided ferry service for the Vancouver-Nanaimo, B.C., run.
				  Built in Glasgow, Scotland (p. 627). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessofVancouver1</container><unittitle>Motor ferry <emph render="italic">Princess of
					 Vancouver</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1955 and 1986</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessofVancouver1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess
				  Patricia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Princess Patricia</emph> was built by
				  the Fairfield Co. of Glasgow, Scotland, for the B.C. Coast Service of the
				  Canadian Pacific Railway. She entered service in 1949 for the
				  Seattle-Victoria-Vancouver international triangle run during the summer months
				  (p. 561). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessPatricia1-2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Patricia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA661/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/16</container><container type="item">PrincessPatricia3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess
					 Patricia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1949 and 1978?</unitdate><origination><corpname role="Photographer">Canadian Pacific Railway</corpname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessPatricia3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: 9653 Canadian Pacific S.S. Princess
					 Patricia.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Princess Sophia</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">S.S. Princess Sophia </emph> was built
				  in 1912 at Paisley, England, by Bow, McLachlan, &amp; Co. for Canadian Pacific
				  Railway. She was a single-screw steel steamship designed for service from
				  Vancouver and Victoria to northern British Columbia ports and Alaska. She was
				  245 feet in length with a 44-foot beam. (pg. 204) Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966). The <emph render="italic">Princess Sophia
				  </emph>was wrecked and sank near Vanderbilt Reef in Alaska in October 1918.
				  Over 350 passengers and crew were aboard at the time; none survived the wreck.
				  Information from the Klondike Gold Rush National Historical Park website. </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">PrincessSophia1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Princess Sophia</emph>
					 at Alert Bay, Canada</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1912 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.PrincessSophia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Printer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/9</container><container type="item">ClanMcDonald1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Clan
					 McDonald</emph> with tugs <emph render="italic">Columbia</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Printer</emph> on Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ClanMcDonald1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Clan McDonald </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Prosper</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> Built in 1898 at Port Townsend, WA (p. 32). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">Prosper1</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Prosper</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Prosper1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Pueblo</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">Pueblo1</container><unittitle>Boxing match on the deck of the <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Pueblo</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">November 29, 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Pueblo1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on image: U.S.S. Pueblo Thanksgiving Day 1917.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Queen</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Queen</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">QueenA1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Queen</emph> with
					 Captain J.A. Waters in front of the pilot house</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.QueenA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">QueenB1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Queen </emph>at dock in
				  Port Townsend after fire at sea</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 27, 1904</unitdate></did></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Quilcene</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Put into service ca. 1929 on the Seattle-Port Townsend run and
				  then the new Edmonds-Port Townsend route (p. 402). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">Quilcene1</container><unittitle>Steam ferry <emph render="italic">Quilcene</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1929 and 1939?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Quilcene1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Quillayute</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">Quillayute1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Quillayute</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1927 and 2003</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ramona</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter4</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.J.
					 Potter</emph>, sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph>,
					 and sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Ramona</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.J.Potter4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Three popular Portland excursion
					 steamers.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">T.J. Potter
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.C. Slade</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 673 ton, four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">R.C.
				  Slade</emph> was constructed in 1900 at Aberdeen, WA, by John Lindstrom. She
				  was sunk by the German Navy in 1917 (p. 58 and p. 293). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">R.C.Slade1</container><unittitle>Schooners <emph render="italic">R.C. Slade</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">A.J. West</emph> docked at the Slade Mill, Aberdeen,
					 Washington </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA574/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: No. 2. Shipping at Aberdeen Washington.</p><p>Written on verso: 4 m. sch. R.C. SLADE, 4 m. sch. A.J. WEST at
					 the Slade Mill, Aberdeen, W.T. Wishkah &amp; Chehalis Rivers. G.R.
					 Weinstein.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Reporter</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The 337-ton lumber schooner <emph render="italic">Reporter</emph>, built by Hall Bros. in 1876 when their yard
				  was still located at Port Ludlow, was wrecked March 13, 1902, south of Grays
				  Harbor (p. 83). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
				  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">Reporter1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Reporter</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian"> Between 1876 and March 1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Reporter1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Schooner "Reporter" of Hoquiam, Wash.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Resolute</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Built in 1902 in Hoquiam, Washington, by Hitchings &amp;
				  Joyce.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Resolute1</container><unittitle>Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Resolute</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Resolute1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.H. Fauntleroy</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">R.H.Fauntleroy1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">R.H.
					 Fauntleroy</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1854 and 1881</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.R.H.Fauntleroy1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.J. Hanna</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/17</container><container type="item">R.J.Hanna1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">R.J. Hanna</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA2416/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Roanoke</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Roanoke1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Roanoke</emph> at
					 Nome, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Roanoke1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Roanoke2</container><unittitle>People in front of the steamship <emph render="italic">Roanoke</emph> with a load of gold from Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 30, 1898</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Roanoke2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: First shipment of gold from Dawson to arrive
					 in Seattle [doubtful].</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Roosevelt</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Roosevelt1</container><unittitle>Tugboat <emph render="italic">Roosevelt</emph> at
					 Latouche, Alaska with a fouled propeller</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Roosevelt1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Rosalie</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Rosalie</emph> was a wooden propeller
				  steamer built in Alameda, CA, in 1893. She was sent north for the Puget
				  Sound-Alaska route. She was soon placed into service on the Victoria run (p.
