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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 2, 2020)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL | THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 2020 | 9A Offbeat Oregon Sternwheelers on Willamette once towed barns, caught flying fish By Finn J.D. John for The Sentinel T he Willamette River was running high and wild on the morning of Feb. 5, 1890, as Alden and Arthur Graham set out from Oregon City in their sternwheel riverboat for the daily run to Port- land. They arrived in Portland in what must have been re- cord time, dodging logs and small floating buildings along the way, and prompt- ly canceled the return trip. It was just too dangerous to even try charging into the teeth of all the fast-moving debris. But after they arrived, they learned that theirs was the only riverboat between Willamette Falls and the Portland bridges — and there were some things floating down the river that could potentially dam- age or even destroy those bridges. So, back out into the torrent they went, to the rescue. “Our first job was to meet two warehouses of furniture owned by I.F. Powers that had gone adrift upstream,” Alden recalls, in his unpublished memoir. “The first one we missed, and it crashed into the Morrison Bridge. But the second one we caught and towed to safety.” Then it was down to Ross Island to rescue a herd of dairy cows that were about to be swept away by the ris- ing waters. The brothers finished the night with a moonlit run up the river to intercept a barn which had floated off its footings and was on its way to the bridges. This they found securely jammed up on the banks near Ross Island, so they left it alone and called it a night. “It had taken us over an hour to get that far up- stream but less than half that time to return,” Alden writes, “drifting stern-first and taking no chances on fouling our (paddle)wheel or rudder and becoming a casualty ourselves!” It wasn’t exactly “just an- other day” in the life of the owners of a small steam- boat line, but it wasn’t un- expected either. In fact, during the 1861 flood, at least one riverboat steamed out across the flooded val- ley floor, going from house to house to rescue people stuck on the roofs. Throughout the late 1800s, the sternwheel riv- erboat was the predom- inant icon of life along the Willamette and lower Columbia rivers — as the sidewheel boat was along the Mississippi. A lden Graham hadn’t had any thoughts of starting a steamboat line when he first arrived in Portland from Nova Sco- tia. He was the son of a ship captain there, and his brother Arthur had followed in the old man’s footsteps; but Alden had decided to seek his fortune in Oregon, and so, in 1879, off he went. In his new home, he tried several lines of work before settling into a position at Lipman & Wolfe’s dry- goods store. And he was rapidly rising through the ranks there when a week- end excursion changed his life. “Two of us (rowing club members) paddled from Portland to Ilwaco, near the mouth of the Colum- bia, in our canoes,” Alden writes. “It took us three and a half days. We returned to Portland via steamboat, an enjoyable experience which also opened my eyes to the possibilities present in the booming steamboat transportation business. “… Thereafter my inter- est in dry goods waned and Strike GOLD on buy, sell your next & invest with the real estate best transaction. c21nuggetrealty.com 541.942.2121 625 N. 9th Street | Cottage Grove, OR 97424 Serving Cottage Grove since 1986! Each office is individually owned and operated. Dentistry is our profession, people are our focus. Birch Avenue Dental Dentistry is our profession, people are our focus. Birch Avenue Dental 1325 Birch Ave. 541-942-2471 • General Dentistry • Implants I devoted my spare time to scouting around for a small steamboat operation that we Grahams could handle.” Alden also started writ- ing letters to his father, John, and brothers, Arthur and Newton, urging them to come west and join him in the venture. Soon they did. The result, in 1885, was the purchase of a tatty lit- tle 100-foot sternwheeler, the Altona — which broth- er Arthur, the former ship captain, immediately set about restoring to immac- ulate and perfect order. T he Grahams named their operation the Or- egon City Transportation Co., but locals all referred to them as “The Yellow Stack Line,” because Arthur had painted the smoke- stack of the Altona bright yellow. The line fit nicely into a little niche between the big freight operations that were then scrapping for the Wil- lamette Valley wheat-ship- ping business