Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Canadian Pacific Navigation Company

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Defunct
  
1901

Founder
  
John Irving

Successor
  
Canadian Pacific Railway

Headquarters
  
Victoria, Canada

Founded
  
1883

Ceased operations
  
1901

Canadian Pacific Navigation Company uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthumb440

Fate
  
Merged into successor corporation

The Canadian Pacific Navigation Company was an early steamship company that operated steamships on the coast of British Columbia and the Inside Passage of southeast Alaska. The company was founded in 1883 by John Irving (1854-1936), a prominent steamboat man, businessman, and politician of early British Columbia. In 1901 the company was purchased by the Canadian Pacific Railway, becoming the steamship division of the CPR.

Contents

Ships

The company owned a variety of vessels, including the sternwheeler Princess Louise, R.P. Rithet, the old sidewheelers Wilson G. Hunt and Yosemite, and the coastal steamer Willapa.

Loss of SS Islander

Another ship owned by the company was the steamship Islander, which went down in August 1901. Islander was a steel twin-screw steamer built for the Inside passage to Alaska and favoured by wealthy travelers. On the morning of August 15, 1901, the ship struck a submerged iceberg and went down off the south end of Douglas Island, British Columbia. 40 passengers and crew were lost, including the wife and daughter of the politician James Hamilton Ross.

References

Canadian Pacific Navigation Company Wikipedia