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Urania (steamboat)

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Name
  
Urania

Builder
  
John L. Anderson

Out of service
  
1914

Route
  
Lake Washington

In service
  
1907

Urania (steamboat) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

Owner
  
Anderson Steamboat Company

The steamboat Urania was a vessel that operated on Lake Washington in the first part of the 20th century. Built of wood, the vessel burned and sank in 1914. In 2002, the wreck was found and photographed by divers.

Contents

Construction

Urania was built in 1907 on Lake Washington, for Captain John Anderson, to join his fleet of steamboats on Lake Washington, operating under the name of the Anderson Steamboat Company. She was 85 feet (26 m) long. “Urania” was the Greek name for the muse of astronomy and astrology Captain Anderson named his vessels after classical gods, starting with Xanthus and Cyrene. Urania was similar to but slightly smaller than another Anderson vessel, Fortuna, built in 1906. Captains Wells Green and C.R. Hall were two of Urania’s masters.

Partial conversion to auto transport

In 1913, Urania was reconstructed to allow four automobiles to be carried sideways across her foredeck. The reconstruction required removal of a portion of her upper deck.

Loss by fire

On February 12, 1914, Urania burned near Houghton, and became a total loss. Her steam engine was salvaged and she was scuttled in the lake west of the Houghton shipyard in about 150 feet of water. A leading authority states that Urania was transferred to Puget Sound in 1917; if so, this cannot be the same Urania as the vessel described in the SCRET report, as the webpage shows the burned Urania before scuttling.

Discovery of wreck

In 2002, divers of the Submerged Cultural Resources Exploration Team (“SCRET”) found the wreck of Urania, noting that she lies upright on the bottom, her hull substantially intact, but her upper works completely destroyed of course by the fire.

References

Urania (steamboat) Wikipedia