				  14). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/4</container><container type="item">Rosalie1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Rosalie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1893 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Rosalie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Capt. O'Brien and Capt. Durphie, Rosalie</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Rosalie2</container><unittitle>Passengers and crew aboard the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Rosalie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">May 5, 1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Rosalie2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Rosebud</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Rosebud1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Rosebud</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Rosebud1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Rosecrans</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Rosecrans </emph>was a screw steamer
				  built by Barclay, Curle, &amp; Co. in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1883 as the 
				  <emph render="italic">Methven Castle</emph>. She was renamed 
				  <emph render="italic">Columbia </emph>in 1897 and finally, the 
				  <emph render="italic">Rosecrans </emph>in 1898. This ship was acquired by the
				  U.S. military as a US Army Transport (U.S.A.T.) ship, used to transport troops
				  to the Philippines during the Philippine-American War. The 
				  <emph render="italic">Rosecrans </emph> was converted to a tanker in 1902. She
				  was wrecked off of Astoria, Oregon, on January 7, 1913. Notes from the
				  Caledonian Maritime Research Trust and Paul Silverstone's "The New Navy,
				  1883-1922" (New York: Taylor &amp; Francis, 2006).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Rosecrans1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.A.T. Rosecrans</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Rosecrans1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Rossland</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/18</container><container type="item">Rossland1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Rossland</emph> on
					 Arrow Lakes, B.C., Canada</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Rossland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Royal</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">Royal1</container><unittitle>Tugboat <emph render="italic">Royal</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1960?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Royal1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Tug - fishing.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ruby A. Cousins</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The schooner <emph render="italic">Ruby A. Cousins</emph>,
				  Seattle for Valdez, was wrecked October 16, 1900, at the entrance of Prince
				  William Sound, but was salvaged and renamed <emph render="italic">Harold Blekum
				  </emph> (p. 62). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History
				  of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">RubyA.Cousins1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Ruby A. Cousins
					 </emph>on the Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1882 and 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.RubyA.Cousins1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ryba</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The Grays Harbor tug <emph render="italic">Ryba </emph> of the
				  Allman Hubble Tug Boat Co., (a 66 -foot steamer built at Alameda, Calif. in
				  1902), capsized on the bar while heading back after taking a pilot to an
				  incoming ship April 30, 1925. Although the <emph render="italic">Etna
				  Maru</emph>, aboard which the <emph render="italic">Ryba </emph>had just placed
				  Pilot Charles Hanson, the <emph render="italic">Lake Frances</emph>, the dredge
				  <emph render="italic">Culebra</emph> , and the tug <emph render="italic">John
				  Cudahy </emph>were all nearby, only Capt. Samuel A. Anderson, master of the
				  tug, could be saved. Basil Hubble, engineer and brother of Frank and Alonzo
				  Hubble, owners of the tug, Harry Hubble, Jr., a nephew, the vessel's fireman,
				  and deckhand Phillip Barnes, went down with the capsized tug (p. 368). Notes
				  from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">Ryba1</container><unittitle>Tug <emph render="italic">Ryba</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Ryba1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Salvor</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did altrender=""><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Charmer1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Salvor</emph> assisting 
					 <emph render="italic">Charmer</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Charmer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Charmer </emph>subseries</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Charmer2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Salvor</emph> assisting 
					 <emph render="italic">Charmer</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Charmer2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Charmer </emph>subseries</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
				  Francisco</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/7</container><container type="item">Chicago1</container><unittitle>Drawing of naval ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Massachusetts</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Chicago</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. New York</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. San
					 Francisco</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Philadelphia</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Newark</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Chicago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written below drawing: "The White Squadron" United States
					 Navy. Armored Steel Battle Ship <emph render="italic">Massachusetts</emph>,
					 Cruiser <emph render="italic">Chicago</emph>, Armored Steel Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">New York</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">San
					 Francisco</emph>, Cruiser <emph render="italic">Philadelphia</emph>, Cruiser 
					 <emph render="italic">Newark</emph>. Copyright 1893 by Currier &amp; Ives,
					 N.Y.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Chicago
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">San Juan</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">San Juan</emph>, a 284-ton fishing
				  steamer, 118 feet in length, was built in 1904 at Seattle by Sloan &amp; Hill
				  for the San Juan Fishing &amp; Packing Co., later passing to Libby, McNeill,
				  and Libby (p. 106). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">SanJuan1</container><unittitle>Fishing steamer <emph render="italic">San Juan</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SanJuan1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Santa Clara</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The wood passenger and freight steamer <emph render="italic">Santa Clara</emph> was built at Everett in 1900 as the 
				  <emph render="italic">John S. Kimball</emph>. She was 1,588 tons. On November
				  2, 1915, she was wrecked and destroyed off the coast of Coos Bay, with the loss
				  of 16 lives (p. 145 and p. 256). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">SantaClara1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Santa Clara</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and November 1915</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SantaClara1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p> Possibly showing the Santa Clara navigating the Panama Canal
					 in June 1914.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Sarah</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Sarah</emph> was built in 1898 by the
				  Howard shipyard at Jeffersonville, Indiana, using molds from the Ohio river
				  boats <emph render="italic">Bluff City</emph> and <emph render="italic">Dolphin
				  No. 3</emph>. Along with her sister ships, <emph render="italic">Susie</emph>
				  and <emph render="italic">Hannah</emph>, she was shipped in sections to
				  Unalaska, where she was assembled by the Alaska Commercial Co. and proceeded
				  from there to St. Michael and the Yukon under her own power. They were
				  spectacular boats in the grand tradition of the Western river packets,
				  particularly at night when they made their fast passages up and down the
				  desolate Yukon with decks and cabins ablaze with lights. Their niceties
				  included spacious mahogany paneled dining salons and two and three-berth
				  staterooms to accommodate 150 first-class passengers. She was out of service by
				  1920 (p. 29 and p. 309). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/19</container><container type="item">Sarah1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Sarah</emph>
					 at the Dawson waterfront, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1900 </unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Sarah1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Schley</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">Schley1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Schley</emph> with men
					 on board, probably on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between May 1898 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Schley1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">Schley2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Schley</emph> at a
					 dock, probably on Lake Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between May 1898 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Schley2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">Schley4</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Schley</emph> on the
					 St. Joe River, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between May 1898 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Schley4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Sea Lion</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>In July 1897, the steam tug <emph render="italic">Sea
				  Lion</emph> was chartered by the Seattle Post-Intelligencer newspaper to take
				  reporters to intercept the <emph render="italic">Portland</emph> upon her
				  arrival at Cape Flattery to investigate rumors that a large quantity of gold
				  was aboard, being brought down from the Yukon. At that time, the 
				  <emph render="italic">Sea Lion</emph> was owned by Puget Sound Tug Boat company
				  at Port Townsend (p. 12). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">SeaLion1</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Sea Lion</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1884 and 1910?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SeaLion1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Seattle</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Seattle</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">SeattleA1-A3</container><unittitle>Steam ferry <emph render="italic">Seattle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1924 and 1939</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA719%20TRA696%20TRA697/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Formerly the <emph render="italic">H.B. Kennedy</emph>, she
					 was renamed in 1922 and converted to a steam ferry in 1924 (pg. 324). Notes
					 from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
					 Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">SeattleB1</container><unittitle>Battleship <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Seattle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1918 and 1946</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SeattleB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Launched in 1905 as the <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Washington</emph>, she was renamed the <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Seattle
					 </emph>in 1916. She was decommissioned in 1946.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Seattle No. 3</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p><emph render="italic">Seattle No. 3</emph> was in operation on
				  the Yukon River as early as 1899. At that time, the steamboat was owned by the
				  Seattle-Yukon Transportation Co. (p. 30). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/20</container><container type="item">SeattleNo.31</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboats <emph render="italic">Seattle
					 No. 3</emph> and <emph render="italic">D.R. Campbell</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1899 and 1927</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA718/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Seattle Spirit</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Seattle Spirit</emph> was a small
				  freight steamer of 81 tons, 83 feet long, built at Ballard in 1906 for Norman
				  R. Smith (p. 119). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">SeattleSpirit1</container><unittitle>Freight steamer <emph render="italic">Seattle
					 Spirit</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SeattleSpirit1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: Seattle Spirit 1915 Small Puget Sound
					 freighter.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Senator</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> In 1898, the steel passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Senator </emph>was built by the Union Iron Works at San
				  Francisco for the Pacific Coast Steamship Co. She was a single-screw vessel of
				  2,432 tons. She had a speed of 10.8 knots. She was taken over by the government
				  upon her completion and carried 1,004 troops on her first voyage to Manila.
				  Upon her return to the company she was immediately placed on the Cape Nome
				  route from San Francisco via Seattle and Tacoma (pp. 31-32). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">Senator1</container><unittitle>Men in front of a steamship, probably the 
					 <emph render="italic">Senator</emph>, near Nome, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1899 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Senator1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">Senator2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Senator</emph> in ice
					 pack in Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Senator2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Seward</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">Seward1-3</container><unittitle>U.S. Army Transport <emph render="italic">Seward</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA2430%20TRA2431%20TRA2432/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Shannon Foss</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">ShannonFoss1</container><unittitle>Tugboats <emph render="italic">Shannon Foss</emph> and
					 <emph render="italic">Carol Foss</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1957 and 1997</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ShannonFoss1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Siberia Maru</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The former Pacific Mail liner <emph render="italic">Siberia</emph> passed, in 1916, to Japanese ownership as the 
				  <emph render="italic">Siberia Maru</emph>. She was diverted in 1929 from the
				  N.Y.K. San Francisco-Oriental route to the Puget Sound-British
				  Columbia-Oriental route, being replaced shortly by a vessel of the 
				  <emph render="italic">Hikawa Maru</emph> class (p. 398). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/21</container><container type="item">SiberiaMaru1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Siberia Maru</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1935?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SiberiaMaru1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Post Card. Printed by G.T. Sun Co.</p><p>Written on photo: N.Y.K. Seattle-Orient Liner S.S.
