Trisha Shetty (Editor)

W. P. Snyder Jr. (towboat)

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Builder
  
Rees & Sons Company

Depth
  
5.2 ft (1.6 m)

Designated NHL
  
29 June 1989

Added to NRHP
  
10 November 1970

Length
  
175 ft (53 m) (LOA)

Launched
  
1918

Year built
  
1918

W. P. Snyder Jr. (towboat)

Name
  
W. H. Clingerman (1918–1938) J. L. Perry (1938–1945) A-1 (1945–1945) W. P. Snyder Jr. (1945–)

Beam
  
28.4 ft (8.7 m) (original) 32.3 ft (9.8 m) (modified)

Installed power
  
2 × Tandem compound steam engines 750 hp (560 kW)

Address
  
Muskingum River, Marietta, OH 45750, United States

Owners
  
Carnegie Steel Company, Ohio History Connection

Similar
  
Ohio River Museum, Campus Martius Museum, Rufus Putnam House, Mound Cemetery, Ohio Company Land Office

W. P. Snyder Jr., also known as W. H. Clingerman, W. P. Snyder Jr. State Memorial, or J. L. Perry, is a US National Historic Landmark.

W. P. Snyder Jr. is a sternwheel, steam driven, towboat that was originally built as the Carnegie Steel Company towboat W. H. Clingerman in 1918 by Rees & Sons Company of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. In 1938, she was renamed J. L. Perry, and in 1945 A-1. In August 1945, she was sold to Crucible Steel Company of Pittsburgh, and renamed the W. P. Snyder Jr. in September 1945.

She was a sister vessel of W. H. Colvin Jr., and she towed coal on the Monongahela River until being laid up on 23 September 1953, at Crucible, Pennsylvania. In the summer of 1955, the boat was given to the Ohio Historical Society for exhibit at the Ohio River Museum in Marietta, Ohio. W. P. Snyder Jr. was the last steamboat locking through Lock 1, on the Muskingum River, before that lock was removed. She arrived in Marietta, Ohio, with Captain Fred Way Jr. as master on 16 September 1955.

As one of the first steel hull towboats constructed, she was fitted with the prominent anti-hogging struts and cables necessary on wooden hulled stern wheelers. At the time it wasn't known if they would be needed with the steel hull construction.

W. P. Snyder Jr. has been permanently moored on the Muskingum River in Marietta, Ohio, at the Ohio River Museum. Visitors to the museum receive a guided tour of W. P. Snyder Jr..

She is "the only intact, steam-driven sternwheel towboat still on the nation's river system", but "is in danger of sinking". On 21 November 2009, W.P. Snyder Jr. was towed from Marietta to South Point, Ohio to have her hull replaced. W. P. Snyder Jr. made her way home starting 15 September 2010 and arrived back in the Muskingum River at Marietta on 17 September 2010.

References

W. P. Snyder Jr. (towboat) Wikipedia