Annie Faxon
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Annie Faxon'' was a steamboat that was built by the
Oregon Steam Navigation Company The Oregon Steam Navigation Company (O.S.N.) was an American company incorporated in 1860 in Washington with partners J. S. Ruckle, Henry Olmstead, and J. O. Van Bergen. It was incorporated in Washington because of a lack of corporate laws in ...
. She is chiefly remembered now for the catastrophic
boiler explosion A boiler explosion is a catastrophic failure of a boiler. There are two types of boiler explosions. One type is a failure of the pressure parts of the steam and water sides. There can be many different causes, such as failure of the safety val ...
in 1893 that destroyed her and killed eight people on board.


Design and construction

''Annie Faxon'' was built at 1877 at Celilo, Oregon, and rebuilt 1887 at Texas Ferry, Washington. She was first owned by the Oregon Steam Navigation Company, and then by the
Oregon Railway and Navigation Company The Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company (OR&N) was a Rail transport company, rail and Steamboats of the Columbia River, steamboat transport company that operated a rail network of running east from Portland, Oregon, Portland, Oregon, United ...
when the shareholders of O.S.N. sold their stock at a huge profit.


Navigation on the Columbia River

At that time, and for the entire operational life of this vessel, the Columbia River was not continuously navigable from Portland at tidewater. Instead the river was divided into reaches known as the lower, middle, and upper Columbia, each one separated by a long stretch of essentially unnavigable rapids. The reaches were like giant steps, and once a steamboat was built on a step, it could, with some danger, descend to a lower step by running the rapids. However, in general no steamboat could proceed up a step, although in some cases steamboats were dismantled and carried around the major rapids or smaller ones might be winched up by a line attached to the bank.


Operations of ''Annie Faxon''

''Annie Faxon'' ran on the top step, that is, the reach above
Celilo Falls Celilo Falls (; , meaning "echo of falling water" or "sound of water upon the rocks," in several native languages) was a tribal fishing area on the Columbia River, just east of the Cascade Range, Cascade Mountains, on what is today the border bet ...
. She was one of the largest steamboats to operate on these route. Boats like ''Annie Faxon'' on the upper Columbia could navigate up the Snake River to
Lewiston, Idaho Lewiston is a city and the county seat of Nez Perce County, Idaho, United States, in the state's North Central Idaho, north central region. It is the third-largest city in the Idaho Panhandle, northern Idaho region, behind Post Falls, Idaho, Pos ...
, and even beyond.Mills, Randall V., ''Sternwheelers up Columbia -- A Century of Steamboating in the Oregon Country'', at 43, 83, and 205, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE (1977 reprint of 1947 ed.)


Destruction

On April 14, 1893, at 7:30 a.m., ''Annie Faxon'' was destroyed in a catastrophic boiler explosion. The boat was coming in for a landing with Captain Harry Baughman in command. Suddenly with no warning the boiler exploded and the upper works of the vessel were destroyed. Eight people were killed, including the bride of purser J.E. Tappen, who was blown into the river and drowned. The boat's pilot, Thomas McIntosh, had been beheaded by flying debris, and crewman William Kidd was blown to pieces. Captain Baughman, who had been standing next to pilot McIntosh, was blasted onto the shore, dazed and injured. Five crew members were killed: John McIntosh, Thomas McIntosh, William Kidd, Henry Bush, Pain Allen, George Farwell, and Scott McComb Marshall, Don, ''Oregon Shipwrecks'', at 203, Binford and Mort, Portland, OR 1984


Cause of the explosion

The cause of the explosion was later said to be the failure of a safety valve (called a "
fusible plug A fusible plug is a threaded cylinder of metal, usually bronze, brass or gunmetal, with a tapered hole drilled completely through its length. This hole is sealed with a metal of low melting point that flows away if a predetermined high temperatur ...
") to blow when the water level in the boiler fell too low. Just how this occurred was not quite certain. The vessel had been recently inspected, and while she was 16 years old at the time, she had been rebuilt in 1887 just six years before. The curious thing about this explosion was that it seemed to fit a pattern of explosions occurring not while racing but rather just after or before the vessel was coming in for a landing, as in the case of the ''Gazelle'' and the ''Senator''.Timmen, Fritz, ''Blow for the Landing -- A Hundred Years of Steam Navigation on the Waters of the West'', at 27, 29, and 71, Caxton Printers, Caldwell, ID 1973 Wright, E.W., ed., ''Lewis & Dryden Marine History of the Pacific Northwest'', at 197, Lewis & Dryden Printing Co., Portland, OR 1895
/ref>


Notes

{{Oregon Steam Navigation Company Maritime boiler explosions Steamboats of Oregon Steamboats of Washington (state) Sternwheelers of Washington (state) Steamboats of Idaho Steamboats of the Columbia River Steamboats of the Snake River Oregon Steam Navigation Company