Motor Vessel ''Kalakala'' (pronounced )
was a
ferry
A ferry is a ship, watercraft or amphibious vehicle used to carry passengers, and sometimes vehicles and cargo, across a body of water. A passenger ferry with many stops, such as in Venice, Italy, is sometimes called a water bus or water taxi ...
that operated on
Puget Sound from 1935 until her retirement in 1967.
MV ''Kalakala'' was notable for her unique
streamlined superstructure,
art deco styling, and luxurious amenities. The vessel was a popular attraction for locals and tourists, and was voted second only to the
Space Needle in popularity among visitors to
Seattle during the
1962 Seattle World's Fair. The ship is known as the world's first
streamlined vessel for her unique art deco styling.
After retiring from passenger service in 1967, the ship was beached in
Kodiak, Alaska, and converted to a shrimp cannery. In 1998, the ship was refloated and towed to Puget Sound with the owner hoping to restore the ship. During this time, the ship continued to deteriorate, with the Coast Guard declaring the ship a hazard to navigation in 2011. Unable to raise the funds required for restoration, the ship was scrapped in 2015.
Service
Peralta
She was constructed for the
Key System
The Key System (or Key Route) was a privately owned company that provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, Berkeley, Alameda, Emeryville, Piedmont, San Leandro, Richmond, Albany, and El Cerrito in the eastern San Francisco Bay Area fr ...
's ferry service on
San Francisco Bay
San Francisco Bay is a large tidal estuary in the U.S. state of California, and gives its name to the San Francisco Bay Area. It is dominated by the big cities of San Francisco, San Jose, and Oakland.
San Francisco Bay drains water from a ...
between Oakland and San Francisco and named ''Peralta'' in honor of one of the area's early Spanish founding families. Launched in April 1926 she was of double ended design and was powered by a steam-turbo-electric power plant.
On February 17, 1928, while docking in Oakland, Peralta's bow sank into the water, sending waves sweeping over the deck. Five passengers were killed. The main cause of the accident was found to be the failure in properly filling ballast tanks at the rear of the ship with water to counterbalance the weight of the passengers moving en masse to the bow to disembark.
On the evening of May 6, 1933, while moored at the Oakland ferry terminal an arson fire started in the adjacent train sheds at 11 pm and spread to the ''Peralta'' whose superstructure collapsed due to the intense heat and she was written off by her insurance company.
Rebuilding
The still intact hull of the ''Peralta'' caught the eye of Alexander Peabody, president of the
Puget Sound Navigation Company (PSNC), also known by its marketing name, the "Black Ball Line". He made an offer and on October 12, 1933, the vessel was sold to the PSNC, who had the hull towed by the tug Creole to
Lake Washington Shipyards
Lake Washington Shipyards was a shipyard in the Pacific Northwest, northwest United States, located in Houghton, Washington (today Kirkland, Washington, Kirkland) on the shore of Lake Washington, east of Seattle. Today, the shipyards are the sit ...
in
Houghton, Washington
Houghton is one of the lakeside neighborhoods of the city of Kirkland, Washington. Consisting mostly of upscale, single-family homes, Houghton overlooks Lake Washington and is one of the wealthier districts of the Eastside suburbs of Seattle. ...
(since annexed to
Kirkland) to restore the vessel as a ferry.
Over the next two years she was rebuilt. The remains of the superstructure and machinery were removed, while the beam was reduced from 68 ft to 55 ft 8 inches.
Only a single diesel engine was installed as it was intended that she would operate as a single-ender operating between Seattle and Bremerton which was home to a major US navy base (docking by the bow at Bremerton and by the stern at Seattle). As the route was long, speed was considered to be important, as well has the ability to carry both passengers and motor vehicles.
After his wife suggested that the new design should be distinctive and modernistic,
Peabody decided to incorporate streamlining in the new superstructure. Louis Proctor, an engineer for the
Boeing Company, provided an early concept design. The setback of the wheelhouse mimicked the setback of a cockpit behind the nose of an airplane. The flying bridge had no functional purpose but was evocative of wings, fitting with the aircraft-themed design. She was also given a modernistic art-deco interior with a full-service galley, a ladies' lounge, and a men's bar on the lower deck and showers for dockyard workers travelling home from the naval shipyard at Bremerton.
The new electro-welding, or
arc-welding
Arc welding is a welding process that is used to join metal to metal by using electricity to create enough heat to melt metal, and the melted metals, when cool, result in a binding of the metals. It is a type of welding that uses a welding power ...
