Callendar Navigation Company

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IndustryRiverine transport
Foundedcirca 1900
FateMerged 1922
SuccessorKnappton Towing Company
Callender Navigation Company
IndustryRiverine transport
Foundedcirca 1900
FateMerged 1922
SuccessorKnappton Towing Company
HeadquartersAstoria, Oregon, US

The Callendar Navigation Company, sometimes seen as the Callendar Transportation Company, started in business in the early 1900s.[1] Callendar was formed in the early 1900s, and was based in Astoria, Oregon. Callender was to become one of six large towing companies of the Columbia and Willamette rivers in the early decades of the 1900s, the others being Shaver Transportation, Smith Transportation, Hosford, Knappton Towing Co., and Willamette and Columbia River Towing Co.[2] In 1922, Callendar Navigation merged with Knappton Towboat Co., which existed, with a name change in 1990, and which became part of Foss Marine in 1993.[3][4]

The president of the company was M.E. Callender, the vice-president was Maxwell Ludwig "Max" Skibbe, and Charles H. Callendar was the secretary, treasurer, and general manager.[1] In April 1903, Skibbe was the owner of the steamer Eclipse, and held a half interest in the steamer Vanguard and the gasoline launch Queen.[5] That same month, Skibbe sold his interest in a shoreside concern, the Eclipse Hardware Company, to concentrate in the steamboat business.[5]

Fleet composition

Steamer Cruiser in Aberdeen, Washington, circa 1900

Vessels are shown by (date of construction; date of acquisition by company - date of disposition).

  • Cruiser (1886; 1905–1906). Purchased October 1905 and sold June 1906. 66 gross tons, 33 net tons, 70 ft (21.3 m) long, 16 ft (4.9 m) beam, 6.1 ft (1.9 m) depth of hold, crew of one, built in 1886 as a passenger vessel at North Bend, Oregon for Captain Asa Meade Simpson (1826–1915).[6][7] The registry number was 126368. Registered as having a crew of 5.[8] Cruiser was built with a compound steam engine, with a piston stroke of 12 inches and cylinder bore diameters of 9 inches (high pressure) and 16 inches (low pressure).[6] For nearly all the time between construction and 1895, Cruiser was operated in Grays Harbor and Willapa Bay under captains J.C. Reed and Edward Gunderson (b. 1879).[6]
  • Eclipse (1889; 1902–1906), towing and jobbing vessel. Built at Portland in 1889 for Capt. Max Skibbe.[9] Eclipse was reported to have been condemned by officers Fuller and Edward of the Steamboat Inspection Service in October 1906.[10] The plan was to salvage the engines and send the hull to a steamboat graveyard.[10] There was talk that Captain Skibbe, former master of Eclipse, might be reassigned to the tug Cruiser.[10] Cruiser was then owned by the Simpson Lumber Company.[11] The inspectors had refused to renew the steamer's certificate on account of the poor condition of the hull.[11] Cruiser was purchased but quickly sold, in June 1906, to the Portland-Seattle Railway Co.[12]
  • Jordan (1901; 1901-unk.), passenger vessel, 91 gross tons, 60 net tons, 70.4 ft (21.5 m) long, 17.3 ft (5.3 m) beam, 6.2 ft (1.9 m) depth of hold, three crew, built in 1901 at Portland, Oregon, registry number 77501.[8] Jordan was originally built as passenger vessel but was soon converted to a towboat.[13]
  • Melville (1903; 1903–1922), passenger vessel, 93 gross tons, 64 net tons, 79.5 ft (24.2 m) long, 19.7 ft (6.0 m) beam, 6.9 ft (2.1 m) depth of hold, three crew, built in 1903 at Knappton, Washington, registry number 93390.[8] The Callendar company later operated Melville as a steam tug.[14] The Knappton Towing Company acquired Melville through its merger with Callendar Navigation Co., and eventually converted the vessel to diesel power.[14]
  • North Star (1899; 1902–1903), steamer leased from December 1902 to April 1903. 121 gross tons, 82 net tons, 73 ft (22.3 m) long, 19 ft (5.8 m) beam, 8.2 ft (2.5 m) depth of hold, crew of one, built in 1899 as a towing vessel at Seattle, Washington, registry number 130814. Registered as having a crew of 12.[8]
  • Queen (1903; 1903–1909), gasoline launch, 14 gross tons, 10 net tons, 49.5 ft (15.1 m) long, 11.5 ft (3.5 m) beam, 3.6 ft (1.1 m) depth of hold, crew of one, built in 1903 at Astoria, Oregon, registry number 20640.[8] In 1909 the Calendar company sold Queen to Captain Jack Reid (d.1929), a veteran Columbia River ferry operator, who placed the launch in service between Kalama, Washington and Goble, Oregon.[15]
  • Vanguard (1901; 1902-unk.), towing vessel, 75 gross tons, 51 net tons, 64.5 ft (19.7 m) long, 18.1 ft (5.5 m) beam, 4.8 ft (1.5 m) depth of hold, four crew, built in 1901 at Astoria, Oregon, registry number 161873.[8] Vanguard had a long career in towing on the lower Columbia River, mostly for Calendar Navigation Co.[16]
  • Wenona (1904; 1904-unk.), passenger vessel, 74 gross tons, 51 net tons, 60.7 ft (18.5 m) long, 16.0 ft (4.9 m) beam, 4.8 ft (1.5 m) depth of hold, three crew, built in 1904 at North Bend, Oregon, registry number 201565.[8]

Operations

Merger with Knappton Towboat Co.

Notes

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