					 "SIBERIA-MARU."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave1</container><unittitle>Boat <emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph> in ice,
					 likely in Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1924?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave2</container><unittitle>Boat <emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave3</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph> beached at
					 Cape Spencer, near Teller, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Silver Wave on the beach at Cape Spencer,
					 near Teller, Alaska. Only a miracle that it was not a total loss. Summer of
					 1928. Silver Wave 65 feet long.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave4</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph> beached at
					 Cape Spencer, near Teller, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Silver Wave beached near Teller Alaska.
					 Summer 1928.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave5</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph> beached near
					 ice with people on board</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SilverWave6</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Silver Wave</emph> beached near
					 ice</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1928?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SilverWave6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph>Skagit</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/4</container><container type="item">Skagit1</container><unittitle>Boat <emph render="italic">Skagit</emph> loaded with
					 supplies heading to the Klondike at dock in Seattle, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1898?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Skagit1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Skagit Belle</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SkagitBelle1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Skagit
					 Belle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1941 and 1950</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SkagitBelle1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Skagit Belle" wood freighter, stern-wheel.
					 Gross 555, net 513. Dim. 164.5 x 40.3 x 6.7. 1941 Everett. Built for Harold
					 Durham for Skagit River Navigation Co. to replace "Gleaner." Engines were the
					 high pressure half from the Columbia River Steamer "Umitilla"[sic]. In A.J.S.
					 service 1943.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SkagitBelle2</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Skagit
					 Belle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1941 and 1950</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SkagitBelle2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Skagit Chief</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Skagit Chief</emph> was built in 1934
				  by Lake Union Dry Dock &amp; Machine Works for the Skagit River Navigation
				  &amp; Trading Co. She was designed for the Seattle, Stanwood, Mt. Vernon and La
				  Conner route. She was a shallow-draft vessel fitted with "spuds" (heavy upright
				  beams which could be lowered to the river bed) to enable her to hoist herself
				  over shoals and to make difficult turns in the river. Of 502 tons, with
				  dimensions of 165x40.1x6.4 and a draft of 18 inches, the <emph render="italic">Skagit Chief</emph> was fitted with the 400-horsepower
				  single-cylinder engines from the former Columbia River steamer 
				  <emph render="italic">G.K. Wentworth</emph> of 1905. The <emph render="italic">Skagit Chief</emph> sank in 1956 while being towed to the
				  Portland Harbor Marina to be converted to a floating restaurant on the
				  Willamette River (p. 437 and p. 615). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SkagitChief1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Skagit
					 Chief</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1934 and 1956</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SkagitChief1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">SkagitChief2</container><unittitle>Stern of steamer <emph render="italic">Skagit
					 Chief</emph>, probably at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1934 and 1956</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SkagitChief2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.N. Castle</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">S.N. Castle</emph> was a three-masted
				  schooner of 514 tons, built by Hall Bros. in 1886 as a three-masted barkentine.
				  After long service in the Hawaiian sugar trade, the Bering Sea codfishery and
				  South Seas copra trade, she was towed to southern California in January 1926
				  for use in a motion picture and burned at Catalina February 17, 1926 (p. 376).
				  Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/22</container><container type="item">S.N.Castle1</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">S.N. Castle</emph> at
					 Port Townsend, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1893?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA711/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Windjammers loading at Port Townsend. In the
					 early '90s such scenes as this were common at Puget Sound ports as the sailing
					 vessels loaded lumber, grain and general freight for world markets. Built at
					 Port Blakely. SNC at far right.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Snoqualmie</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">Snoqualmie1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Snoqualmie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1890</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">F.G. Moran</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Snoqualmie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: "Kunstadter" screw &amp; stearing [sic]
					 gear. Seattle fire boat. Built by Seattle Dry Dock &amp; Ship Building Co.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Somers</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">Somers1</container><unittitle>Clemson-class destroyer <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Somers </emph> (DD-301) with other ships</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1918 and 1930</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Somers1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">South Bend</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SouthBend1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">U.S.A.T. South
					 Bend</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between September 1919 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SouthBend1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Spokane</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SpokaneA1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SpokaneA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SpokaneA2</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SpokaneA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SpokaneB1</container><unittitle> Deck and passengers aboard the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph> in Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SpokaneB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The finest vessel yet to fly the houseflag of the Pacific
					 Coast Steamship Co. appeared in 1902 with the completion at Union Iron Works,
					 San Francisco, of the steamship <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph>,
					 especially designed for the growing Alaska tourist excursion trade which had
					 developed as a result of the international attention focused on that territory
					 by the recent gold finds in the Klondike, at Cape Nome, Copper River and in
					 other areas. The <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph> was a steel, single-screw
					 vessel of 2,277 tons. She was fitted out to carry 171 first-class passengers in
					 most comfortable accommodations. In addition, she had facilities for 100 in
					 steerage, for even though she was designed primarily for the excursion trade,
					 the heavy seasonal movement of cannery workers to the north made the
					 transportation of steerage passengers a profitable segment of steamship
					 operation on the North Pacific (p. 79). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
					 McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
					 Co, 1966).She suffered damages when she ran ashore in June of 1910 at Peril
					 Straits, Alaska, which resulted in costly repairs. The following year, she hit
					 an uncharted rock in Seymour Narrows and had her hull torn open underwater. She
					 was driven to the safety of shallow waters and was towed by the steamer 
					 <emph render="italic">Salvor </emph> and was repaired by the British Columbia
					 Salvage Company. In 1921, she was renamed <emph render="italic">Admiral Rogers
					 </emph> and was scrapped by the early 1940s due to being unprofitable.</p><p>Written on photo: 8210. One and one-half hours' fishing, on
					 Alaska excursion steamship "Spokane" reached via the Pacific Coast Steamship
					 Company.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SpokaneB2</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph> in
					 Glacier Bay, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1907</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SpokaneB2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The finest vessel yet to fly the houseflag of the Pacific
					 Coast Steamship Co. appeared in 1902 with the completion at Union Iron Works,
					 San Francisco, of the steamship <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph>,
					 especially designed for the growing Alaska tourist excursion trade which had
					 developed as a result of the international attention focused on that territory
					 by the recent gold finds in the Klondike, at Cape Nome, Copper River and in
					 other areas. The <emph render="italic">Spokane</emph> was a steel, single-screw
					 vessel of 2,277 tons. She was fitted out to carry 171 first-class passengers in
					 most comfortable accommodations. In addition, she had facilities for 100 in
					 steerage, for even though she was designed primarily for the excursion trade,
					 the heavy seasonal movement of cannery workers to the north made the
					 transportation of steerage passengers a profitable segment of steamship
					 operation on the North Pacific (p. 79). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
					 McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
					 Co, 1966).She suffered damages when she ran ashore in June of 1910 at Peril
					 Straits, Alaska which resulted in costly repairs. The following year, she hit
					 an uncharted rock in Seymour Narrows and had her hull torn open underwater. She
					 was driven to the safety of shallow waters and was towed by the steamer 
					 <emph render="italic">Salvor </emph> and was repaired by the British Columbia
					 Salvage Company. In 1921, she was renamed <emph render="italic">Admiral Rogers
					 </emph> and was scrapped by the early 1940s due to being unprofitable.</p><p>Written on verso: S.S. Spokane among the ice bergs of Glacier