, process was used instead of rivet construction, lending a seamless appearance to fit with the streamlined design. Kalakala was the first vessel on which the new technique was used.
The new bridge and wheelhouse were built entirely out of copper, from fear that the steel used in the rest of the vessel would interfere with the ship's compass.
In November 1934, William O. Thorniley, publicist for PSNC and president of the
Olympic Peninsula Travel Association
Olympic or Olympics may refer to
Sports
Competitions
* Olympic Games, international multi-sport event held since 1896
** Summer Olympic Games
** Winter Olympic Games
* Ancient Olympic Games, ancient multi-sport event held in Olympia, Greece bet ...
, named the new ferry ''Kalakala'', which means "bird" in the Pacific Northwest Native American trade language
Chinook Jargon.
Thorniley launched a national promotional campaign beginning with large billboard signs that simply said "KALAKALA!" Later, they said "KALAKALA, Seattle, WA" and featured a picture of the vessel as well.
The name established a tradition of all vessels in the ferry fleet of the Washington State Department of Transportation (which acquired ownership of the ''Kalakala'' in 1951) bearing indigenous names.
Service
After festivities, ''Kalakala'' entered service on July 4, 1935, becoming an icon.
[ In addition to ferry service, she was used for "moonlight cruises" with a live dance orchestra.]
''Kalakala'' saw heavy service during World War II transporting shipyard workers and Navy personnel between Seattle and Bremerton on an extended schedule. Vandalism and rowdiness brought deployment of the Shore Patrol and closure of the bar. That service led to the moniker, "The Workhorse of Puget Sound."
The aircraft-inspired design of ''Kalakala'' sacrificed functionality. The setback of the wheelhouse made it impossible to see the bow of the vessel, leading to difficulties when docking. The streamlined wheelhouse's small size and round windows also made all round visibility difficult. The car deck was narrowed for the sake of form, sacrificing lane width. That led to a 40% drop in the number of vehicles that could be carried as American cars became wider in the postwar years, with a corresponding drop in economic efficiency, while making it difficult for passengers to squeeze between cars on their way to embarking and disembarking from the ferry. With the coming of the more efficient Evergreen State class boats in the mid-1950s, ''Kalakala'' became obsolete. The enclosed bow design did, however, make her suitable for open water routes such as the Port Angeles - Victoria run, where she served from 1955 to 1959.
''Kalakala'' had a heavy shaking vibration that ran throughout the vessel when in operation. This was probably due to poor alignment of the engine during the 1930s rebuild. When the propeller was replaced with a new 5-bladed version in 1956, the vibration was reduced by 40%.[
] Although the PSNC wished ''Kalakala'' to be known as the ''Silver Swan'', she soon attracted other, less complimentary nicknames, including ''Silver Slug'', ''Silver Beetle'', ''Galloping Ghost of the Pacific Coast'', and, among Seattle's Scandinavian community, ''Kackerlacka'', which means "cockroach".
In February 1946, ''Kalakala'' was issued Federal Communications Commission (FCC) license #001 when she was fitted with the first commercial radar system.
''Kalakala'' was featured transportation for tours of the Bremerton shipyards during the Seattle World's Fair in 1962.
Retirement
In 1967, ''Kalakala'' retired from service and moved to the Washington State Ferries repair facility at Eagle Harbor Eagle Harbor may refer to several places in the United States:
* Eagle Harbor, a development on Fleming Island, Florida
* Eagle Harbor, Maryland, a town
* Eagle Harbor, Michigan, an unincorporated community and census-designated place
** Eagle Har ...
. A year later she was sold to a seafood processing company and towed to Alaska to work as a crab cannery at Ouzinkie, Alaska. Later the ''Kalakala'' was beached in Kodiak Kodiak may refer to:
Places
*Kodiak, Alaska, a city located on Kodiak island
* Kodiak, Missouri, an unincorporated community
*Kodiak Archipelago, in southern Alaska
*Kodiak Island, the largest island of the Kodiak archipelago
** Kodiak Launch Com ...
in 1970 and used to process shrimp.
Peter Bevis discovered the rusting hulk on a fishing trip in 1984. ''Kalakala'' was still operating as a cannery, with her internal structure having been reworked to create a building with cement floors, drywall, and ceiling tiles. After complicated financial negotiations, the ship was refloated and towed back to Seattle in 1998. The vessel became a source of controversy for the remainder of her existence as her owners were unable to raise sufficient funds to refurbish the vessel or even to keep her moored in Seattle's Union Bay.
