Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

SS Northwestern (1889)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Northwestern

Length
  
102 m

Launched
  
23 November 1889

SS Northwestern (1889) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Namesake
  
The Northwestern Steamship Company

Fate
  
Sank at mooring, Captains Bay, Unalaska Island

Status
  
Hulk visible projecting from bay

Class and type
  
Passenger and freight transport

Speed
  
14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)

Builder
  
Delaware River Iron Ship Building and Engine Works

Ss northwestern 1889 top 7 facts


The SS Northwestern, originally SS Oriziba, was a passenger and freight steamship launched in 1889 by the Delaware River Iron Ship Building and Engine Works, Chester, Pennsylvania which spent most of its career in service in the waters of Alaska. The ship from early in its career had a reputation for trouble, and was frequently involved in groundings, collisions with other ships, and with port facilities. She first served as a transport in the West Indies as Oriziba, and was acquired by the Northwestern Steamship Company in 1906, sailed around Cape Horn, and renamed Northwestern. For the next thirty years she worked along the Alaska coast, transporting people, mail, and goods, as well as ore from mining operations at Kennecott.

Contents

On 25 July 1933, Northwestern ran aground off Alaska′s Sentinel Island Lighthouse and subsequently was beached on the Eagle River Sand Spit. Her passengers were taken off by a United States Government steamship.

Northwestern was pressed into service by the United States Navy during World War II, and was serving as housing for workers at Dutch Harbor on Unalaska when the area was bombed by the Japanese in June 1942. On 4 June a bomb struck her, inflicting extensive damage. Her hulk afterward was loaded with scrap and towed to Captains Bay in anticipation of eventually being towed to Seattle. Washington. Despite U.S. Navy records indicating that she was towed to Seattle, she in fact remained in Captains Bay, and eventually sank around 1946; there are differing accounts as to the circumstances of the sinking. Approximately 50 feet (15 m) of her hull is normally visible at the head of Captains Bay.

The site of the shipwreck was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1994.

Ss northwestern 1889 top 8 facts


References

SS Northwestern (1889) Wikipedia