1658

Nice Steamer Collection

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Mining Start Price:125.00 USD Estimated At:250.00 - 500.00 USD
Nice Steamer Collection
SOLD
100.00USDto t*******d+ buyer's premium (22.50)
This item SOLD at 2015 Apr 10 @ 17:53UTC-7 : PDT/MST
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Lot five. 1) Stockton, 1869, Steamer Harriet. Haas & Crow steamship company. $212.13 for freight and passengers. From Henry Miller,of Miller and Lux. Captain J. W. Smith would advertise her sailing and next destination in the local newspaper. Miller & Lux were corporate ranchers in Los Banos and one of the largest landholders in the United States in the 1860's. They would directly control 22,000 square miles. This steamer receipt is feature in the book "Maritime Contra Costa County" by Carol Jensen and the East Contra Costa Historical Society. 2) Stockton, 1869. Steamer Tulare of the California Stream Navigation Company. Once again to H. Miller of Miller & Lux. Signed by Bowman. California Steam Navigation Company was a California steamship company formed by a group of steamship captains in 1854. They competed for control of the traffic in the inland waters of the state, and in coastal traffic along the coast of California, Oregon, and British Columbia. Over the next decade, the company established a monopoly on inland water travel in California. On March 31, 1871, the California Pacific Railroad Company acquired all property of the California Steam Navigation Company. Five months later, the Central Pacific Railroad, acquired the California Pacific Railroad Company, which continued the operation of the steamboats of the former California Steam Navigation Company. 3) Sacramento, 1868. Steamer Capital of the California Steam Navigation Company. Stamped by Mitchell. "A Belle of the Past: All Californians who ever had occasion to traverse the Sacramento River in early days, before the effects of hydraulic mining drove the deep-water steamboats into exile and their business reverted to the railroads, remember the grand old steamer Capital that plied between this city and San Francisco—the finest boat that ever appeared on the inland waters of California." [Sacramento Daily Union, April 13, 1895]. She was launched on November 18, 1865. Mark Twain was on hand to see this and wrote about it, "I was just starting off to see the launch of the great steamboat Capital..." 4) Marysville, 1864. Steamer Chrysopolis of the California Steam Navigation Co. G. Castle signature. The Chrysolpolos was launched in 1859. She cost $200,000 and was thelargest boat on the inland waters at this time. 5) B. Landing, 1860. Steamboat San Soule. For T. J. Bidwell and singed by Carpenter. The Sam Soule would sink six months later near Colusa. The 1860 census shows a T.J. Bidwell as a merchant living in Rock Creek near Chico. (Prag Collection)

City: Stockton et al
State: California,
Date: 1860-1869

FHWAC#: 27438