New York (1836 steamboat)

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NameNew York
Owner
  • New Haven Steamboat Co. (1836–39)
  • Connecticut Steamboat Co. (1840–50)
  • Durant, Lathrop & Co. (1851–54)
  • Schuyler's Line Steam Tow Boats (1854–70)
  • Thomas Cornell (1870–75)
OperatorSee owners
New York
New York after her 1841 rebuild; painting by J. & J. Bard
History
NameNew York
NamesakeNew York City
Owner
  • New Haven Steamboat Co. (1836–39)
  • Connecticut Steamboat Co. (1840–50)
  • Durant, Lathrop & Co. (1851–54)
  • Schuyler's Line Steam Tow Boats (1854–70)
  • Thomas Cornell (1870–75)
OperatorSee owners
RouteNew York, NY – New Haven, CT (original)
BuilderLawrence & Sneden (Manhattan, NY)
Completed1836
FateAbandoned 1875
General characteristics
TypeSidewheel steamboat
Tonnage524 gross
Length212 ft (65 m)
Beam23 ft (7.0 m)
Draft5 ft (1.5 m) (loaded)
Depth of hold11 ft (3.4 m)
Installed power
Propulsion24 ft 6 in (7.47 m) sidewheels with 30 in (76 cm) dip
SpeedApprox. 20 mph (32 km/h) (cruising)

New York was an American passenger-cargo sidewheel steamboat built in 1836 for service on Long Island Sound. When new, she was the largest steamboat yet to operate on the route between New York and New Haven, Connecticut, and was one of the largest Sound steamboats of her day.

New York continued to operate on the Sound until 1850, when she was sold to New York parties and began service on New York's Hudson River. By the mid-1850s she had been converted into a towboat, and remained in service on the Hudson in that capacity to the end of her career in 1875.

British novelist Charles Dickens wrote an unflattering description of New York in 1842, when she was still operating on Long Island Sound as a passenger steamer. The description appears in his book American Notes.

New York, a wooden-hulled passenger-cargo sidewheel steamboat, was built in Manhattan, New York, in 1836 by Lawrence & Sneden for the New Haven Steamboat Company, which planned to operate the vessel between New York City and New Haven, Connecticut. She was 212 feet (65 m) in length, with a beam of 23 feet (7.0 m), hold depth of 11 feet (3.4 m) and loaded draft of 5 feet (1.5 m).[1][2][a] With a gross tonnage of 524, she was at the time considerably larger than any steamboat previously built for service between New Haven and New York,[4] and was one of the largest steamers on Long Island Sound.[b] She was considered a fine vessel for her day.[7]

New York was powered by a single-cylinder crosshead engine with 50-inch (130 cm) bore and 10-foot (3.0 m) stroke, built by the Allaire Iron Works of New York.[1][2][7] Steam was originally supplied by an iron boiler installed in the hold[7] and exhausted through a single smokestack amidships. By 1841, this arrangement had been superseded by a pair of boilers and smokestacks on the guards,[c] in conformity with the then-prevailing trend in steamboat design, introduced to reduce damage and injuries in the event of boiler explosions. New York's sidewheels were 24 feet 6 inches (7.47 m) in diameter, and had 12-foot (3.7 m) buckets with a 30-inch (76 cm) dip.[7]

Service history

Footnotes

References

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