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Sierra Nevada (ferry)

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History
Name
  • 1913-: Edward T. Jeffery
  • -1933: Feather River
  • 1933-1956: Sierra Nevada
Owner
Operator
Port of registrySan Francisco,  USA
BuilderMoore and Scott Iron Works, Oakland, CA
Cost$300,000
CompletedBuilt: 19 July 1913
In service1913
Out of service1 September 1956
IdentificationOfficial Number: 211506
FateFoundered 1978
General characteristics
Class and typeauto/passenger ferry
Tonnage1578
Displacement1025
Length218 ft (66 m)
Beam42 ft (13 m)
Depth16.6 ft (5 m)
Installed powerTotal 2,500 hp from 4 water tube boilers
Propulsionsingle screw powered by two 2-cyl compound steam engines
Crew20

Sierra Nevada was a steel-hulled steam-powered passenger ferry operated on San Francisco Bay. The ferry was built for the Western Pacific Railroad as Edward T. Jeffery in 1913 and subsequently renamed Feather River. The ferry offered connecting service to San Francisco for Western Pacific train passengers arriving in Oakland, California. The ferry was sold to Southern Pacific Transportation Company when Western Pacific began using Southern Pacific's Oakland ferry facilities in May, 1933. Southern Pacific renamed the ferry Sierra Nevada and placed it in commuter service between San Francisco and Alameda, California until that route was discontinued in 1939. The ferry was leased to the Key System for the Golden Gate International Exposition on Treasure Island from 1939 through 1940. In 1942, the ferry was requisitioned by the federal government to carry shipyard workers from San Francisco to Richmond Yard 1 through World War II. The Richmond-San Rafael Ferry Company purchased the ferry in 1947 and rebuilt it to carry automobiles between Richmond and San Rafael until the Richmond–San Rafael Bridge opened on 1 September 1956.[1] The ferry was then towed to San Pedro, Los Angeles where she sank in 1978.[2]

In 1980, the U.S. Corps of Engineers documented the shipwreck and found the ship's propulsion system eligible for the National Register of Historic Places. The ship was then destroyed by dredging, and the propulsion system sold for scrap.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ford, Robert S. Red Trains in the East Bay (1977) Interurbans Publications ISBN 0-916374-27-0 pp.197-198,213,283-286&342-347
  2. ^ "San Francisco Bay Ferryboats - Yesterday". Joe Thompson. Retrieved 2011-07-22.
  3. ^ Schwartz, Stephen. "Evaluation of the Steam Propulsion System of the Wrecked Ferry Boat Sierra Nevada" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology 4: 205-211.
[edit]

Media related to Sierra Nevada (ship, 1913) at Wikimedia Commons