FRIDAYEXTRA ! The Daily Astorian Friday, August 7, 2015 Weekend Edition FLIGHT FƝƪƪIƝƫ ƧFΎTHƝ All items from Matt Winters Collection Tourist No. 2 was drafted for national defense at the start of World War II, used to lay mines to block Japanese access to the Columbia River. This drawing was reproduced in the 1966 dedication booklet for the Astoria-Megler Bridge. Possible return sparks renewed interest in bygone era By MATT WINTERS For The Daily Astorian C olumbia River ferries are one of those obsolete transpor- tation systems — others include the Astoria and Colum- bia River Railroad and the Ilwaco Railway & Navigation Co — that ignite a bright À ame of nostalgic interest Anyone who has used the extensive Puget Sound ferry network to commute to work or as a cheap dating gambit will appreciate the romance of spending time out on the water on what amount to comfortable À oating picnic places and observation platforms News that the Tourist No. 2 ferry will likely soon be making at least a short-term return to the Columbia River estuary has excited much discussion. It will be fun to see it docked in Astoria. Maintaining and running such a vessel is not for the faint of heart or weak of wallet. .eeping Tourist No. 2 here and ¿ nding some economically sustainable way of making it useful to the community would be a big chal- lenge. Looking back to completion of the Astoria-Megler Bridge 49 years ago this month, it’s clear most residents and travelers couldn’t wait to be done with the inconveniences of having to plan around the ferry. Conceivably, the returning ferry might be able to break even in tourist season by running a schedule stopping along the waterfront between Tongue Point and Hammond, possibly making wildlife-watching cruises into the es- tuary or to places like Rice Island and Miller Sands. But it’s hard to imagine taxpayers and city councilors agreeing to such an experiment, at least without strong private ¿ nancial guarantees. In the meantime, a few avid collec- tors seek out artifacts relating to the Columbia ferry era. Postcards, timetables, correspondence, tickets and other paper items are the most likely ¿ nds. A lucky few may manage to discover and keep objects from the boats themselves, or things like of¿ ce accoutrements and street signs associated with the As- toria-North Beach Ferry Co. See FERRIES, Page 3C CLOCKWISE FROM TOP RIGHT: This ferry schedule for summer 1939, kept as a souvenir in a tourist’s scrapbook, shows that walk-on human passengers paid 25 cents, while horses and cows paid 50. Outbreak of World War II about two and a half years later resulted in enormous changes for the ferries and their passengers. This 1936 bill for books of tickets sold to Chinook Packing Co. might represent tickets bought for resale to local res- idents or fares for company employees living on one side of the Columbia and conducting business on the other. Tickets like these on the Astoria-North Beach Ferry were used by Pacific County, Wash., people traveling to the “big city” of Astoria for healthcare, shopping and other needs, and by Astorians coming north for clamming and fun at the beach. Pedestrian travelers connected with train ser- vice until 1930 and small buses thereafter. Tourists used the service to travel north and south on the already-fa- mous U.S. 101 Pacific Coast Highway.