Elk (steam tug)

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History
Name: Elk ex Katherine
Completed: 1880; rebuilt 1896[1]
Out of service: 1911
Identification: 164007 (as rebuilt)[2]
Fate: burned
General characteristics
Type: inland steamboat
Length: As built: 44.3 ft (13.50 m);[3] as rebuilt: 64 ft (19.51 m)[2]
Beam: As built: 11.25 ft (3.43 m);[3] as rebuilt: 15.1 ft (4.60 m)[2]
Depth: As built and as rebuilt: 3.5 ft (1.07 m) depth of hold[2][3]
Installed power: steam engine
Propulsion: propeller

Elk was a steam tug that operated on Puget Sound, and earlier, from 1880 to 1896, on Lake Washington under the name of Katherine.

Career

Elk was originally constructed at Houghton, Washington, and launched under the name Katherine. Katherine was 44 ft (13.41 m) long, 44 ft (13.41 m) on the beam, and rated at 14.25 registered tons.[3] Katherine operated on Lake Washington, and by 1895, was owned by Capt J.C. O'Connor, who had been born in New York in 1846. O'Connor had been involved with steamboats on Lake Washington since 1874, when he had worked on the steamer Chehalis

In 1896, Capt. O.G. Olsen (d. 1924) bought the steamboat Katherine. Olsen was a native of Norway who came to Pacific Coast in 1883. Olsen rebuilt Katherine as a tug and took the vessel to Puget Sound to operate out of Tacoma as a tug under the name of Elk, the first vessel of what became the Olsen Tug Boat Company.[1]

Stranding

In 1909, while operating under the Seattle concern of Crosbie Towing Co., Elk was towing a barge loaded with telephone cable intended for the Kitsap County Telephone Company, Elk went aground near Restoration Point. As a result the vessel suffered extensive damage, including breaking the tail shaft, rudder shaft and keel. Elk was not a total loss, and the vessel was able to be removed to the King and Winge shipyard in West Seattle where repairs were made.

Disposition

Elk is reported to have burned in 1911.[4]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 McCurdy Marine History, at 4, 168, 358.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 1909 Annual Merchant Shipping Report, at 190.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Lewis & Dryden Marine History, at 375, 397, and 483/
  4. Newell, Inland Sea, at 207.

References