					 Bay in front of the Muir Glacier between Skagway and Juneau.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Squak Valley</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">SquakValley1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Squak Valley</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1895?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.SquakValley1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">St. Paul</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">St.Paul1</container><unittitle>Sailing ship <emph render="italic">St. Paul</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1934?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Walter P. Miller</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.St.Paul1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Famous full rigged ship St Paul on her last
					 voyage before being converted into a Marine Museum by the Foss Tug &amp; Barge
					 Co. The ship is now moored near the Lake Washington Canal locks, Seattle,
					 Washington. (Credit Photo Walter P. Miller).</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Stella Erland</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> In 1898, between Middleton Island and Prince William Sound,
				  bound from Seattle for Copper River, the <emph render="italic">Stella
				  Erland</emph> fell in with the steam schooner <emph render="italic">Albion</emph>, Portland for Valdez with 98 passengers. The 
				  <emph render="italic">Albion</emph> 's master, no doubt an expert in the
				  doghole navigation of the Redwood (northern California) coast, had not the
				  slightest idea where he was. The pilot, who claimed to be an expert Alaska
				  navigator, was equally bewildered. The skipper of the <emph render="italic">Stella Erland</emph>, who had been there before, agreed to
				  pilot the steamer in return for a tow for his schooner, the two vessels thus
				  reaching their destination safely, and the <emph render="italic">Stella
				  Erland</emph> more rapidly than her crew had expected her to (p. 38). Notes
				  from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/23</container><container type="item">StellaErland1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Stella Erland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1894 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.StellaErland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Success</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>A great attraction on the Northwest waterfronts in 1915 was the
				  ancient convict ship <emph render="italic">Success</emph>, claimed to have been
				  built in 1790, but actually constructed about 1840 of Burmese teak in India for
				  the service of the East India Company. Her publicity claimed that she had been
				  taken over by the British government in 1802 for transporting felons to the
				  penal colonies of New South Wales. Actually, although used as a floating jail
				  in 1852, she never actually carried convicts. Owned by Capt. D.H. Smith, and
				  fitted out as a floating museum of horrors, the bluff, beak-bowed vessel,
				  rerigged as a barkentine, was towed around from the East Coast without mishap.
				  She remained in Northwest waters until 1916 and lasted until 1946, when she was
				  accidentally burned near Port Clinton, Ohio (p. 252). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Success1-2</container><unittitle>Convict ship <emph render="italic">Success</emph> at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Success3</container><unittitle>Convict ship <emph render="italic">Success</emph> at
					 Seattle dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Success3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Success4-5</container><unittitle>Convict ship <emph render="italic">Success</emph> at
					 Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1915</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA710/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Sunland</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Sunland1</container><unittitle>Boat <emph render="italic">Sunland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Sunland1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Susie</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The steamer <emph render="italic">Susie</emph> was built at
				  Seattle in 1879 and operated on the Tacoma-North Bay run until 1897, when she
				  was sold to the Franco-American Canning Co. at Fairhaven as a cannery tender
				  (p. 20). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Susie1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Susie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1879 and 1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Susie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/24</container><container type="item">Susie2</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Susie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1897 and 1904</unitdate><origination><persname role="Photographer">Goetzman</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Susie2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Off for Cape Nome. Dawson. A.C. Co.
					 Steamer.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Svea</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/21</container><container type="item">HelenP.Drew1</container><unittitle> Steam schooners <emph render="italic">Svea</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">Idaho</emph>, <emph render="italic">Oregon</emph>, and 
					 <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.HelenP.Drew1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Helen P. Drew
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a">T-Z</unittitle></did><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaA1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Tacoma</emph> at
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">December 30, 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: U.S.S. Tacoma. Navy Yard N.Y. Dec 30 04.</p><p>Written on mount: United States Cruiser Tacoma p. 288.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaA2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Tacoma</emph> in Tacoma
					 harbor</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1903 and 1924</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaA2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: United States Cruiser Tacoma in harbor of
					 Tacoma p. 288.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaB1-B2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA730%20TRA2448/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The epitome of Northwest inland steam vessels was reached in
					 1913 with the commissioning of the steel express steamer <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> for the Seattle-Tacoma route of the Puget Sound
					 Navigation Co. She was of 836 tons and driven by a four-cylinder
					 triple-expansion engine. On her first regular run in service between Seattle
					 and Tacoma on June 24, the <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> covered the
					 distance, dock to dock, in 77 minutes (pp. 219-220). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaB3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> and
					 ferries</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaB3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The epitome of Northwest inland steam vessels was reached in
					 1913 with the commissioning of the steel express steamer <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> for the Seattle-Tacoma route of the Puget Sound
					 Navigation Co. She was of 836 tons and driven by a four-cylinder
					 triple-expansion engine. On her first regular run in service between Seattle
					 and Tacoma on June 24, the <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> covered the
					 distance, dock to dock, in 77 minutes (pp. 219-220). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaB4</container><unittitle>Lifeboats aboard the steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaB4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The epitome of Northwest inland steam vessels was reached in
					 1913 with the commissioning of the steel express steamer <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> for the Seattle-Tacoma route of the Puget Sound
					 Navigation Co. She was of 836 tons and driven by a four-cylinder
					 triple-expansion engine. On her first regular run in service between Seattle
					 and Tacoma on June 24, the <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> covered the
					 distance, dock to dock, in 77 minutes (pp. 219-220). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaB5</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaB5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The epitome of Northwest inland steam vessels was reached in
					 1913 with the commissioning of the steel express steamer <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> for the Seattle-Tacoma route of the Puget Sound
					 Navigation Co. She was of 836 tons and driven by a four-cylinder
					 triple-expansion engine. On her first regular run in service between Seattle
					 and Tacoma on June 24, the <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> covered the
					 distance, dock to dock, in 77 minutes (pp. 219-220). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaB6</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1913 and 1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaB6/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The epitome of Northwest inland steam vessels was reached in
					 1913 with the commissioning of the steel express steamer <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> for the Seattle-Tacoma route of the Puget Sound
					 Navigation Co. She was of 836 tons and driven by a four-cylinder
					 triple-expansion engine. On her first regular run in service between Seattle
					 and Tacoma on June 24, the <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph> covered the
					 distance, dock to dock, in 77 minutes (pp. 219-220). Notes from Gordon Newell,
					 ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
					 Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">TacomaC1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Tacoma</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1938</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaC1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: SS Tacoma Hamburg American Line 1938.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tacoma Maru</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/5</container><container type="item">TacomaMaru1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">S.S. Tacoma Maru </emph>docked
					 in Commencement Bay, Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1, 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TacomaMaru1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: First O.S.K. [Osaka Shosen Kaisha] Boat
					 landed at CM&amp;PS [Chicago, Milwaukee, &amp; Puget Sound Railway Co.]
