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Columbia River Paddle Boat Cruise

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America, Mississippi riverboat, circa 1900-1910. Note the group of ...
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The Columbia, sometimes called the Steamer Columbia, was a paddle steamer excursion boat on which 87 or 88 people died on the Illinois River in July 1918 across from Creve Coeur between Peoria and Pekin, Illinois.


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Pre-disaster

The Columbia was built at Clinton, Iowa in 1897. Originally a packet boat, it was converted to an excursion boat in 1905.

In 1912, a well-respected captain, Herman F. Mehl of Peoria, formed the Herman F. Mehl Excursion Company, and bought the Columbia from Captain Walter Blair of Davenport, Iowa In autumn 1917, the ship was rebuilt at the Howard Ship Company's Mound City yards, in time for the 1918 excursion season. Mehl spent almost $18,000 on renovations to meet safety standards, after which the federal inspectors called the Columbia "the safest boat on western waters".


Columbia River Paddle Boat Cruise Video



Last voyage

The Columbia excursion of July 4, 1918 was hosted by Pekin's South Side Social Club. The club sold 563 tickets at the price of 50 cents, or 25 cents for children. One hundred of the passengers were picked up at Kingston Mines, the boat leaving at 7:30 p.m.; the rest were picked up in Pekin. The boat left Pekin at 8:15 p.m.

The Columbia docked at Al Fresco Park along the river in Richwoods Township (and now Peoria Heights) for 30 minutes, then returned downstream.

Just after passing under the Peoria and Pekin Union Railway bridge, just upstream from Wesley City (now Creve Coeur), the boat encountered dense fog, which a passenger described as "like going from sunshine into darkness". The pilot lost control of the vessel, which then drifted towards the Peoria County, Illinois side of the river.

Captain Mehl told pilot Tom Williams to make for the shore, unaware of a large hole torn in the ship's side by a submerged log. Williams attempted to cross from the overgrown Peoria County side to the Tazewell County side, where there were populated shacks and a possible landing. However, the ship's decks quickly collapsed on top of each other.


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Aftermath

The same inspectors who had declared the boat safe were the ones who conducted the federal investigation. Mehl and Williams both lost their licenses. The coroner implicated Mehl, Williams, and the purser of the Columbia, but the case never went to trial.

After the disaster, the boat remained partially submerged for some time.

The disaster ended the bulk of the riverboat excursion business on the Illinois River.


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Further reading

  • Steamer Columbia Sinks -- two 1918 articles from the Glasford Gazette on Peoria County, Illinois Genealogy Trails
  • pictures of the wrecked steamboat Columbia 1918
  • Tazewell County Museum website page on the Columdia disaster
  • Collection of Articles & List of Crew, Orchestra & Passengers of & from the Columbia Riverboat Disaster, July 5, 1918 - August 14, 2000 -- on Tazewell County, Illinois Genealogy Trails
  • "A moment of calm, then panic". The Cass County Star-Gazette. Beardstown, Illinois: Beardstown Newspapers. Retrieved 2013-12-03. 
  • Zurski, Ken (2012). The Wreck of the Columbia: A Broken Boat, a Town's Sorrow & the End of the Steamboat Era on the Illinois River. Chicago: Amika Press. ISBN 978-1937484057.  -- said to be "the first book-length treatment of this tragic event"

Source of the article : Wikipedia



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