above the falls, and the even-bigger Oregon Railway & Naviga- tion Co., which was at the time battling it out with U.B. Scott for the Columbia River passenger business. They specialized in twice-daily runs from Or- egon City to Portland. And they’d chosen wise- ly — there was literally no competition for that run in 1885. The larger operators considered it too small to put a boat on. “We would stop any place for anything,” Alden recalls. “A single passen- ger or a few bags of farm produce. A cloth ‘flag’ on a stick with a note attached giving the shipper and consignee’s name was suf- ficient to assure shipment to either Portland or Ore- gon City. … This resulted in goodwill which carried on through the years and helped us when we did get competition later on.” Sometimes they didn’t even have to stop the boat to take on cargo. “During the salmon run each year … commercial fishermen with boatloads of netted salmon between Portland and Oregon City would hail us, and, as we slowed down, would come along- side and toss their salmon aboard for shipment to Portland,” Alden writes. “These were loose fish, so each shipment had to be separated from others by making cordwood bins, with each bin duly tallied and tagged by the purser as to number of salmon, shipper, and consignee. Our biggest year for loose salmon was 1889, when we carried 16,874.” T ime marched on. In 1893 an electric rail- road was built linking Port- land with Oregon City, and the competition cut deeply into the Grahams’ passen- ger business; the riverboat ride was scenic and love- ly, and the Grahams ran an excellent restaurant on Comprehensive Family Medical Eye Care and Optical Services Welcome Anthony Grillo, MD A southern Oregon native, Dr. Grillo is a board-certified ophthalmologist specializing in cornea, external disease, and refractive surgery. Call for an appointment today! • Sedation • Financing 1325 Birch Ave. Cottage Grove birchavenuedental.com 541-942-2471 Tammy L. McClung DDS • Park W. McClung DDS Call 541-942-5000 257 N. 8th St. • www.pcvi.com Monday - Friday 9am - 5pm Official LASIK and Eye Doctors of the Oregon Ducks and Eugene Emeralds board, but the train ride was much faster. Their fleet having ex- panded to two boats, they found they only had enough business for one; so they sent the other boat through the Oregon City locks to battle it out with the freighters on the upper river. They expected a hard fight. But at about the same time, someone dis- covered hops as a Willa- mette Valley cash crop, and suddenly there was a huge seasonal demand for transportation of hop pick- ers to and from the fields. This boom was very timely for the Grahams, who had expected to have to fight for market share with the wheat-freighters. Right up through the outbreak of the First World War the Grahams’ fleet of “Yellow Stack” riverboats continued to ply the upper Willamette, bringing loads of passengers, hops and wheat down the river to Or- egon City over high waters or low shoals. After 1911 or so the passenger business dried up, as the Oregon Electric Railway extended service all the way to Eu- gene; but there was always freight to be hauled, and so much of it that they actual- ly had another boat built, the Grahamona, a 150-foot humdinger that could pack 250 tons and drew just three feet of water. But around the time of the war, the “Good Roads” initiatives had created a national infrastructure of highways that the river- boats couldn’t beat. Heavy motor trucks were less expensive to run than steamboats, and they could pick up a farmer’s wheat from his actual barn rather than requiring everything to be hauled to the wharf for shipping. By 1918, the Grahams, recognizing the writing on the wall, shut down their operation and sold off their floating stock. “The Grahamona made her last run from Corval- lis (to Oregon City) for the O.C.T. Co. in May, 1918,” Alden writes, “and, as I write this in 1941, no oth- er steamboat line has been able to restore the reliable Willamette River service we carried out for the 32 years of our corporate life. I doubt if any ever will. It was the end of the steam- boat era.” (Sources: “Dad’s Memo- ry Locker: Recollections of Portland and Willamette River Steamboating a Cen- tury Ago,” an article by A.G. Graham published in the September 1982 issue of Or- egon Historical Quarterly). Public Notices The Lowest Rates in Lane County PUBLIC MEETINGS, TRUSTEE NOTICES, PROBATE, AUCTION & FORECLOSURE NOTICES, AND MORE. Published weekly in the Cottage Grove Sentinel and online at cgsentinel.com S entinel C ottage G rove Contact: Meg Fringer 541-942-3325 x1200 mfringer@cgsentinel.com