					 Oriental dock Tacoma. Sunday Aug 1, 1909 5 pm.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/5</container><container type="item">TacomaMaru2</container><unittitle>Cargo from the <emph render="italic">S.S. Tacoma Maru
					 </emph> in warehouse in Tacoma</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">August 1, 1909</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tamalpais</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">Tamalpais1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Tamalpais</emph>
					 being towed in Grays Harbor, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1906 and 1931</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tamalpais1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Steam schooner "Tamalpais" built in Hoquiam
					 Wash. 1906. She is shown towing into Grays Harbor in waterlogged condition. She
					 was repaired and operated until 1931 when she was broken up for scrap. </p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tanner</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">Tanner1</container><unittitle>Brigantine <emph render="italic">Tanner</emph> beached
					 near Port Townsend, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1902</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tanner1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tatoosh</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Tatoosh</emph> was built by Moran
				  Bros. Co. in Seattle in 1900 and was a 277-ton vessel. She had a distinguished
				  career on North Pacific waters which was to include the saving of dozens of
				  lives from the violence of the sea (p. 61). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Tatoosh1</container><unittitle>Launching of the steam tug <emph render="italic">Tatoosh</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">February 22, 1900</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tatoosh1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Tatoosh2</container><unittitle> Steam tug <emph render="italic">Tatoosh</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tatoosh2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Tatoosh3</container><unittitle> Steam tug <emph render="italic">Tatoosh</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tatoosh3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">T.C. Power</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">T.C. Power</emph> was built by Moran
				  Bros. Co. in 1897 for the North American Transportation &amp; Trading Co. for
				  service on the Yukon (p. 16 and p. 30). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W.
				  McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing
				  Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">T.C.Power1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.C.
					 Power</emph> on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1897 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA743/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">T.C.Power2</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.C.
					 Power</emph> and another ship</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1897 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.C.Power2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">T.C. Reed</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">T.C. Reed</emph> was built in
				  Aberdeen, Washington, in 1897 for service at Grays Harbor. She was sold in 1902
				  to Elliot and Pope for service on Puget Sound (p. 81). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">T.C.Reed1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">T.C.
					 Reed</emph> with four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph>Gleaner </emph> in
					 background at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA742/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Temple Bar</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The British tramp steamship <emph render="italic">Temple
				  Bar</emph>, a 4,291-ton vessel owned by the Temple Steamship Co. of London,
				  stranded on the Washington coast near La Push on April 8, 1939 while outward
				  bound from Puget Sound with a cargo of scrap metal. Although the vessel became
				  a total loss, most of the cargo was salvaged by the Morrison-Knudsen Co. of
				  Boise, Idaho, which purchased the wreck from the underwriters (p. 475). Notes
				  from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">TempleBar1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Temple
					 Bar</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1939</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.TempleBar1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tetas</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/5</container><container type="item">Tetas1</container><unittitle>Bark <emph render="italic">Tetas</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1900?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tetas1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: St. Aux Barque "TETAS" U.S.N. circa
					 1890-1900. The "Tetas" Flag ship. My father served on sometime prior to his
					 marriage in Sept. 1903.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Thetis</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Thetis1</container><unittitle> U.S. Revenue Cutter <emph render="italic">Thetis</emph> and the <emph render="italic">S.S. Corwin</emph>
					 in Unalaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Thetis1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tilikum</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Capt. John C. Voss, one of the most colorful and adventurous of
				  the old-time British Columbia mariners, became convinced that the Indian dugout
				  canoe of the Pacific Northwest constituted the ideal small sea boat. He
				  obtained a 50-year-old Nootka dugout in 1901, rebuilding it as a 38-foot,
				  three-masted schooner. In this remarkable craft, which he named 
				  <emph render="italic">Tilikum</emph>, he sailed three quarters of the way
				  around the world in somewhat over three years, calling at Suva, Sydney, N.S.W.,
				  Tasmania, New Zealand, South Africa, Brazil, and finally to Margate, England.
				  The <emph render="italic">Tilikum </emph> was placed on display at the London
				  Marine Exhibition of 1905. Capt. Voss left the <emph render="italic">Tilikum
				  </emph>and returned to Victoria via Yokohama and for some time the gallant
				  little vessel rotted away on the Thames tideflats. Before she was beyond
				  repair, however, she was acquired by the noted British yachtsmen A.W.E. and A.
				  Byford, who refitted her and returned her to Victoria by freighter. (pg. 331)
				  Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did altrender=""><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Tilikum1</container><unittitle>Dugout canoe <emph render="italic">Tilikum</emph> on
					 display in Victoria, British Columbia</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1937 and 1965?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tilikum1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tillicum</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">Tillicum1</container><unittitle>Tug <emph render="italic">Tillicum</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1922</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tillicum1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tillikum</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Tillikum1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Tillikum</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1959 and 1980?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tillikum1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">T.J. Potter</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">T.J. Potter</emph> was built prior to
				  1896 and was abandoned in 1921 (p. 5 and p. 329). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966). The ship was rebuilt in 1901. She was condemned
				  for passenger use in 1916, several years before she was abandoned.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.J.
					 Potter</emph> at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA749/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter2</container><unittitle> Drawing of the sidewheel steamer 
					 <emph render="italic">T.J. Potter</emph> at Seattle</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1921?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.J.Potter2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter3</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.J.
					 Potter</emph> after rebuild</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.J.Potter3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">T.J.Potter4</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">T.J.
					 Potter</emph>, sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Bailey Gatzert</emph>,
					 and sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Ramona</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1888 and 1921</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.J.Potter4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Three popular Portland excursion
					 steamers.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tonquin</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Tonquin1</container><unittitle>Illustration of the Battle of Woody Point including
					 the ship <emph render="italic">Tonquin</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1811 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tonquin1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Attack and massacre of crew of ship Tonquin
					 by the savages of the N.W. coast.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Totem</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Totem1</container><unittitle>Totem</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Totem1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tourist</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The old sternwheeler <emph render="italic">Skagit Chief</emph>,
				  later the <emph render="italic">Port Orchard</emph>, went through another
				  reincarnation in 1907, being rebuilt by Carlson Bros. at Port Blakely as the 
				  <emph render="italic">Tourist</emph> for the Navy Yard Route of the Puget Sound
				  Navigation Co. The old house and machinery went into a new hull, 
				  <emph render="italic">Tourist</emph> being registered as a new vessel (p. 140).
				  Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Tourist1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">Tourist</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tourist1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Transocean</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Transocean1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Transocean</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Transocean1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Salmon Cannery Boat "Transocean."</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Traveler</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Tug <emph render="italic">Traveler </emph>built 1886 in North
				  Bend, Oregon, by John Kruse. This fine log tug was well known on Grays Harbor
				  as a "bar tug" used for towing the sailing vessels across the Grays Harbor
				  bar.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">Traveler1</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1886 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Traveler1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/3</container><container type="item">Arago1</container><unittitle>Barkentine <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> and
					 tugboat <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph> on Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1891 and 1914</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Arago1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Arago</emph> subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">J.M.Weatherwax2</container><unittitle>Three-masted schooner <emph render="italic">J.M.
					 Weatherwax</emph> being towed by tug <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph> on
					 Hoquiam River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1909</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.J.M.Weatherwax2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Aberdeen built schooner, 3 m. J.M.
