Echo (steam tug)
Steam tugboat Echo
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History | |
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United States | |
Name | Echo |
Owner |
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Builder | Crawford and Reid, Tacoma |
Out of service | 3 January 1938 |
Identification | USA official number 136791 |
General characteristics | |
Type | Tugboat |
Tonnage | |
Length | 66.5 ft (20.3 m) |
Beam | 18.2 ft (5.5 m) |
Depth | 7.3 ft (2.2 m) |
Installed power | 175 ihp |
Propulsion |
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The steam tug Echo operated in the early 1900s on Puget Sound.[1]
Construction
[edit]Echo was built at Tacoma in 1900 by Crawford and Reid for Captain O. G. Olson. Echo was propeller-driven and 66.5' long.[2]
Operation
[edit]On August 16, 1906, the Foss gasoline-powered launch Lion caught fire in Commencement Bay, when a fuel valve mistakenly left open had spilled 30 gallons of gasoline into her bilges, which was ignited by the engine backfiring. Echo pumped water on board Lion until the fire was out, while a boat from the cutter Grant took off her crew and passengers.[3]
Purchase by Foss Launch & Tug Co.
[edit]In 1916, Foss Launch and Tug Company bought Captain O.G. Olson's Tacoma towing business, including the steam tugs Echo, Elf, and Olympian. In 1921, Perry Moore became Echo ‘s chief engineer.[4] Foss continued to operate Echo until 1930, when she was laid-up at the company's yard in Seattle. In 1938, Echo was described as unfit for further service, her documentation was abandoned, and she was reported to have been burned for scrap near Shilshole Bay.[5]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Newell, Gordon R., ed., H.W. McCurdy Marine History of the Pacific Northwest, at 61, Superior Publishing, Seattle, WA 1966
- ^ McCurdy, at 61
- ^ McCurdy, at 127
- ^ McCurdy, at 265, 266 and 632
- ^ Skalley, Michael (1981). Foss : ninety years of towboating (1st ed.). Seattle, Wash.: Superior. p. 40. ISBN 0-87564-224-1.