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Keller Ferry

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Began operation
  
Early 1890s

Locale
  
No. of vessels
  
1 (M/V Sanpoil)

Keller Ferry WSDOT Keller Ferry

Route
  
Washington State Route 21

Carries
  
Passengers and automobiles

Operator
  
Washington State Department of Transportation

Predecessor
  
Martha S., San Poil of Seattle (barge) and Ann of Wilbur (tug), L.A. McLeod, and Keller

Riding the new keller ferry 2014


Keller Ferry (occasionally called Clark Ferry), is a ferry crossing on Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake in the US state of Washington. The crossing connects the northern and southern segments of State Route 21, between The Colville Indian Reservation in Ferry County and Clark in Lincoln County. The ferry run has been in operation since the 1890s and under state control since 1930. During that time, five vessels have served the crossing, including the Martha S., which operated from 1948 to 2013, and the current ferry, the M/V Sanpoil.

Contents

Keller Ferry SanpoilThe Keller Ferry

The M/V Sanpoil is the only Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) owned and operated ferry in Eastern Washington; the others are on Puget Sound in Western Washington. This was the first ferry crossing operated by the state of Washington; the Puget Sound ferries did not commence until 1951.

Keller Ferry Washington State DOT on Twitter quotThe new Keller Ferry Sanpoil

Hours of operation are 6:00 a.m. to Midnight 7 days per week. The fare to ride is free.

Keller ferry ride keller ferry wa


Keller, L. A. McLeod & San Poil

Keller Ferry httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons66

Before the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam, the Keller, a cable ferry, served the crossing, at the confluence of the Columbia River and the Sanpoil River. The Keller had an on-board motor to winch the boat across the river.

Keller Ferry WSDOT Keller Ferry Historical Photos

The L. A. McLeod, a Diesel powered side-wheeler, served the crossing from 1939 to 1944, a period which saw the completion of the Grand Coulee Dam and the formation of Lake Roosevelt.

Keller Ferry Keller Ferry Ride Keller Ferry WA YouTube

Between 1944 and 1948, the route was served by a barge called the San Poil, which was pushed by a tugboat, the Ann of Wilbur.

Martha S.

Launched in 1948, the Martha S., was powered by two diesel engines making total 470 horsepower, and was 80 feet in length and 30 feet in beam. Its maximum capacity was 12 cars, or a single tractor-trailer truck alone, but it was unable to accommodate highway legal double tractor-trailer trucks. The ferry was in service from its launch until its retirement on Sunday, July 7, 2013. The vessel was named in honor of Martha Shain, the wife of State Highway Director Clarence Shain at the time it was put in service.

M/V Sanpoil

The current Keller ferry, the M/V Sanpoil, is 116 feet in length, and is designed to carry 20 passenger vehicles, two single tractor-trailer trucks and 9 passenger vehicles, or a double tractor-trailer truck and 8 passenger vehicles. It was christened, received a tribal blessing, and began service on August 14, 2013, after the Martha S. docks were refit to handle the larger replacement vessel. The name "Sanpoil" is an Anglicized version of the name of the native peoples of the surrounding area, and is the name of the river adjacent SR 21 to the north of the ferry.

The project to acquire a replacement ferry for the Martha S. was funded by the Washington State Legislature during the 2011 session. The Colville Confederated Tribes contributed $2 million of the approximately $12 million cost of the new vessel. On Nov. 16, 2011, WSDOT awarded a contract for construction of the replacement vessel with delivery slated for May 2013. Justification for replacing the Martha S. included replacement parts for it no longer being commercially manufactured, requiring them to be custom-made as needed.

References

Keller Ferry Wikipedia


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