					 Weatherwax under tow of tug Traveler, Hoquiam River, W.T.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">J.M. Weatherwax </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/7</container><container type="item">Melrose1</container><unittitle>Tug <emph render="italic">Traveler</emph> towing
					 four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">Melrose</emph> on Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Melrose1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Melrose </emph>
					 subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Triton</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Triton</emph> was built at the
				  Anderson Yard in Houghton for the Lake Washington service of the Anderson
				  Steamboat Co. She was a 49-ton passenger steamer and 78 feet in length (p.
				  159). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the
				  Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Triton1-2</container><unittitle> Steamer <emph render="italic">Triton</emph> loading
					 passengers, probably on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1915?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA753%20TRA754/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Triton3</container><unittitle>Steamships <emph render="italic">Triton</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Aquilo</emph>, probably on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1909 and 1938</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tyee</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Tyee </emph>was built before 1896 and
				  was sold in 1916 to the Port Blakely Mill Co. for use in connection with the
				  shipbuilding activities of the Skinner &amp; Eddy Corporation at Port Blakely
				  (p. 6 and p. 263). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Tyee1</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1884 and 1916?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tyee1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Tyee2</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 19, 1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tyee2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: Fulton. Pt Townsend Wash.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Tyee3</container><unittitle>Steam tug <emph render="italic">Tyee</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1899</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tyee3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Tug TYEE, 1899, Capt. J.B. Libby, owner.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Tyrrell</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Tyrrell</emph> was built in 1898 by
				  the Canadian Pacific Railroad at its yards in False Creek, Vancouver. She
				  eventually saw service on the lower Yukon River (p. 28 and p. 31). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Tyrrell1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Tyrrell</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Tyrrell1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Union Flag</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The Union Fish Company of San Francisco, in 1905, built and sent
				  north the launch <emph render="italic">Union Flag</emph> (7 net tons), equipped
				  with a 40 h. p. Union engine, and she was the first power vessel to be utilized
				  as a transporter between the Alaska shore stations...her headquarters being at
				  the Pirate Cove station of Popof Island in the Shumagin Islands (p. 4). Notes
				  from Pacific Motor Boat, Vol. 12, Issue 1, October 1919.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">UnionFlag1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Union Flag</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.UnionFlag1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Utopia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">Utopia1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Utopia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1893 and 1929</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Utopia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: "Utopia" wood passenger. 123' 8" long, 24'
					 6" beam, 9' 1" hold. Gross 423, net 350. Built at Seattle 1893. Soon was put on
					 the Vancouver Route. Engine second set 1908 Triple 10-16-26 x 16 meters 180
					 lbs. steam. Built for G.W. McGregor to succeed the "J.R. McDonald" on
					 Seattle-Vancouver freight run. Rebuilt as passenger boat in 1898 and used for
					 two years to S.E. and S.W. Alaska ports, with a trip to St. Michael included.
					 In 1900, bought by La Connor Trading and Trans. Co. and placed on South Whatcom
					 route with some service on Victoria run. Worn out by their successors, the
					 Puget Sound Navigation Co. on the "straits" run and as spare boat. Burned for
					 metal at Richmond Beach in 1929. Her engines went into the 
					 <emph render="italic">Vashona</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Valencia</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Valencia1</container><unittitle>Passenger steamer <emph render="italic">Valencia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1882 and 1906</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Valencia1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: Pacific Steam Whaling Co.'s S.S.
					 Valencia.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Valencia2</container><unittitle>Wreck of the steamship <emph render="italic">Valencia</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Valencia2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Valencia3</container><unittitle>Coastline near where the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Valencia</emph> wrecked</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Valencia3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Valencia4</container><unittitle>Cave where bodies of victims of the steamship 
					 <emph render="italic">Valencia</emph> wreck were</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1906?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Valencia4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Vashon</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Vashon</emph> was built in 1930 at
				  Houghton for the Seattle-Vashon-Harper route of the Kitsap County
				  Transportation Co. The main power plant of the , at that time the largest
				  diesel ferry in operation o<emph>Vashon</emph>n Puget Sound, was a
				  1,000-horsepower, eight-cylinder Washington diesel (p. 402). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Vashon1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Vashon</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1930 and 1970?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Vashon1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Verona</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Verona1</container><unittitle>Steamboat <emph render="italic">Verona</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1910 and 1936</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Verona1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Victoria</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph> was formerly the 
				  <emph render="italic">Parthia </emph>(p. 98). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed.,
				  The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Victoria1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1954</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victoria1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Victoria2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1954</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victoria2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Victoria3</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1892 and 1954</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victoria3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Victoria4</container><unittitle>Advertisement for the steamship <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph> for trips from Seattle to Nome</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">July 1, 1904</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victoria4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: From Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 7-1-1904,
					 p.3.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">Victoria5</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Victoria</emph> 's
					 captain John M. O'Brien aboard ship</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1898 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victoria5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Victorian</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Victorian</emph> was built at Portland
				  in 1891. She was 243 feet long and equipped with triple-expansion engines large
				  enough to drive an ocean liner. She was built for Seattle-Victoria service.
				  However, her wooden hull was too light for her engines and her career was a
				  long series of mechanical breakdowns (p. 15). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed.,
				  The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Victorian1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Victorian</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Victorian1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: S.S. Victorian, Union Steamship Co.,
					 1897.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Vigilant</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Vigilant1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">Vigilant</emph> on the
					 Chehalis River at Aberdeen, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1930?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Vigilant1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Vigilant - Chehalis River - Aberdeen, Wash.
					 Skipper Capt. Matt Peasley. The ship and skipper were the featured ones in
					 "Cappy Ricks" articles that ran in Saturday Evening Post for many years.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Vincennes</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Vincennes1</container><unittitle>Drawing of the sloop of war <emph render="italic">Vincennes</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1826 and 1867?</unitdate><origination><persname role="Artist">A.T. Agate</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Vincennes1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on image: Vincennes on San Francisco Bar.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Virginia III</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">VirginiaIII1</container><unittitle>Passenger ferry <emph render="italic">Virginia
					 III</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1914 and 1927</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.VirginiaIII1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Virginia III, wood Passenger. Gross 91 net
					 71 engines 92.8 x 19.4 x 5.5 1910 Tacoma. Built for Lorenz Bros. to serve the
					 Tacoma-Henderson Bay route replacing the steam whaler "Tyconda." Original name
					 was "Typhoon" the second of the name. About 1914 passed to West Pass Trans Co.