The vessel was sold in 2004 to a private investor, who moved her to an anchorage in Neah Bay provided by the Makah people. Soon after arriving at Neah Bay ''Kalakala'' was evicted by the Makah, who also brought a lawsuit against the owners. The vessel was then relocated to Tacoma, Washington.
In February 2008, ''Kalakala'' owner Steve Rodrigues announced his intention to acquire additional vintage ferry vessels and to restore them and the ''Kalakala'' as either ferries powered by wind and solar technologies or as museums. ''Kalakala'' was scheduled for work on her hull and superstructure in dry dock in 2010, but this never happened. After six years in Tacoma, ''Kalakala'' began listing, and officials became concerned that the ferry might pose an environmental risk. The vessel's owner was also pressured to take action after Washington State passed a law focusing on the removal of abandoned or neglected vessels. For these reasons, ''Kalakala''s owner put her up for sale for a nominal fee of one dollar, contingent on the purchaser committing to renovating ''Kalakala''.
In December 2011, the Coast Guard declared the ship a hazard to navigation. Among other issues, the Coast Guard stated that her mooring arrangements were inadequate. The Coast Guard set a December 19 deadline for the owner to repair the hull of the ship and submit a plan to tow her away from her current mooring in Tacoma. This deadline was not met. The owner, Steve Rodrigues, appealed this order, claiming that an anonymous person had purchased the ship. The Coast Guard rejected the appeal as there was no evidence that any work had been done on the ship and no evidence of the supposed sale.
The Coast Guard described the ship as being in such fragile condition that it may not withstand being moved to other moorage and might have to be scrapped. In July 2012 Steve Rodrigues sued the state of Washington claiming that the state had failed in its "duty" to help preserve the ferry. Rodrigues' suit asked that the state be prevented from forcing ''Kalakala'' to be moved, confiscated, or sunk and sought to force the state to pay approximately $50 million for restoration of the ferry under a proposal Rodrigues previously submitted, which was rejected. In November 2012, Karl Anderson, owner of the Hylebos Waterway uplands where the boat was moored, took possession of the vessel in exchange for the $4,000 he claimed Rodrigues owed him in back rent.
Dismantling
On January 4, 2015, owner Karl Anderson announced that the ''Kalakala'' would be dismantled for scrap metal.[
]
On January 22, the ''Kalakala'' was towed to a Tacoma dry dock and scrapping began immediately. By the first week of February scrapping was completed with only a few pieces such as windows, pilot house, and the rudder saved and sold as souvenirs.
Artistic projects
Several art projects arose from fascination with ''Kalakala'', including a full-length album of solo cello compositions recorded on board the vessel in November 2003, called ''Songs from a Parallel Universe''. There is an as-yet unreleased film about the "Ghost Dance" that was filmed on ''Kalakala''. There was also a live concert featuring the Icelandic band '' múm'', Serena Tideman
Serena Tideman (born 24 February 1978) is an American composer and classical and improvisational cellist who resides in Port Townsend,
Washington
Washington commonly refers to:
* Washington (state), United States
* Washington, D.C., the capital ...
and Eyvind Kang, on board the ''Kalakala''. The watercolorist Robert Tandecki painted her among her later days. Artist Cory Ench painted a large mural of ''Kalakala'' in downtown Port Angeles in 1995.
In 2002, it was home to the Undergraduate Degree Shows for Cornish College of the Arts Design Department.
A temporary pirate radio station broadcasting from ''Kalakala'' is featured in the 2005 documentary film ''Pirate Radio USA
''Pirate Radio USA'' is a 2006 documentary film written and directed by Jeff Pearson, with musical director Mary Jones. Its running time is 82 minutes.
Summary
The film showcases illegal radio, or pirate radio in America. DJs Him and Her (Pearso ...
''.
The city of Kirkland bought some of the scrapped pieces of ''Kalakala'' and, , is considering using them in a public art project. Several pieces of the vessel were placed in the parking lot of Salty's on Alki in West Seattle, including a wheelhouse that faces Elliott Bay and the Seattle skyline.
See also
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Notes
References
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External links
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Kalakala, MV
Washington State Ferries vessels
Art Deco ships
Streamliners
National Register of Historic Places in Tacoma, Washington
Ships on the National Register of Historic Places in Washington (state)
Puget Sound Navigation Company
1926 ships
Merchant ships of the United States
Passenger ships of the United States