					 for the Tacoma-Seattle-West Pass route and was re-named "Virginia III" at that
					 time. In the 1920s Capt. Ed Lorenz again took over the boat for the South
					 Ludlow and various routes. He re-named her again the "Narada." Laid up in Lake
					 Union in the mid 1930s and finally taken over by Capt. Howard Parker who
					 changed the name to "Salmon King" and used her in passenger ferry service from
					 Keyport to Bremerton. Retired and laid up in Lake Union 1944.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Virginia V</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">VirginiaV1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Virginia V</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1922 and 1938?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.VirginiaV1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Virginia V. Gross 122 net 83 - 115.9 x 24.1
					 x 7.1 Wood - Passenger. Built 1922 in Olalla Wash. for West Passage
					 Transportation Co - for Seattle-Tacoma-West Passage run, until 1936 - and
					 seasonably thereafter until 1942 - then on Columbia River from Portland to
					 Astoria route. Returned to Puget Sound 1944 - in March.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">VirginiaV2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Virginia V</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1922 and 1958?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.VirginiaV2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Virginia V. Wood - Passenger. Gross 122 new
					 83 - 115.9 x 24.1 x 7.1 - 1922 Olalla Wash. Built for West Pass Trasp. Co -
					 Seattle-Tacoma-West Pass run. Until 1936 - and seasonably thereafter until 1942
					 - there on Columbia River for Portland-Astoria route. Returned to the Sound
					 March 1944.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Volunteer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Volunteer1</container><unittitle>Steam launch <emph render="italic">Volunteer</emph> at
					 dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1880 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Volunteer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The "Volunteer" at the dock. The "Elk" in
					 the distance.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Wanderer</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Wanderer1</container><unittitle>Steam tugboat <emph render="italic">Wanderer</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wanderer1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Washington</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">Washington1</container><unittitle>Battleship <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Washington</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Washington1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on photo: US Cruiser Washington.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Washington of
				  Kirkland</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WashingtonofKirkland1</container><unittitle>Men aboard ferry <emph render="italic">Washington of
					 Kirkland</emph> on Lake Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1908 and 1920?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder:oversize">SOS1/5</container><container type="item">WashingtonofKirkland2</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Washington of
					 Kirkland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1908 and 1920?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Wasp</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The steam schooner <emph render="italic">Wasp</emph> was built
				  before 1913 (p. 222). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine
				  History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Wasp1</container><unittitle>Steam schooner <emph render="italic">Wasp</emph> with
					 steam schooner <emph render="italic">Nushagak</emph> and four-masted schooner 
					 <emph render="italic">Commerce</emph> on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1904 and 1925</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wasp1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">West Camargo</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WestCamargo1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">West Camargo</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WestCamargo1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">West Nilus</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WestNilus1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">West Nilus</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1944</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WestNilus1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">West Notus</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WestNotus1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">West Notus</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1920 and 1944</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WestNotus1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">West Seattle</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WestSeattle1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steam ferry <emph render="italic">West
					 Seattle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1914?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WestSeattle1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">WestSeattle2</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steam ferry <emph render="italic">West
					 Seattle</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1907 and 1920?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WestSeattle2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Whitehorse</unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Whitehorse</emph> was built in 1901 by
				  the British Yukon Navigation Co. at Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, having a
				  tonnage of 1,120 and dimensions of 171x36.3x5.6. She made her final voyage on
				  the Yukon River in 1953 (p. 69 and p. 583). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Whitehorse1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Whitehorse</emph> on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1940</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Whitehorse1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Whitehorse2</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Whitehorse</emph> at Dawson, Yukon Territory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1940</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Whitehorse2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Whitehorse leaving Dawson.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Whitehorse3</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Whitehorse</emph> on the Upper Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1910</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Whitehorse3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Loading wood on the Upper Yukon. The first
					 we got off.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Wickersham</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">Wickersham1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">MV Wickersham</emph> in
					 Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1968 and 1974</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wickersham1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: State of Alaska M/V WICKERSHAM, 1,000+
					 passengers, 100+ vehicles, berths for 384.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Willapa</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Willapa</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WillapaA1</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Willapa</emph> in
					 Juneau, Alaska</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">March 1897</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WillapaA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: WILLAPA at Juneau, Alaska, March 1897.
					 (Orig. called GENERAL MILES.) Later renamed BELLINGHAM.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WillapaB1</container><unittitle>Ferry <emph render="italic">Willapa</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1940 and 1980?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WillapaB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Will H. Isom</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p> The <emph render="italic">Will H. Isom</emph> was built in 1901
				  at Ballard, Washington, for the North American Transportation &amp; Trading Co.
				  She was the largest towboat ever to operate on the Yukon, being 983 tons with
				  dimensions of 183.8x36.5x5.6. She was fitted to carry passengers and freight,
				  as well as to handle two or more large freight barges (pp 67-68). Notes from
				  Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
				  (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966). </p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WillH.Isom1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Will H.
					 Isom</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1903</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA785/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WillH.Isom2a-b</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Will H.
					 Isom</emph> and crew in winter quarters at Stewart River, Yukon
					 Territory</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1901</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso of item WillH.Isom2b: Winter Quarters -
					 1900-1901, Stewart River, Y.T.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">William F.
				  Monroe</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>Sternwheeler <emph render="italic">Wm. F. Monroe</emph> was
				  built at Seattle in 1883 for Capt. William F. Monroe, who operated her on the
				  Seattle, Bellingham Bay and Nooksack River route, and later in the Snohomish
				  and Skagit Rivers trade from Seattle. Converted to a towboat in 1894 and was
				  wrecked at Sterling Bend on the Skagit River in 1896 (p. 7). Notes from Gordon
				  Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="subseries"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nellie1</container><unittitle> Steamboats <emph render="italic">Nellie</emph> and 
					 <emph render="italic">Wm. F. Monroe</emph> at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1896</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nellie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Nellie &amp; Wm. F. Monroe. Nellie built at
					 Seattle 1876, 55.03 or 100 tons. Wm. F. Monroe built at Seattle 1883, 99.81
					 tons.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Nellie </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">William H. Smith</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The Bath-built former wooden ship <emph render="italic">William
				  H. Smith</emph> of 1883, having pursued a varied career for a full generation
				  on the Pacific Coast as full-rigged ship, floating cannery, coal barge,
				  five-masted schooner and, since 1932 as a fishing barge off Monterey,
				  California, broke from her moorings April 14, 1933, and stranded on the beach,
				  becoming a total loss. The 1,978-ton <emph render="italic">William H.
				  Smith</emph> was generally referred to among Pacific Coast seamen as "Big Smit"
				  and the 566-ton Hall-built schooner <emph render="italic">Wm. H. Smith</emph>
				  as "Little Smith" (p. 425). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy
				  Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co,
				  1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WilliamH.Smith1</container><unittitle>Schooner <emph render="italic">William H. Smith</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">between 1911 and 1917</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA786/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Ship Wm. H. Smith, floating cannery and cold
					 storage plant.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Willie</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">Willie1</container><unittitle>Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">Willie</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Willie1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Willie. Built at Seattle 1883. 67' long 15'
					 beam. 4 ½ hold. 55.94 tons. Ran out of Olympia.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Wilson G. Hunt</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WilsonG.Hunt1</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Wilson G.
					 Hunt</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1890?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA788/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on mount: S.S. Wilson G. Hunt. Only steeple engine
					 type ship on west coast. Being dismantled?</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">WilsonG.Hunt2</container><unittitle> Sidewheel steamer <emph render="italic">Wilson G.
					 Hunt</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1860 and 1890?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.WilsonG.Hunt2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Winema</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">Winema</emph>, a 125-foot sternwheeler
				  with three decks but a draft of less than 25 inches, was launched on Klamath
				  Lake in 1904 for the Klamath Lake Navigation Co. She provided freight and
				  passenger service between Klamath Falls and towns and logging camps on the
				  north and west shores of the lake (p. 106). Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The
				  H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle: Superior
				  Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">Winema1</container><unittitle> Steamship <emph render="italic">Winema</emph> and
					 steamship <emph render="italic">Mazama</emph> on Klamath Lake,
					 Oregon</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Winema1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">Winema2</container><unittitle>Steamship <emph render="italic">Winema</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Winema2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S.
				  Wisconsin</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/9</container><container type="item">Nebraska5</container><unittitle> Ships <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Nebraska</emph>, 
					 <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Colorado</emph>, <emph render="italic">U.S.S.
					 Pennsylvania</emph>, and <emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wisconsin</emph> at Puget
					 Sound Navy Yard in Bremerton, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1905 and 1916</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Nebraska5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: The Big Four. Advance guard of U.S. naval
					 rendezvous scheduled for North Pacific Ocean this summer on arrival of Atlantic
					 fleet under Admiral Evans. Scene at Puget Sound Navy Yard (Bremerton opposite
					 Seattle). Reading from left to right: Battleship Nebraska, Armored Cruiser
					 Colorado, Armored Cruiser Pennsylvania, Battleship Wisconsin.</p><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">Nebraska
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>W.J. Patterson</unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">W.J. Patterson</emph> was a
				  four-masted schooner built by John Lindstrom at Aberdeen, Washington, in 1901.
				  In 1918, she was sold and moved to Mobile, Alabama. She was scrapped in 1923
				  after being damaged in a storm (p. 299 and p. 344). Notes from Gordon Newell,
				  ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest (Seattle:
				  Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.J.Patterson1</container><unittitle>Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph> at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam
					 River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.W.J.Patterson1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.J.Patterson2</container><unittitle> Four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph render="italic">Gleaner</emph> at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam
					 River, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1905</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA790/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">T.C.Reed1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamboat <emph render="italic">T.C.
					 Reed</emph> with four-masted schooner <emph render="italic">W.J.
					 Patterson</emph> and three-masted barkentine <emph>Gleaner </emph> in
					 background at Northwest Lumber Co. dock on the Hoquiam River,
					 Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1901 and 1918</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.T.C.Reed1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Filed under <emph render="italic">T.C. Reed
					 </emph>subseries.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">W.K. Merwin</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>The <emph render="italic">W.K. Merwin</emph> was a 108-foot
				  sternwheeler of 230 tons. She was built at Seattle in 1883, laid up in 1894,
				  and came out again in 1896 to try several sound and river routes, including the
				  Olympia-Shelton and Skagit River runs, before going north. On January 19, 1897,
				  in operation on the Skagit River, she collided with the half-open drawspan of
				  the railway bridge at Mt. Vernon. All the upperworks to the smokestack were
				  demolished, and the pilot house and texas reduced to kindling (p. 8 and p. 15).
				  Notes from Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific
				  Northwest (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.K.Merwin1</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">W.K.
					 Merwin</emph> at Rink Rapids on the Yukon River</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.W.K.Merwin1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Rink Rapids located five miles below Five Finger Rapids on the
					 Yukon River. Information from the Rand McNally Guide to Alaska and the Yukon,
					 1922.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">W.K.Merwin2</container><unittitle> Sternwheel steamer <emph render="italic">W.K.
					 Merwin</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1883 and 1897?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/TRA791/field/all/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wyoming</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">Wyoming1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">U.S.S. Wyoming</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1902 and 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Wyoming1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Yosemite</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">Yosemite1</container><unittitle>Sidewheel steamship <emph render="italic">Yosemite
					 </emph>in Gamble Bay, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1906 and 1908</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Yosemite1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Passenger boat Yosemite with excursion from
					 Georgetown, Seattle. Entering Gamble Bay. Just about where picture of old
					 Galiah was taken. This was a big boat and could make around 14 knots.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Zephyr</emph></unittitle></did><scopecontent><p>There were multiple ships named <emph render="italic">Zephyr</emph>.</p></scopecontent><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">ZephyrA1</container><unittitle>Steamer <emph render="italic">Zephyr</emph> at Port
					 Madison, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">June 1, 1876</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ZephyrA1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Written on verso: Trinity Church picnic. Port Madison. June 1,
					 1876.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">ZephyrB1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Zephyr</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1950?</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.ZephyrB1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle><emph render="italic">Zinita</emph></unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">Zinita1</container><unittitle>British bark <emph render="italic">Zinita</emph>
					 stranded on Copalis Beach, Washington</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1896</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/1290.Zinita1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>The British bark <emph render="italic">Zinita</emph>, bound
					 for Portland for wheat, went ashore November 8, 1896, five miles north of Grays
					 Harbor, but was successfully refloated two weeks later (p. 7). Notes from
					 Gordon Newell, ed., The H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
					 (Seattle: Superior Publishing Co, 1966).</p><p>Written on verso: Scottish barque <emph render="italic">Zinita</emph> stranded near Copalis Beach, Wash. 1907. this
					 fine steel sailing vessel was refloated and towed to Seattle where she was sold
					 to Norwegian owners and renamed <emph render="italic">Sorknes</emph>[in
					 1910].</p></note></c03></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>Unidentified Ships</unittitle></did><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/10</container><container type="item">UNS1</container><unittitle>Ship at dock with pulleys loading or unloading
				  cargo</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/10</container><container type="item">UNS2</container><unittitle>Lounge room of ship interior</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1946?</unitdate></did><note><p>Possibly interior of the <emph render="italic">City of
				  Seattle</emph>.</p></note></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Small boats</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/11</container><container type="item">UNSB1</container><unittitle>Man standing in dinghy aboard larger ship</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did><note><p>Other covered dinghy visible, named Port Townsend</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/11</container><container type="item">UNSB2</container><unittitle>Small boat tied up along shore</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/11</container><container type="item">UNSB3</container><unittitle>Man sitting in riverboat tied up at dock</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1940?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">3/11</container><container type="item">UNSB3</container><unittitle>Propeller launch at a small dock, on probably Lake
					 Coeur d'Alene, Idaho</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did><note><p>"Schley" is pencilled on verso, but is misidentified, possibly
					 because the hull looks similar to the <emph render="italic">Schley.</emph>.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Sailing ships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/12</container><container type="item">UNSAIL1</container><unittitle>One-masted sailboat in water with men and women
					 aboard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: Leary - Grand Trunk Dock. Scott Calhoun,
					 Alaskan Bldg. Stanley Griffiths - Bert Griffiths, Globe Bldg. Capt. Jas.
					 Griffiths.</p></note></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/12</container><container type="item">UNSAIL2</container><unittitle>Bow of sailing ship in water with sails
					 raised</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1940?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>3-masted Sailing Ships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/13</container><container type="item">UNT1-5</container><unittitle>Profile of three-masted ship in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/13</container><container type="item">UNT6</container><unittitle>Bow of ship at sail</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>4-masted Sailing Ships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/14</container><container type="item">UNFOUR1-2</container><unittitle>Profile of ship with raised sails in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/14</container><container type="item">UNFOUR3</container><unittitle>Ship being towed by tugboat</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>5-masted Sailing Ships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/15</container><container type="item">UNFIVE1</container><unittitle>Profile of ship with raised sails in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/15</container><container type="item">UNFIVE2</container><unittitle>Bow of ship with raised sails and man crouching in
					 foreground on other boat </unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1870 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>6-masted Sailing Ships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/16</container><container type="item">UNSIX1</container><unittitle>A coal-carrying cargo ship, or collier, with raised
					 sails in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1925?</unitdate></did><note><p>Written on verso: One of the two sister ships - Colliers -
					 largest sailers now under sail.</p></note></c03></c02><c02 level="subseries"><did><unittitle>Steamboats &amp; Steamships</unittitle></did><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/17</container><container type="item">UNSS1</container><unittitle>Two-masted U.S. Fisheries steamer with passengers
					 aboard</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1890 and 1930?</unitdate></did></c03><c03 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/17</container><container type="item">UNSS2</container><unittitle>Cargo steamship in profile in water</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">Between 1900 and 1950?</unitdate></did></c03></c02></c01></dsc></archdesc></ead>

